Posted on 04/04/2011 7:26:13 AM PDT by Red Badger
Another arab pi**ing in the well. That’s all.
It may not be the first picture but hopefully the last of....how many posts?...of this story.
The discovery of the manuscript is very interesting but, frankly, the image bears no resemblance to that which I saw on the 3-cheese pizza.
I still say the pizza is Michael Jackson..............
ping
See: http://paleojudaica.blogspot.com/ for serious questions about the authenticity of these lead tablets.
I have read some of the arguments.
They seem to hinge on similarities of depictions on coins of the era among other things.
The maker of these plates might have used the coins as a reference or they might have been actually used a part of the mold in the original.
I am not really interested in whether they are fake or not. That will be proven one way or another scientifically, not by ‘consensus’ opinion.
If they are real, it won’t change much of today’s world.
If they are fake, it won’t change any of today’s world...............
Finally, the provenance for the item is very unclear (always a bad sign). My bet: this is a fraud.
****Looks just like contemporaneous portraits of Helios or Apollo, the Sun God in the Greco-Roman pantheon. ****
I was thinking the same thing! Now, we need to open it, give it to real translators adept in ancient languages, then examine the metal for signs of fakery.
It is the best way to be sure.
It could be.
It could also be the first known depiction of an extraterrestrial, too.
Anything is possible.
Looks like a lion to me.
If genuinely produced by early Christians, it could represent The Lion of the Tribe of Judah mentioned in Revelation
No, it’s already been debunked as a fraud.
It could represent a Roman convert’s idea of Christ. The Romans had no compunctions against the portrayals of deities like the Jews, and hence the early Christians, did. That would account for the similarity between the coins and statues of the day and the plates............
By reputable, scientific analysis or by people who have opinions instead of facts?..................
“They seem to hinge on similarities of depictions on coins of the era among other things.”
That’s not really the best evidence. One of the codices has Greek text that appears to have been copied, word for word, from a tombstone on display in a museum in Jordan, but the copier did not know Greek, because they confused the letters lambda and alpha. Only a fragment of the text on the tombstone was copied, and this was repeated over and over, in a nonsensical fashion. Also, that codex was originally claimed to be found in Egypt, but now it’s popped up again with the lead codices and claimed to have been found in Jordan.
We don’t know if it IS a picture of Jesus, or some pagan deity or a portrait of Fredius Flinstonius.............
Here’s the story:
http://paleojudaica.blogspot.com/2011_03_27_archive.html#7454369078247746754
Yes, these are reputable experts.
James R. Davila - Professor of Early Jewish Studies at the University of St. Andrews in Scotland
Dr. Peter Thonemann - University Lecturer in Ancient History
Forrest-Derow Fellow and Tutor in Ancient History, Wadham College
Lecturer in Ancient History, Keble College
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