Peter’s Tomb Recently Discovered In
Jerusalem by F. PAUL PETERSON 1960
Chapter 1
Saint Peter's Tomb
The Discovery of Peter's Tomb in Jerusalem 1953
While
visiting a friend in Switzerland, I heard of what seemed to
me, one of the greatest discoveries since the time of
Christ—that Peter was buried in Jerusalem and not in Rome.
The source of this rumor, written in Italian, was not clear;
it left considerable room for doubt or rather wonder. Rome
was the place where I could investigate the matter, and if
such proved encouraging, a trip to Jerusalem might be
necessary in order to gather valuable first hand information
on the subject. I therefore went to Rome. After talking to
many priests and investigating various sources of
information, I finally was greatly rewarded by learning
where I could buy the only known book on the subject, which
was also written in Italian. It is called,
"Gli Scavi del Dominus Flevit", printed in 1958 at the
Tipografia del PP. Francescani, in Jerusalem. It was written
by P. B. Bagatti and J. T. Milik, both Roman Catholic
priests. The story of the discovery was there, but it seemed
to be purposely hidden for much was lacking. I consequently
determined to go to Jerusalem to see for myself, if
possible, that which appeared to be almost unbelievable,
especially since it came from priests, who naturally because
of the existing tradition that Peter was buried in Rome,
would be the last ones to welcome such a discovery or to
bring it to the attention of the world.

In Jerusalem
I spoke to many Franciscan priests who all read, finally,
though reluctantly, that the bones of Simon Bar Jona (St.
Peter) were found in Jerusalem, on the Franciscan monastery
site called, "Dominus Flevit" (where Jesus was supposed to
have wept over Jerusalem), on the Mount of Olives. The
pictures show the story. The first show an excavation where
the names of Christian Biblical characters were found on the
ossuaries (bone boxes). The names of Mary and Martha were
found on one box and right next to it was one with the name
of Lazarus, their brother. Other names of early Christians
were found on other boxes. Of greatest interest, however,
was that which was found within twelve feet from the place
where the remains of Mary, Martha and Lazarus were found—the
remains of St. Peter. They were found in an ossuary, on the
outside of which was clearly and beautifully written in
Aramaic, "Simon Bar Jona".

 |
The charcoal inscription
reads: "Shimon Bar Yonah" which means "Simon
[Peter] son of Jonah".
Mat 16:17 And Jesus answered
and said unto him, Blessed
art thou, Simon Barjona: for flesh and blood
hath not revealed it unto thee, but my Father
which is in heaven. |
I talked to
a Yale professor, who is an archaeologist, and was director
of the American School of Oriental Research in Jerusalem. He
told me that it would be very improbable that a name with
three words, and one so complete, could refer to any other
than St. Peter.

But what
makes the possibility of error more remote is that the
remains were found in a Christian burial ground, and more
yet, of the first century, the very time in which Peter
lived. In fact, I have a letter from a noted scientist
stating that he can tell by the writing that it was written
just before the destruction of Jerusalem by Titus in 70 A.D.

I talked to
priest Milik, the co-writer of this Italian book, in the
presence of my friend, a Christian Arab, Mr. S. J. Mattar,
who now is the warden of the Garden Tomb, where Jesus was
buried and rose again. This priest, Milik, admitted that he
knew that the bones of St. Peter are not in Rome. I was very
much surprised that he would admit that, so to confirm his
admittance, I said, to which he also agreed, "There is a
hundred times more evidence that Peter was buried in
Jerusalem than in Rome." This was something of an
understatement, for he knew as I know that there is
absolutely no evidence at all that Peter was buried in Rome.

I have
spoken on the subject to many Franciscan priests who either
were or had been in Jerusalem, and they all agree that the
tomb and remains of St. Peter are in Jerusalem. There was
just one exception which is interesting and which only
proves the point. The Franciscan priest, Augusto Spykerman,
who was in charge of the semi-private museum inside the
walls of old Jerusalem, by the site of the Franciscan Church
of the Flagellation, was that exception. When I asked to see
the museum, he showed it to the three of us, Mr. Mattar, who
in addition to being warden of the Tomb of Christ, had been
the manager of an English bank in Jerusalem, a. professional
photographer and myself. But he told us nothing of the
discovery. I knew that the evidence of Peter’s burial was
there, for priests had told me that relics from the
Christian burial ground were preserved within this museum.
People who lived in Jerusalem all their lives and official
guides who are supposed to know every inch of the city,
however, knew nothing of this discovery, so well was it
withheld from the public. I had asked an elderly official
guide where the tomb of St. Peter was. He responded in a
very profound and majestic tone of voice, "The Tomb of St.
Peter has never been found in Jerusalem." "Oh," I said, "but
I have seen the burial place of Peter with my own eyes." He
turned on me with a fierceness that is so common among
Arabs. "What," he replied, "you a foreigner mean to tell me
that you know where the tomb of St. Peter is when I have
been an official guide for thirty-five years and know every
inch of ground in Jerusalem?" I was afraid that he would
jump at my throat. I managed to calm him as I said, "But
sir, here are the pictures and you can see the ossuary,
among others, with Peter’s name in Aramaic. You can also see
this for yourself on the Mount of Olives on the Franciscan
Convent site called, "Dominus Flevit". When I finished he
slowly turned away in stunned amazement. A person who has
seen this Christian burial ground and knows the
circumstances surrounding the case could never doubt that
this truly is the burial place of St. Peter and of other
Christians. I, too, walked around in a dreamy amazement for
about a week for I could hardly believe what I had seen and
heard. Since the circulation of this article, they do not
allow anyone to see this burial place.
Before
things had gone very far, I had been quite discouraged for I
could get no information from the many priests with whom I
had talked. However, I continued questioning priests
wherever I would find them. Finally one priest dropped some
information. With that knowledge I approached another priest
who warily asked me where I had acquired that information. I
told him that a priest had told me. Then he admitted the
point and dropped a little more information. It went on like
that for some time until I got the whole picture, and I was
finally directed to where I could see the evidence for
myself. To get the story, it made me feel as though I had a
bull by the tail and were trying to pull him through a key
hole. But when I had gathered all the facts in the case, the
priests could not deny the discovery of the tomb, but even
confirmed it, though reluctantly. In fact, I have the
statement from a Spanish priest on the Mount of Olives on a
tape recorder, to that effect.
But here we
were talking to this Franciscan priest in charge of the
museum, asking him questions which he tried to evade but
could not because of the information I had already gathered
from the many priests with whom I had spoken. Finally after
the pictures of the evidence were taken, which was nothing
short of a miracle that he allowed us to do so, I
complimented him on the marvelous discovery of the tomb of
St. Peter in Jerusalem that the Franciscans had made. He was
clearly nervous as he said, "Oh no, the tomb of St. Peter is
in Rome." But as he said that, his voice faltered, a fact
which even my friend, Mr. Mattar, had noticed. Then I looked
him squarely in the eyes and firmly said, "No, the tomb of
St. Peter is in Jerusalem." He looked at me like a guilty
school boy and held his peace. He was, no doubt, placed
there to hide the facts, but his actions and words, spoke
more convincingly about the discovery than those priests who
finally admitted the truth.
I also spoke
to a Franciscan priest in authority at the priest’s printing
plant within the walls of old Jerusalem, where their book on
the subject was printed. He also admitted that the tomb of
St. Peter is in Jerusalem. Then when I visited the Church of
the Nativity in Bethlehem, I encountered a Franciscan monk.
After telling him what I thought of the wonderful discovery
the Franciscans had made, I asked him plainly, "Do you folks
really believe that those are the remains of St. Peter?" He
responded, "Yes we do, we have no choice in the matter. The
clear evidence is there." I did not doubt the evidence, but
what surprised me was that these priests and monks believed
that which was against their own religion and on top of
that, to admit it to others was something out of this world.
Usually a Catholic, either because he is brainwashed or
stubbornly doesn’t want to see anything only that which he
has been taught, will not allow himself to believe anything
against his religion, much less to admit it to others. But
there is a growing, healthy attitude among many Catholics,
to "prove all things, hold fast to that which is good" as
the Master admonished us all.
Then I
asked, "Does Father Bagatti (co-writer of the book in
Italian on the subject, and archaeologist) really believe
that those are the bones of St. Peter?" "Yes, he does,"
was the reply. Then I asked, "But what does the Pope
think of all this?" That was a thousand dollar question and
he gave me a million dollar answer. "Well," he
confidentially answered in a hushed voice, "Father
Bagatti told me personally that three years ago he went to
the Pope (Pius XII) in Rome and showed him the evidence and
the Pope said to him, ‘Well, we will have to make some
changes, but for the time being, keep this thing quiet’."
In awe I asked also in a subdued voice, "So the Pope
really believes that those are the bones of St. Peter?"
"Yes," was his answer. "The documentary evidence is
there, he could not help but believe."
I visited
various renowned archaeologists on the subject. Dr.
Albright, of the John Hopkins University in Baltimore, told
me that he personally knew priest Bagatti and that he was a
very competent archaeologist. I also spoke with Dr. Nelson
Gluek, archaeologist and president of the Hebrew Union
College in Cincinnati, Ohio. I showed him the pictures found
in this article, but being with him for only a few minutes I
therefore could not show him the wealth of material that you
have before you in this article. However, he quickly
recognized the Aramaic words to be "Simon Bar Jona".
(Aramaic is very similar to Hebrew). I asked him if he would
write a statement to that effect. He said to do so would
cast a reflection on the competency of the priest J. T.
Milik, who he knew to be a very able scientist. But he said
that he would write a note. I quote,
"I
regard Father J. T. Milik as a first class scholar in
the Semitic field." He added, "I do not consider that
names on ossuaries are conclusive evidence that they are
those of the Apostles." Nelson Glueck
I quote this
letter of Dr. Glueck because it shows that priest Milik is a
competent archaeologist. As I have mentioned, I was only
able to be with him for a few minutes and was not able to
show him but a very small part of the evidence. Anyone,
including myself, would readily agree with Dr. Glueck that
if only the name Simon Bar Jona on the ossuary was all the
evidence that was available it would not be conclusive
evidence that it was of the Apostle Peter, though it would
certainly be a strong indication. The story of the cave and
the ossuaries and the regular cemetery just outside of the
Convent site is this: It was a Roman custom that when a
person had died and after about ten years when the body had
decomposed, the grave would be opened. The bones would be
placed in a small ossuary with the name of the person
carefully written on the outside front. These ossuaries
would then be placed in a cave as in the case of this
Christian burial ground and thus making room for others. But
this cave or burial place where the ossuaries were found and
which was created and brought about through the natural and
disinterested sequence of events, without any reason to
change facts or circumstances, was a greater testimony than
if there were a witness recorded, stating that Peter was
buried there. And yet, even that is unmistakenly recorded in
the three words in Aramaic of the ossuary, Simon Bar Jona.
Herein, lies the greatest proof that Peter never was a Pope,
and never was in Rome, for if he had been, it would have
certainly been proclaimed in the New Testament. History,
likewise, would not have been silent on the subject, as they
were not silent in the case of the Apostle Paul. Even the
Catholic history would have claimed the above as a fact and
not as fickle tradition. To omit Peter as being Pope and in
Rome (and the Papacy) would be like omitting the Law of
Moses or the Prophets or the Acts of the Apostles from the
Bible.
Dr. Glueck,
being Jewish, and having been to Jerusalem, no doubt, is
fully aware of the fact that for centuries the Catholic
Church bought up what were thought to be holy sites, some of
which did not stand up to Biblical description. For
instance, the priests say that the tomb of Jesus is within
the walls of the old Jerusalem, in a hole in the ground;
whereas, the Bible says that the tomb where Jesus was laid
was hewn out of rock and a stone was rolled in front and not
on top of it. The Garden Tomb at the foot of Golgotha,
outside the walls of old Jerusalem, meets the Biblical
description perfectly. In fact, all those who were hated by
the Jewish leaders, as Jesus was, could never have been
allowed to be buried within the gates of the Holy City. The
tomb where Jesus lay was made for Joseph of Arimathaea. His
family were all stout and short of stature. In this burial
place you can see to this day where someone had carved
deeper into the wall to make room for Jesus who was said to
be about six feet tall.
When Pope
Pius XII declared the Assumption of Mary to be an article of
faith in 1950, the Catholic Church in Jerusalem then quickly
sold the tomb of Mary to the Armenian Church. Ex-priest
Lavallo told me personally that there is another tomb of St.
Mary in Ephesus. But the tomb of St. Peter is altogether
different for they would rather that it never existed, and
to buy or sell such a site would be out of the question. It
fell upon them in this manner, as I was told by a Franciscan
monk of the monastery of "Dominus Flevit". One of their
members was spading the ground on this site in 1953, when
his shovel fell through. Excavation was started and there, a
large underground Christian burial ground was uncovered. The
initial of Christ in Greek was written there which would
never have been found in a Jewish, Arab or pagan cemetery.
By the structure of the writings, it was established by
scientists that they were of the days just before the
destruction of Jerusalem by Titus in 70 A.D. On the
ossuaries were found many names of the Christian of the
early Church. It was prophesied in the Bible that Jesus
would stand on the Mount of Olives at His return to earth.
You can see then, how the Christians would be inclined to
have their burial ground on the Mount, for here also, had
been a favorite meeting place of Jesus and His disciples. In
all the cemetery, nothing was found (as also in the
Catacombs in Rome) which resemble Arab, Jewish, Catholic or
pagan practices. Dr. Glueck, being Jewish, is not fully
aware, no doubt, that such a discovery is very embarrassing
since it undermines the very foundation of the Roman
Catholic Church. Since Peter did not live in Rome and
therefore was not martyred or buried there, it naturally
follows that he was not their first Pope.
The Catholic
Church says that Peter was Pope in Rome from 41 to 66 A.D.,
a period of twenty-five years, but the Bible shows a
different story. The book of the Acts of the Apostles (in
either the Catholic or Protestant Bible) records the
following: Peter was preaching the Gospel to the
circumcision (the Jews) in Caesarea and Joppa in Palestine,
ministering unto the household of Cornelius, which is a
distance of 1,800 miles from Rome (Acts 10:23, 24). Soon
after, about the year 44 A.D. (Acts 12), Peter was cast into
prison in Jerusalem by Herod, but he was released by an
angel. From 46 to 52 A.D., we read in the 13th chapter that
he was in Jerusalem preaching the difference between Law and
Grace. Saul was converted in 34 A.D. and became Paul the
Apostle (Acts 9). Paul tells us that three years after his
conversion in 37 A.D., he "went up to Jerusalem to see
Peter" (Galatians 1:18), and in 51 A.D., fourteen years
later, he again went up to Jerusalem (Gal. 2:1, 8), Peter
being mentioned. Soon after that he met Peter in Antioch,
and as Paul says, "Withstood him to the face, because he was
to be blamed," Gal. 2:11. The evidence is abundant, the
truth is clear from the Scriptures which have never failed.
It would be breathtaking to read of the boldness of Paul in
dealing with Peter. Very few, if any, have withstood a Pope
and lived (except in these days when everybody seems to
withstand him). If Peter were Pope it would have been no
different. Paul does not only withstand Peter but rebukes
him and blames him of being at fault.
This reminds
me of my visit to the St. Angelo Castle in Rome. This
castle, which is a very strong fortress, is connected with
the Vatican by a high arched viaduct of about a mile in
length over which popes have fled in time of danger. The
Roman Catholic guide showed me a prison room which had a
small air-tight chamber in it. He told me that a Cardinal
who had contended with a pope on doctrine was thrown into
this air-tight chamber for nearly two hours until he almost
smothered to death. He then was led to the guillotine a few
feet away and his head was cut off. Another thing remained
with me forcibly. The guide showed me through the apartments
of the various popes who had taken refuge there. In each
case he also showed me the apartment of the mistresses of
each of the popes. I was amazed that he made no attempt to
hide anything. I asked him "Are you not a Catholic?" He
humbly answered, "Oh yes, I am a Catholic, but I am
ashamed of the history of many of the popes, but I trust
that our modern popes are better." I then asked him,
"Surely you are aware of the affair between Pope Pius XII
and his housekeeper?" Many in Rome say that she ran the
affairs of the Pope and the Vatican as well. He hung his
head in shame and sadly said, "Yes, I know."
All this
explains why the Catholic Church has been so careful to keep
this discovery unknown. They were successful in doing just
that from 1953, when it was discovered by the Franciscans on
their own convent site, until 1959. Having succeeded for so
long in keeping "this thing quiet," as the Pope had
admonished, they were off guard when a fellow at that time
came along who appeared harmless but persistent. Little did
they know that this fellow would publish the news
everywhere. Their position in the world is shaky enough
without this discovery becoming generally known.
As I have
mentioned, I had a very agreeable talk with priest Milik,
but I did not have the opportunity to see priest Bagatti
while in Jerusalem. I wrote to him, however, on March 15,
1960, as follows: "I have spoken with a number of Franciscan
priests and monks and they have told me about you and the
book of which you are a co-writer. I had hoped to see you
and to compliment you on such a great discovery, but time
would not permit. Having heard so much about you and that
you are an archaeologist (with the evidence in hand), I was
convinced, with you, concerning the ancient burial ground
that the remains found in the ossuary with the name on it,
‘Simon Bar Jona’, written in Aramaic, were those of St.
Peter." It is remarkable that in his reply he did not
contradict my statement, which he certainly would have done
if he honestly could have done so. "I was very much
convinced with you - ... that the remains found in the
ossuary ... were those of St. Peter." This confirms the talk
I had with the Franciscan monk in Bethlehem and the story he
told me of Priest Bagatti’s going to the Pope with the
evidence concerning the bones of St. Peter in Jerusalem. In
his letter one can see that he is careful because of the
Pope’s admonition to keep this discovery quiet. He therefore
wrote me that he leaves the whole explanation of the Aramaic
words, "Simon Bar Jona", to priest Milik. This is a familiar
way of getting out of a similar situation. In priest
Bagatti’s letter one can see that he is in a difficult
position. He cannot go against what he had written in 1953,
at the time of the discovery of this Christian-Jewish burial
ground, nor what he had said to the Franciscan monk about
his visit to the Pope. However, he does raise a question
which helps him to get out of the situation without
altogether contradicting himself and at the same time
putting a smoke screen around the truth. He wrote,
"Supposing that it is ‘Jona’ (on the ossuary) as I
believe, it may be some other relative of St. Peter,
because names were passed on from family to family. To
be able to propose the identification of it with St.
Peter would go against a long tradition, which has its
own value. Anyway, another volume will come soon that
will demonstrate that the cemetery was Christian and of
the first century to the second century A.D. The
salute in God most devoted P. B. Bagatti
C. F. M."
As I have
shown, after the admonition of the Pope to "keep this thing
quiet," priest Bagatti leaves the interpretation of the
whole matter to priest Milik who offers several suggestions
but in the end declares that the original statement of
priest Bagatti may be true—that the inscription and the
remains were of St. Peter. It is also very interesting and
highly significant that priest Bagatti, in his attempt to
neutralize his original statement and the consternation the
discovery had and would have if it were generally known,
says in reference to the name Simon Bar Jona (St. Peter),
"It may be some other relative of St. Peter, because names
were passed on from generation to generation." In other
words he says that Peter’s name, Simon Bar Jona, could have
been given him from a relative of the same name of
generations before him, or, could belong to a relative
generations after St. Peter. Both speculations are beyond
the realm of the possible. First of all, it could not refer
to a relative before St. Peter for the Christian burial
ground could only have come into being after Jesus began.
His public ministry and had converts; and therefore, could
not belong to a relative before Peter’s time, since only
those who were converted through Christ’s ministry were
buried there. Titus destroyed Jerusalem in 70 A.D. and left
it desolate. Therefore, it is impossible that the
inscription could refer to a relative after Peter’s time.
One encyclopedia explains the destruction in these words,
‘‘With this event the history of ancient Jerusalem came to a
close, for it was left desolate and it’s inhabitants were
scattered abroad." From all evidence, Peter was about fifty
years old when Jesus called him to be an Apostle, and he
died around the age of 82, or about the year 62 A.D. Since
by these figures there was only eight years left from the
time of Peter’s death until the destruction of Jerusalem, it
was then impossible that the inscription and remains
belonged to generations after Peter. In those days names
were passed on to another only after a lapse of many years.
But let us say that immediately after the death of St.
Peter, a baby was christened, "Simon Bar Jona", the
inscription still could not have been of this baby for the
remains were of an adult and not of a child of eight years
who had died just before the destruction of Jerusalem in 70
A.D., at which time "the history of ancient Jerusalem came
to a close, for it was left desolate and its inhabitants
were scattered abroad."
This ancient
Christian burial ground shows that Peter died and was buried
in Jerusalem, which is easily understandable since neither
history nor the Bible tells of Peter’s having been in Rome.
To make matters more clear, the Bible tells us that Peter
was the Apostle to the Jews. It was Paul who was the Apostle
to the Gentiles, and both history and the Bible tells of his
being in Rome. No wonder that the Roman Catholic Bishop,
Strossmayer, in his great speech against papal infallibility
before the Pope and the Council of 1870 said, "Scaliger, one
of the most learned men, has not hesitated to say that St.
Peter’s episcopate and residence in Rome ought to be classed
with ridiculous legends."
Eusebius,
one of the most learned men of his time, wrote the Church
history up to the year 325 A.D. He said that Peter never was
in Rome. This Church history was translated by Jerome from
the original Greek, but in his translation he added a
fantastic story of Peter’s residence in Rome. This was a
common practice in trying to create credence in their
doctrines, using false statements, false letters and
falsified history. This is another reason why we cannot rely
on tradition, but only on the infallible Word of God.
The secrecy
surrounding this case is amazing, and yet understandable,
since Catholics largely base their faith on the assumption
that Peter was their first Pope and that he was martyred and
buried there. But I am somewhat of the opinion that the
Franciscan priests, those who are honest, would be glad to
see the truth proclaimed, even if it displeased those who
are over them. While visiting with priest Milik, I told him
of the highly educated priest with whom I had spoken just
before going from Rome to Jerusalem. He admitted to me that
the remains of Peter are not in the tomb of St. Peter in the
Vatican. I asked him what had happened to them? He
responded, "We don’t know, but we think that the Saracens
stole them away." First of all, the Saracens never got to
Rome, but even if they had, what would they want with the
bones of Peter? But they never got to Rome, so there it
ends. We had a good laugh together, but more so when I told
him of my discussion with a brilliant American priest in
Rome. I asked this American priest if he knew that the bones
of Peter were not in the "Tomb of St. Peter" in the Vatican.
He admitted that they were not there. However, he said that
a good friend of his, an archaeologist, had been excavating
under St. Peter’s Basilica for the bones of St. Peter for a
number of years and five years ago he found them. Now a man
can be identified by his fingerprints, but never by his
bones. So I asked him how he knew they were the bones of St.
Peter? He hesitated and tried to change the subject, but on
my insistence he finally explained that they had taken the
bones to a chemist, and they were analyzed and it was judged
that the bones were of a man who had died at about the age
of sixty-five; therefore, they must be Peter’s. How
ridiculous can people be?
Mark you,
all the priests agree that the Vatican and St. Peter’s were
built over a pagan cemetery. This was a very appropriate
place for them to build since, as even Cardinal Newman
admitted, there are many pagan practices in the Roman
Catholic Church. You realize surely, that Christians would
never bury their dead in a pagan cemetery, and you may be
very sure that pagans would never allow a Christian to be
buried in their cemetery. So, even if Peter died in Rome,
which is out of the question, surely the pagan cemetery
under St. Peter’s Basilica would be the last place in which
he would have been buried. Also, Peter from every
indication, lived to be over 80 and not 65 years old. The
Pope was right, going back to the early Christian burial
ground, they must make changes and many of them and
fundamental ones at that. But I am afraid that the Pope’s
(Pius XII) admittance of the discovery on Bagatti’s
presentation of the documentary evidence was to satisfy
Bagatti but at the same time admonishing him to keep the
information quiet, hoping that the truth of the discovery
would die out. But they have said that after all these years
of excavation under the Vatican, they have discovered Greek
words which read, "Peter is buried here," and it gives the
date 160 A.D. First of all, the very structure of the
sentence immediately gives one the impression that either
quite recently or long ago, someone put the sign there
hoping that it would be taken as authentic in order to
establish that which then, and even now, has never been
proven. Then there is a discrepancy in the date, for Peter
was martyred around the year 62 A.D. and not 160 A.D.
Thirdly, why is it that they mention nothing about finding
bones under or around the sign? While visiting the
Catacombs, one sees a few things which are not becoming to
Christians, but which tend to indicate that the Christians
had some pagan practices, similar to those of Rome today.
Nothing is said about them and only after persistent
questioning will the Roman Catholic priest, who acts as
guide, tell you that those things, images, etc., were placed
there centuries after the early Christian era.
In 1950,
just a few years prior to the discovery of the Christian
burial ground in Jerusalem, the Pope made the strange
declaration that the bones of St. Peter were found under St.
Peter’s in Rome. Strange it was, for since beginning to
build the church in 1450 (finished in 1626) they erected,
St. Peter’s Tomb (?) under the large dome and Bernini's
serpentine columns. Since then multiplied millions were
thereby deceived into believing that the remains of St.
Peter were there, which the hierarchy had all along known
was not true, as is proven by the late Pope’s declaration.
The following was published in the Newsweek of July 1, 1957:
"It was
in 1950 that Pope Pius XII in his Christmas message
announced that the tomb of St. Peter had indeed been
found, as tradition held, beneath the immense dome of
the Cathedral (there was, however, no evidence that the
bones uncovered there belonged to the body of the
martyr)." The parentheses are Newsweek’s.
To make an
announcement of such importance when there is absolutely "no
evidence" is rather ridiculous as is also brought out in the
Time Magazine of October 28, 1957 (as in above, we quote the
article word for word).
"A thorough
account in English of the discoveries beneath St. Peter’s is
now available ... by British archaeologists Jocelyn Toynbee
and John Ward Perkins. The authors were not members of the
excavating team, but scholars Toynbee (a Roman Catholic) and
Perkins (an Anglican) poured over the official Vatican
reports painstakingly examined the diggings. Their careful
independent conclusions fall short of the Pope’s flat
statement." (The Pope’s statement that the remains of St.
Peter were found under St. Peter’s in Rome). The excavation
under St. Peter’s for the remains of St. Peter is still
going on secretly, in spite of the Pope’s declaration of
1950.
Then in
1965, an archaeologist at Rome University, Prof. Margherita
Guarducci, tells of a new set of bones belonging to Peter.
The story was fantastic but lacked common sense and even
bordered on the infantile—but a drowning man will grab for a
straw and a straw it was to many. But the Palo Alto Times
(California), May 9, 1967, came out with an article on the
subject, and I quote, "Other experts, among them Msgr.
Joseph Ruysschaert, vice prefect of the Vatican Library are
not convinced by Miss Guarducci’s evidence. ‘There are too
many unknowns,’ he told reporters on a recent tour of the
Vatican grottoes, ‘There is no continuous tracing of the
bones. We lack historical proof. They could be anyone’s
bones.’ The Vatican would seem to be on the monsignor's side
because so far it has taken no steps to officially recognize
the bones as St. Peter’s," continues the article.
The
intelligent priest of whom I have mentioned said that
Peter’s bones were found and he was a man who died of about
62 years of age, the tests indicated. Pope Pius XII declared
these bones were the bones of St. Peter, in his Christmas
message of 1950. These were the same as claimed by Newsweek,
"there was, however, no evidence that the bones uncovered
there belonged to the body of the martyr (Peter)," as well
as the above doubtful statements of the archaeologists
working on the case. The Pope, notwithstanding, was
overjoyed to think they had found the bones of St. Peter
until further examination proved that these bones were those
of a woman. This fact came out in an article on the subject
in the S. F. Chronicle of June 27, 1968.
To continue
the history of another case in which they have erred: In
spite of the statements by the high Papal authority above
and the resultant lesson that should have been learned, the
Pope, a year later claimed the Prof. Margherita bones as his
very own, that is, those of St. Peter. When the bones were
found there was little importance placed upon them and they
were filed away as such. But when the first set of Peter’s
bones turned out so tragically, there was a vacuum left and
something had to be done. Again they turned their thoughts
to the filed-away bones, the only hope they had of success.
In them there was a ray of hopes for the bones were minus a
skull, which could go along with the story of the supposed
skull of St. Peter which had for centuries been guarded in
the church of St. John Lateran in Rome. With a generous
mixture of ideas, suppositions, theories and wishful
thinking, a fairly logical story emerged. It was then
declared by Pope Paul as the Gospel truth, that these now,
were the genuine bones of St. Peter, and most of the
faithful accepted them as such. For a while all was well
until another hitch developed. This time, as fate would have
it, the bones in connection with the skull which was guarded
for centuries as that of St. Peter, were found incompatible
to the more recent bones of St. Peter. The dilemma was
terrible. They were between the Devil and the deep blue sea.
They have juggled around the skulls of St. Peter causing
confusion. It was a choice of claiming these bones
championed by Prof. Margherita as fake, or claiming as fake
the skull accepted by hundreds of Popes as that of St.
Peter. They rejected the past rather than expose themselves
to the ridicule of the present. Prof. Margherita claims in
this article which appeared in the Manchester Guardian in
London, as well as the S. F. Chronicle of June 27, 1968,
concerning the long accepted skull of St. Peter, as "it is a
fake." Then the article continues, "The hundreds of Popes
and millions of Roman Catholics who have accepted and
venerated the other skull were innocent victims of another
early tradition."
But the most
astounding statement in the long article found in the above
mentioned newspapers is, "The professor did not submit them
(Peter’s bones?) to modern scientific tests, which would
have determined the approximate age, because, she feared,
the process would have reduced them to dust." How could any
scientific study of bones be carried out without first
scientifically determining the age of the person, or bones?
This would be of the greatest interest and the most
important for further research. Also any scientist or
chemist knows that you do not have to submit the whole
skeleton for testing to determine the age. A part of the
shin bone or of a rib would be sufficient. It appears that
she was protecting her "Peter’s bones" from another possible
disaster, which a wrong age would have caused. The Vatican
and others have calculated through all existing evidence
that Peter lived to be around 80 and 82 years, and that he
died around the years of 62 or 64 A.D. These figures go
along perfectly, as does everything else in the case, with
the remains found in the Christian burial ground on the
Mount of Olives and in the ossuary on which was "clearly and
beautifully written," Simon Bar Jona in Aramaic. The
following was taken from the book, Races of Mankind, page
161:
"Strained attempts to have Peter, the Apostle to the
Hebrews of the East, in Paul’s territory at Rome and
martyred there are unworthy of serious consideration in
the light of all contemporary evidence. At his age
(eighty-two), that would not have been practicable. In
none of Paul’s writings is there the slightest
intimation that Peter ever had been or was at that city.
All statements to the contrary were made centuries later
and are fanciful and hearsay. The Papacy was not
organized until the second half of the 8th century. It
broke away from the Eastern Church (in the Ency. Brit.,
13th Ed., vol. 21, page 636) under Pippin III; also the
Papacy, by Abbe Guette."
The great
historian, Schaff, states that the idea of Peter being in
Rome is irreconcilable with the silence of the Scriptures,
and even with the mere fact of Paul’s epistle to the Romans.
In the year 58, Paul wrote his epistle to the Roman church,
but does not mention Peter, although he does name 28 leaders
in the church at Rome (Rom. 16:7). It must, therefore, be
concluded that if the whole subject is faced with detached
objectivity, the conclusion must inevitably be reached that
Peter was never in Rome. Paul lived and wrote in Rome, but
he declared that "Only Luke is with me." (1 Tim. 4:11)
Copyright
1960 by F. PAUL PETERSON. Copies may be obtained from your
local bookstore or from the author and publisher, F. Paul
Peterson, P.0. Box 7351, Fort Wayne, Indiana, Price $2.00.
Permission is granted to reproduce any part of this book if
title, price and address where it may be purchased are
given.
Scans
from Gli Scavi del Dominus Flevit
Also of note:
According to
the venerable
Bede's (673-735 A.D.)
Ecclesiastical
History of the English Nation, Book III, chapter XXIX,
the bones (relics) of Peter and Paul were shipped by Vitalian,
bishop of Rome, to Oswy,
king of the Saxons in 665 A.D. The librarian at Canterbury
Cathedral has apparently confirmed that church inventories
do record the arrival of the remains of Peter and Paul into
the church's safekeeping, shortly after Pope Vitalian sent
them to Britain. Unfortunately though, the remains were
apparently lost, or record of their location was lost,
probably in the aftermath of the Cromwellian Rebellion of
the mid 17th century. (see
this page).
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