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   Lost Tomb called a Stunt (The Washington Post.com, Feb 28, 2007)

            "Leading archaeologists in Israel and the United States yesterday denounced the purported discovery of the tomb of Jesus as a publicity stunt."

 

   DNA and Statistics in Tomb of Jesus Effectively Debunked (March 3, 2007). 

                       "James Cameron's and Simcha Jacobovich's 'The Lost Tomb of Jesus,' has to be the first documentary to be effectively debunked before even airing. Their filmmaking work did not enrage as much Christians, used for their religion to be blasphemized, as it did enrage scholars, who took this con scheme quite personally."

 

   Says Scholar Whose Work Was Used in the Upcoming Documentary  (Scientific American.com, March 2, 2007)

                  "In researching our special report on the upcoming Jesus Tomb documentary, fronted by James Cameron (of Titanic fame), I encountered more than a few angry scholars and archaeologists. Of special note was Tal Ilan, whose Lexicon of Jewish Names was essential to the statistical calculation made by Andrey Feuerverger, the U. of Toronto professor of statistics and mathematics who is quoted in the documentary as saying that the odds that any family other than that of the historical Jesus family would have the same names as that family, and be buried in the Tomb the documentary covers, are 600 to 1. In other words, that number argues, the odds are slim that this isn't the tomb of Jesus."

 

   The Correct Interpretation of Dr. Andrey Feuerverger's 1:600 Odds  (NT Gateway weblog, March 2, 2007)

            "There has been plenty of discussion focused on the validity of the numbers and the assumptions used in Dr Andrey Feuerverger's calculation that results in a 1:600 odds claim. While that discussion is certainly interesting, there is a more fundamental issue associated with the very interpretation of this 1:600 odds calculation." 

 

   Has the Tomb of Jesus Been Discovered?  (Society of Biblical Literature)  
                    "In a new documentary film (and related book), director Simcha Jacobovici and producer James Cameron claim to have identified the tomb of Jesus and his family in the Jerusalem suburb of Talpiyot. The tomb itself is not a new discovery; it was excavated in 1980 and published by Amos Kloner, an Israeli archaeologist. What is new is the sensational claim that this is the tomb of Jesus and his family. Although Jacobovici and Cameron are not scholars, their claim is supported by a handful of archaeologists and religious studies specialists. On the other hand, many archaeologists (including Kloner) and scholars of early Judaism and Christianity reject this claim. In this article I explain why the Talpiyot tomb cannot be the tomb of Jesus and his family."

 

 NOTE: This last one is a very good article from someone who does not believe in the inspiration (or accuracy) of the Bible.