In March 1980 a construction company was building an apartment house in 
Jerusalem. They accidentally uncovered yet another burial cave - a 
Hellenistic tomb. Archaeologists were called in and they conducted the 
obligatory rescue excavation. They didn’t find anything out of the 
ordinary and thus the report was published only several years later 
(1994 and 1996). It took another decade before journalists and media 
took notice. A few years ago, around Easter time this 
quarter-century-old archaeological discovery suddenly became a hot media topic. 
The tomb became a sensation because it contained ossuaries (stone boxes 
for bones) inscribed with names known from the gospels. One ossuary even 
carried the name “Jesus son of Joseph”.
       Beyond doubt, this was a tomb of Jesus, in which he lay until his body 
decomposed and his bones were gathered in this ossuary. But one thing 
has to be noted right away - for us Jesus is quite a unique name, and 
thus generated so much media attention. Today Jesús is a common personal 
name only in Ibero-America (Hispanic America). In New Testament times 
Jesus was the fifth, perhaps even the fourth most common Jewish name. It 
was a common version of the biblical name Joshua. And it had profound 
religious and especially political significance - the name means “The 
LORD (is) salvation/liberation.” One can understand why it became so 
popular under the brutal circumstances of the Roman imperial occupation. 
The second most popular male name of those times was Joseph. This name 
was given to babies after a patriarch who survived captivity, conquered 
a foreign empire, and delivered his family from destitution. This 
political name-giving expanded also to female names. The second most 
popular name was Salome - derived from the Hebrew word for peace, and 
the third most popular name was even more direct - Shelamizon which 
means “Peace from Zion.”
       In the New Testament times, in times of Jesus from Nazareth, about every 
eleventh man or boy was named Jesus and every seventh was Joseph, while 
every fourth or fifth female was Mary. There were thousands of Jesuses! 
A discovery of a tomb of Jesus is not anything surprising. Even the 
presence of other biblical names in that cave is not particularly 
surprising. Jesus was a common name of uncommon hope for deliverance, 
justice and peace in the midst of despair. Time was ripe for a quantum 
step of new divine deliverance.
       Thus finding a tomb of Jesus son of Joseph is not any big surprise. A true 
surprise would be to find a tomb of the crucified Jesus, or for that 
matter a burial of any crucified person. But that will open a completely 
new theme for another article. We plan to talk about it and about the 
mystery and powerful symbol of empty tombs in our last Lenten Lecture. I 
would like to invite you to all of the lectures. 

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