Israeli police arrest owner of the James ossuary and Joash tablet
After a six-month investigation, Israeli police on Monday arrested antiques collector Oded Golan on charges of fraud, forgery, using forged documents, and perverting the course of justice. In recent days, investigators searched Golan's home and storerooms, including a workroom on his roof where they say he forged antiquities. "A number of other 'antiques' in various stages of production were uncovered," reports the Tel Aviv newspaper Ha'aretz.

Also on Golan's Tel Aviv roof, "without any security or protection from the elements," was Golan's most famous possession—an ossuary that apparently once held the bones of "James, son of Joseph, brother of Jesus."

Is this treatment of the ossuary another indication that the ossuary is a fraud, or that Golan is merely careless? After all, when he shipped the ossuary for display and testing at the Royal Ontario Museum in Toronto, he packed it so poorly that it cracked—right in the middle of the inscription.

Now even the ROM's Ed Keall, who has been one of the main scholars saying the ossuary is authentic, says Golan might have intentionally damaged the bone box to make testing harder. "I'm afraid at this stage I can't discount anything," he told The Ottawa Citizen. "The story's so bizarre."

Keall said Golan, who was remanded for four days while police continue their investigation, seemed trustworthy: "He really came across as a very innocent, almost gullible person. Aside from all our investigation, scientific analysis…this guy seemed to be a very genuine item. He didn't come off as a fast car salesman who was trying to deceive you. That's why it is all the more puzzling to have this notification that the police arrested him."

But Keall said he still hopes that the ossuary can be proved to be authentic. So do several other scholars, including Biblical Archaeology Review editor Hershel Shanks and Asbury Seminary New Testament professor Ben Witherington III, coauthors of a book about the ossuary. On his magazine's website, Shanks lays out several problems he has with a report from the Israel Antiquities Authority calling the ossuary a fake.

But even Shanks has called one of Golan's other major "finds" a forgery. The ninth-century B.C. "Joash (or Jehoash) Tablet," which corroborates the biblical account of Solomon's Temple, was also dismissed by the Israel Antiquities Authority. The mountain of evidence against the tablet caused at least some scholars to doubt the authenticity of the James ossuary.

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The last nail in the coffin (or bone-box) may be Golan's explanation. According to Ha'aretz, "Golan said the [rooftop] workroom…is actually used by an Egyptian friend who stays at his home for lengthy periods." Has the "I was just holding it for a friend" excuse ever worked?

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Persecution:

  • Rape and torture empties the villages | Serious attacks on and persecution of religious minorities by Islamic fundamentalists are increasing, and despite a detailed dossier on 18 months of persecution of religious minorities, and women in particular, the British government calls Bangladesh a "generally safe" country. Amnesty International says this makes "no sense" (The Guardian, London)

Church life:

  • Rural megachurches invoke resistance | Counties worried about threat to preservation efforts (The Washington Post)

  • Method in the merger | So, it's third time lucky for the Methodists. They have finally persuaded the Anglicans to enter into a covenant that allows the two churches to live and work together, rather than form a united church (John Vincent, The Guardian, London)

  • Panel pushes for safer passenger vans | General Motors Corp. and Ford Motor Co. should add lap-and-shoulder seat belts and other improvements to their 15-passenger vans by 2006 to make them safer in rollover accidents, the National Transportation Safety Board said Tuesday (Associated Press)

  • Also: NTSB urges steps to boost safety of vans (Reuters)

  • A little too personal | Can you sue the person in the pulpit for preaching hellfire — at least if it gets personal? (Peter Steinfels, The New York Times)

  • Women clergy face challenges as their numbers rise | The number of women clergy tripled between 1983 and 1996, from 16,408 to 43,542 (Associated Press)

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U.S. politics and law:

  • An extremist judicial nominee | If the nomination of Alabama attorney general William Pryor is confirmed, his rulings would probably do substantial harm to the rights of all Americans (Editorial, The New York Times)

Life ethics:

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  • Update: All four abortion protesters out of jail (Associated Press)

  • Nothing charitable about giving in | Is your corporation now, or has it ever been, a contributor to Planned Parenthood? Most executives have yet to be asked, but if Warren Buffett's recent tussle with an anti-abortion group is any indication, the era of such litmus tests may not be far behind (Roger Lowenstein, The Washington Post)

  • Abortion bill faces conference setbacks | Senate Democrats are slowing the progress of legislation banning partial-birth abortion as Senate Republicans try to bring the measure to conference with the House, Republican officials say (The Washington Times)

  • Slovak president vetoes abortion law | Bill had fueled a dispute between ruling liberals and conservatives and threatened to topple the future EU member's government (Reuters)

  • Bills to change fetus's status gain support | Measures expanding crime victim designation called backdoor curbs on abortion rights (The Washington Post)

Bible:

Internet and technology:

  • Cyber sex lures love cheats | Growing numbers of married people are turning to internet chat rooms for sexual thrills, a US study has found (BBC)

Books:

  • This evangelist has a 'Purpose' | The Rev. Rick Warren — the most influential evangelist you've never heard of — has the answer to the meaning of life (USA Today)

  • Vicar takes on Harry Potter | Obadiah Demurral is the wicked creation of a priest who has just netted a $500,000 advance from a United States publisher (BBC)

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Sex and marriage:

  • Kenya split by wedding row | A controversial wedding between a 67-year-old woman and a 25-year-old man is threatening to tear apart a prominent family and is testing the position of Kenya's churches on marriage (BBC)

  • Schools stumble over sex education | Two camps have emerged over the years: Teach abstinence only, or teach safer sex. But both these approaches may fall short of what teens need most (The Christian Science Monitor)

  • The swing's their thing | Change in social attitude leads to more swinger clubs, Court declares Canadians tolerant of the 'lifestyle' (The Toronto Star)

  • Gambian freeze on polygamy | President Yahya Jammeh has provoked controversy in Gambia by prohibiting Gambian men from marrying more than three wives for the next three years (BBC)

  • A healthy shot in the arm for marriage | "The State of Our Unions: The Social Health of Marriage in America, 2003," not only bemoans the state of the American family and but also begs a tantalizingly fundamental question: What do Americans today consider the central purpose of marriage? (The Orlando Sentinel)

  • Also: Encouraging marriage is society's role | If this society is to fix the criminal justice system and the schools, it has first to fix the broken family. Government can't do it with $300 million or $300 billion. But it has to try (Jim Wooten, The Atlanta Journal-Constitution)

Same-sex marriage:

  • Churches reject same-sex marriages | Many New Zealand churches say legislation giving same sex and de facto couples the same rights as married people is wrong (Xtra, New Zealand)

  • Religious leaders divided over same-sex marriage | Coalition warns PM of dangers of legalizing homosexual unions (The Ottawa Citizen)

  • A church divided | Anglicans are savagely divided on the issue of same-sex marriage. More than a moral discussion, it's a clash of ideology that is pitting local parishioners against each other and conservative African churches against the more liberal Western congregations (The Montreal Gazette)

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Debate over gay clergy in Uniting Church:

Church of England homosexual rift:

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New Hampshire's gay Episcopal bishop:

Clergy sex abuse:

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