The Nazareth Inscription is a 24" x 15" marble tablet with a 14-line "Edict of Caesar" prescribing capital punishment for body stealing, acquired by Wilhelm Fröhner (1834–1925), Paris, in 1878, sent from Nazareth. Since 1925 it has been in the Bibliothèque nationale, Paris, displayed in the Cabinet des Médailles.
The inscription was published in 1930 by Franz Cumont, who had been alerted to it by Rostovtseff. Its chief interest lies in the possibility that it may represent the official Roman reaction to a contemporary Jewish interpretation of the resurrection of Christ, namely that the body had been removed from the tomb by followers of Jesus of Nazareth.
J. Spencer Kennard, Jr. interpreted the inscription's reference to "Caesar" as an indication that "the inscription must have been derived from somewhere in Samaria or Decapolis; Galilee was ruled by a client-prince until the reign of Claudius". Scholarly concerns regarding the Nazareth inscription set it in the context of tomb-robbery in Antiquity, analyse its language and style, assess its coherence and authenticity, attempt to date it precisely, and expand upon its significance for the historian of the New Testament and more broadly, for Christians in general.
Michael Green cites the inscription as a secular source of early origin that bears testimony to Jesus' empty tomb. "It is an imperial edict, belonging either to the reign of Tiberius (A.D. 14-37) or of Claudius (A.D. 41-54). And it is an invective, backed with heavy sanctions, against meddling around with tombs and graves! It looks very much as if the news of the empty tomb had got back to Rome in a garbled form. (Pontius Pilate would have had to report: and he would obviously have said that the tomb had been rifled). This edict, it seems, is the imperial reaction."
Translation from the Koine Greek text by Clyde E. Billington:
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- 1. EDICT OF CAESAR
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- 2. It is my decision graves and tombs--whoever has made
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- 3. them for the religious observances of parents, or children, or household
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- 4. members--that these remain undisturbed forever. But if anyone legally
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- 5. charges that another person has destroyed, or has in any manner extracted
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- 6. those who have been buried, or has moved with wicked intent those who
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- 7. have been buried to other places, committing a crime against them, or has
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- 8. moved sepulcher-sealing stones, against such a person, I order that a
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- 9. judicial tribunal be created, just as concerning the gods in
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- 10. human religious observances, even more so will it be obligatory to treat
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- 11. with honor those who have been entombed. You are absolutely not to
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- 12. allow anyone to move . But if
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- 13., I wish that to suffer capital punishment under
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- 14. the title of tomb-breaker.
Clyde Billington of Northwestern College (Minnesota) has dated it to AD 41, and interpreted it as evidence for the historicity of Christians preaching the resurrection of Jesus within a decade of His crucifixion.
Famous quotes containing the word inscription:
“Gratefully accepting the proffered honor, [to inscribe a new legal work to him] I give the leave, begging only that the inscription may be in modest terms, not representing me as a man of great learning, or a very extraordinary one in any respect.”
—Abraham Lincoln (18091865)