Here you go...Can we briefly deviate from the OP for a moment? What are some of the archaeological proofs? I had a discussion with someone and he pointed out James’ ossuary as evidence that James wasn’t bodily resurrected in 70AD, although that ossuary is suspect of being a forgery.
As for your discussion with the other person concerning the James ossuary that somehow they thought proved James wasn't bodily resurrected - that ossuary is empty. Many, but not all of the ossuaries retrieved for study are found empty. Part of the reason for that could very well be that those ossuaries were confiscated by thieves for sale on the black market, who inadvertently dumped the contents as being considered unimportant before those ossuaries eventually passed into official hands. But that isn't the only reason why many are found empty.
Take for example the Caiaphas family tomb, first discovered intact in the Peace Forest section of Jerusalem. There were 12 ossuaries inside. Six of these ossuaries, (including the Caiaphas ossuary), had bones within, but not the others. Blame was placed on "grave-robbers" for the ossuaries which were opened and empty. But this does not make sense - especially for an intact family tomb. Why would the most ornate of the 12 ossuaries (the one with Caiaphas' name on it) be one that the supposed "grave-robbers" paid no attention to? Wouldn't those supposed "grave-robbers" have opened ALL of the ossuaries in their hunt for relics? Why leave the elaborately-carved Caiaphas ossuary alone? I maintain that, even among the Caiaphas family which was opposed to Christ, there had been individual members who had been true children of God during their lifetime - and whose mortal remains were bodily resurrected at Christ's AD 70 return. Six empty ossuaries in this intact Caiaphas tomb speak volumes.
Let's also consider the famous Hebron "cave of Machpelah", in which Abraham and Sarah, Isaac and Rebekah, Jacob and Leah were all buried. These were all children of faith. There is the traditional site today which is called the "cave of Machpelah" in Hebron, but the site doesn't match at all with the location we have described in Scripture for this cave. I believe the true location was discovered by Wyatt's team. This "cave of Machpelah" was entered and examined, and no bones whatever were found within this cave - only a large flat single bowl which more than likely was used for the preparation of spices to anoint the dead. One would think that at the very least Jacob's mummified body would still have some vestiges remaining for examination. But no. The burial cave with its three double niches for three pairs of bodies is completely empty. Again, I maintain that the six righteous occupants of this burial cave were bodily-resurrected in AD 70 and taken to heaven with the bodily-returning Christ.
As proof that Christ bodily returned to the Mount of Olives in AD 70, we can examine the description of this predicted return in Zechariah 14:4-5 IN THE LXX - not in the other translations which err in translating some of the language. This text does NOT teach that people would "flee" through a valley created by the Lord standing on the Mount of Olives. Wrong translation.
The better LXX translation reads as follows for Zech. 14:4-5: "And his feet shall stand in that day on the mount of Olives, which is before Jerusalem on the east, and the mount of Olives shall cleave asunder, half of it toward the east and the west, a very great division; and half the mountain shall lean to the north, and half of it to the south. And the valley of my mountains shall be CLOSED UP, and the valley of the mountains shall be joined on to Jasod, and shall be BLOCKED UP as it was blocked up in the days of the earthquake, in the days of Ozias king of Juda; and the Lord my God shall come, and all the saints with him."
This is describing an earthquake at the Mount of Olives location when Christ returns, with the crest of the Mount of Olives breaking apart and "leaning" or falling downhill in all directions - north, south, east, and west. This resulting landslide rubble falling downhill would "CLOSE UP" or "BLOCK UP" the Kidron Valley as far as the "Jasod" location. This is the "Azal" location which the KJV writes about, which actually shows up on today's maps as the "Wadi Yasul", just off the far southeastern corner of Jerusalem's walls. Nobody was going to "flee" through this valley at Christ's bodily return, because it was going to be "blocked up" or "closed up" when Christ set foot on the Mount of Olives at that second coming return.
Archaeologists have examined the top layers which currently fill the bed of the Kidron Valley, and have discovered that there is a 40' layer which has been deposited there around the AD 70 time frame, and with yet another layer below that one (deposited in King Uzziah's days during that earthquake). This topmost 40' layer has moved the deepest part of the bed of the Kidron Valley about 70' further away from the walls of Jerusalem than it was in Christ's days. In other words, the current-day Mount of Olives isn't nearly as steep as it used to be in Christ's days, because the top of the Mount of Olives broke apart at Christ's bodily return in AD 70, with all that landslide rubble falling downhill to "close up" the Kidron Valley and "block it up" as far as the Azal location.
And since we know that this earthquake at Christ's bodily return to the Mount of Olives was to be accompanied by a resurrection, and those resurrected ones being caught up together with Him to meet the Lord in the air to return to heaven with Him, this dates Christ's return to the date of that topmost earthquake rubble layer. He left His "calling card" of landslide rubble lying in the Kidron Valley back then as proof that He came exactly where and when He was predicted to bodily return.
Daniel 12:11-13 had predicted this resurrection, and he dated it to arrive 1,335 days after those two predicted events would take place during the same season of time. Those two events in Daniel 12:11 occurred in AD 66, with the end of the 1,335th day countdown falling on AD 70's Pentecost day in Jerusalem - the date of Christ's second coming return.
We should also realize the significance of the eastern gate of the temple which Ezekiel 46 described. For that rebuilt temple constructed at Zerubbabel's directions, the people of Israel in the post-exilic return were to worship as they stood facing that eastern gate in the Sabbaths and the new moons (Ez. 46:1-3). This gate was only for the "prince" of the people to enter AND LEAVE by that gate (Ez. 46:8). The significance of the people of Israel worshipping at that particular location and at those particular times was to symbolize both the location and time for where and when "Messiah the Prince" would both enter AND LEAVE this world to return to heaven along with the bodily-resurrected saints.
NOTE: Once that Jerusalem temple was torn down in September of AD 70, that eastern gate of the temple was also torn down - because by then, the significance of that eastern gate's existence would have been fulfilled by Christ having bodily returned to the Mount of Olives location AND LEFT from that eastern side of Jerusalem's walls. There would be no more reason for that temple and its eastern gate to exist, once it had fulfilled its intended purpose.
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