Seventy small metal books discovered in a cave in Jordan may be Christianity's earliest written documents.
The books, which are only the size of a credit card, were discovered
between 2005 and 2007 in a cave in remote part of Jordan but the
discovery was only made public this week.
The area of the original
discovery is an area to which Christians fled after the fall of
Jerusalem in 70AD and has also been associated with other important
archaeological finds from the same period.
The pages are metal and they are bound by wire.
Each ‘book’ contains
between 5 and 15 leaves.
On them are inscribed images, symbols and
words that appear to refer to the Messiah and, possibly even, to the
Crucifixion and Resurrection.
They contain text in ancient hebrew, most
of which is in code.
Initial tests indicate the books date back to the first century AD.
If this is true, it means they are the oldest records of Christianity,
even predating the letters of St Paul.
One of the few people to have examined the books is David Elkington, a
British scholar of ancient religious history and archaeology. He told
the BBC they could be “the major discovery of Christian history.”
“It is a breathtaking thought that we have held these objects that
might have been held by the early saints of the Church,” he said.
Unfortunately, a dispute is currently raging over ownership of the
books that were discovered by a Jordanian Bedouin who smuggled them out
of Jordan to Israel through another Bedouin.
Currently Jordan is trying
to get the books back, but the Israeli Bedouin who currently holds the
books has denied smuggling them out of Jordan, and claims they have been
in his family for 100 years.
Mr Elkington is part of a British team trying to ensure that the
books are safely repatriated to a Jordanian museum. He believes the
most telling evidence of their Christian origin is the fact that the
images on the covers of the books feature signs that early Christians
would have interpreted as indicating Jesus, shown side-by-side with
others they would have regarded as representing the presence of God.
Philip Davies, emeritus professor of Biblical Studies at Sheffield
University, agrees that the images on the books are Christian in origin,
describing one plate that seems to represent the city of Jerusalem.
“There is a cross in the foreground, and behind it is what has to be
the tomb of Jesus, a small building with an opening, and behind that the
walls of the city. There are walls depicted on other pages of these
books too and they almost certainly refer to Jerusalem. It is a
Christian crucifixion taking place outside the city walls.”
Margaret Barker, a Methodist preacher and authority on New Testament
history, says the location of the discovery is evidence too that the
books are Christian, rather than purely Jewish.
"We do know that on two occasions, groups of refugees from the
troubles in Jerusalem fled east, they crossed the Jordan near Jericho
and then they fled east to very approximately where these books were
said to have been found," she says.
"[Another] one of the things that is most likely pointing towards a
Christian provenance, is that these are not scrolls but books. The
Christians were particularly associated with writing in a book form
rather than scroll form, and sealed books in particular as part of the
secret tradition of early Christianity."
She is currently working on photographs of the books to try to
decipher the meaning of the ancient hebrew text, most of which is in
code.