1/05/2007
"Jewish Burial Customs. The first point of comparison is the cloth itself. The gospels say that Jesus was
buried in a cloth (or cloths); the Shroud of Turin appears to be a burial cloth which medical experts say once
held a dead body. The image reveals a man lying on his back with his feet close together. His elbows
protrude from his sides and his hands are crossed over the pelvic area. We can ascertain that the linen sheet
was wound lengthwise up the front and down the back of the corpse. ... Is this kind of burial compatible with
the New Testament reports? It is at least compatible with Jewish customs as we know them from extrabiblical
sources. Recent archaeological excavations at the Qumran community found that the Essenes buried their
dead in the way represented on the Shroud. Several skeletons were found lying on their backs, faces
pointing upward, elbows bent outward, and their hands covering the pelvic region. The protruding elbows
rule out an Egyptian-type mummified burial. Also very instructive is the Code of Jewish Law, which
discusses burial procedures in its `Laws of Mourning.' It instructs that a person executed by the
government was to be buried in a single sheet. This is another parallel with the Shroud." (Stevenson, K.E.
& Habermas, G.R., "Verdict on the Shroud: Evidence for the Death and Resurrection of Jesus Christ,"
Servant Books: Ann Arbor MI, 1981, p.46. Emphasis original)
1/05/2007
"Although the New Testament's description of typical first-century Jewish burial customs is not overly
detailed, it does give the general features. The body was washed (Acts 9:37) and the hands and feet were
bound (John 11:44). A cloth handkerchief (Greek, sudarion) was placed `around' the face (John 11:44;
20:7). The body was then wrapped in clean linen, often mixed with spices (John 19:39-40), and laid in the
tomb or grave. The Code of Jewish Law adds that the Jews usually shaved the head and beard completely
and cut the fingernails before burial. However, the gospels tell us that Jesus' burial was incomplete. Because
the Sabbath was about to begin, he was removed from the cross and laid in the tomb rather hurriedly. This is
why the women returned to the tomb on Sunday morning. They had prepared spices and ointments for
Jesus' body, and they went to the tomb to apply them (Luke 23:54-56). It is not often noticed why the women
went to the tomb. They certainly did not expect Jesus to rise (Luke 24:3-4; John 20:12-15). Rather they came
in order to finish anointing Jesus' body with the prepared spices (Luke 24:1; Mark 16:1). They were worried
about who would help them to move the stone from the entrance of the tomb so that they could finish the
job begun before the Sabbath (Mark 16:3)." (Stevenson, K.E. & Habermas, G.R., "Verdict on the Shroud:
Evidence for the Death and Resurrection of Jesus Christ," Servant Books: Ann Arbor MI, 1981, pp.46-47)
1/05/2007
"McDowell and some others detect a problem in John's word to describe the `binding' of the body.
[McDowell, J. & Stewart, D., "Answers to Tough Questions Skeptics Ask About the Christian Faith," Here's
Life: San Bernardino CA, 1980, pp.165-166] They suggest that Jesus' body was wrapped tightly like an
Egyptian mummy, a procedure which would not have yielded an image such as the one on the Shroud.
However, the mummy idea largely rests on variant readings in the extant manuscripts of John's Gospel. One
late manuscript uses a verb in 19:40 which suggests a tight binding of the body. The accepted verb,
however, is edesan; a verb which means to `wrap' or `fold' and which is quite compatible with the
synoptic verbs. The idea that Jesus was tightly bound like a mummy is also incompatible with John's earlier
description of the way Lazarus emerged from the tomb after Jesus raised him from the dead (John 11:44).
Lazarus, who was buried according to Jewish custom, was able to proceed from the tomb by his own power,
although he was impaired and had to be `unbound.' He had his hands and feet bound, as was the custom,
but he was not completely wrapped up. [Wuenschel, E.A. "The Shroud of Turin and the Burial of Christ,"
Catholic Biblical Quarterly, Vols. 7 & 8, 1945 & 1946] In other words, the type of wrapping depicted in the
Shroud is compatible with Jewish burial technique. In particular, the burial methods depicted both in the
Essene cemetery and described in the Code of Jewish Law favor the Shroud. Along with the Lazarus
account, these sources convince us that the type of wrapping demanded by the Shroud was at least
practiced in Israel in Jesus' time, and may even have been the most popular practice. At any rate, it cannot
be asserted that Jesus must have been buried as a mummy." (Stevenson, K.E. & Habermas, G.R., "Verdict on
the Shroud: Evidence for the Death and Resurrection of Jesus Christ," Servant Books: Ann Arbor MI, 1981,
pp.47-48. Emphasis original)
PIERSON and KBCI remember this info as I wont go through it again, as this is the most IMPORTANT answer to the Skeptics Burial Objections.1/05/2007
"The Grave Clothes. Another issue concerns the difference in the words chosen by the gospel writers to
describe the grave clothes that Jesus was wrapped in. The synoptic evangelists say that he was wrapped
in a sindon, a Greek word meaning a linen cloth which could be used for any purpose, including burial.
John, on the other hand, says Jesus was wrapped in othonia, a plural Greek word of uncertain meaning.
Othonia is sometimes translated as `strips of linen,' a meaning that would seem to be incompatible with a
fourteen-foot-long shroud covering the front and back of the body. However, it is likely that othonia
refers to all the grave clothes associated with Jesus' burial-the large sindon (the shroud), as well as the
smaller strips of linen that bound the jaw, the hands, and the feet. This interpretation of othonia is
supported by Luke's use of the word. He says (23:53) that Jesus was wrapped in a sindon, but later (24:12)
that Peter saw the othonia lying in the tomb after Jesus' resurrection. Luke, then, uses othonia as a
plural term for all the grave clothes, including the sindon. Furthermore, as seen earlier, Jewish burial
customs do not support the idea that John's othonia refers to the wrappings of a mummy. Jews did not
wrap up their dead like mummies, but laid them in shrouds, as indicated by the Gospel of John, the Essene
burial procedures, and the Code of Jewish Law. John himself insists that Jewish customs were followed
Jesus' case (19:40). Thus, there is good scriptural evidence that Jesus was laid in the tomb wrapped in a
shroud. Therefore, the gospels refer to the grave clothes in both the singular and the plural. When a single
cloth is spoken of, it is obviously the linen sheet itself. However, since Luke (or early tradition) had no
difficulty in using the plural (24:12) to describe what he earlier referred to in the singular (23:53), the term
`clothes' may still refer to a single piece of material. On the other hand, if more than one piece is meant,
`clothes' is most probably a reference to both the sheet and the additional strips which were bound around
the head, wrists, and feet, as indicated in John 11:44 (cf. John 19:40).
Sorry about the long response folks but I had to put this here to completely answer the bulk of the skeptics questions so that they wont repeat these objections again and make me go through another winded searchInterestingly enough, bands in these
same locations can be discerned on the Shroud of Turin. At any rate, it is a reasonable conclusion that at
least one major linen sheet is being referred to in the gospels." (Stevenson, K.E. & Habermas, G.R., "Verdict
on the Shroud: Evidence for the Death and Resurrection of Jesus Christ," Servant Books: Ann Arbor MI,
1981, pp.48-49. Emphasis original).
I have a few more links that I will put in my next post.