The Letter and the Scroll: What Archaeology Tells Us About the Bible

The Letter and the Scroll: What Archaeology Tells Us About the Bible
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For 2,000 years and more, the Bible and its precepts have shaped world culture and civilization, whether Judeo-Christian or not. The Bible is a touchstone of religious belief, literary accomplishment, morality, and history unlike any other. Biblical interpretations have changed over the millennia, but the past 100 years have witnessed some of the most important transformations in our perspective, and no recent influence has been greater than archaeology.

In the mid-20th century, the unearthing of the Dead Sea Scrolls—to cite just one of many modern finds—deepened our understanding of the Biblical world, its peoples, and their beliefs. Since then, new evidence has appeared—the Tel Dan inscription, the Merneptah Stele, and the Gabriel Revelation—with each revelation providing richer insights into the scriptural narrative and the way these stories were written and handed down, confirming the details of historical events and personages, or clarifying the meaning and chronology of biblical ideas.

Meticulous, scholarly, yet always accessible, this is required reading for anyone interested in both Old and New Testaments and the creeds, cultures, and civilizations of ancient Hebrews and early Christians alike.

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Found in 2008 by archaeologists excavating at Khirbet Qeiyafa, a fortified city near Bethlehem occupied around the time of King David, this message written on clay is the oldest Hebrew inscription yet discovered, dating to around 1000 B.C.E. (Sebastian Scheiner/AP) Despite containing only 14 lines of script, the Tel Dan Stela has become one of the most important recent discoveries in biblical archaeology. It is the oldest non-biblical text to refer to the kingdom of Israel and the only one to refer to the House of David. (Israel Museum, Jerusalem) The Dome of the Rock, built over the rubble of Solomon’s and Herod’s Temple, rises above the old City of David. (Zev Radovan)
In solemn procession, envoys from Media ascend the stairs to pay tribute to the Persian king, in this relief from the palace at Persepolis. (James P. Blair)

The widespread use of tetradrachm coins like this one featuring Antiochus IV Epiphanes symbolized the increasing Hellenization of the Seleucid empire. Jewish law forbade such “graven images” of men and animals. (Zev Radovan) A papyrus dating to ca 160 C.E. with part of the census return from “Paesis, son of Nebteichis,” a Roman citizen of the province of Egypt. (Papyrus Collection, University of Michigan) This fragment of the Gospel of John dates to the second half of the first century of the current era and is the oldest existing copy of any book in the New Testament. (The John Rylands University Library, University of Manchester) A pair of fish, an early symbol of Christ, adorn the mosaic floor at the Megiddo church, Israel. (David Silverman/Getty)

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1948: A Soldier’s Tale – The Bloody Road to Jerusalem

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ANCIENT HEBREW COINS

ANCIENT HEBREW COINS
A coin is usually a piece of hard material, usually metal or a metallic material, usually in the shape of a disc, and most often issued by a government. Coins are used as a form of money in transactions of various kinds, from the everyday circulation coins to the storage of vast amounts of bullion coins. In the present day, coins and banknotes make up the cash forms of all modern money systems. Coins made for circulation (general monetized use) are usually used for lower-valued units, and banknotes for the higher values; also, in most money systems, the highest value coin is worth less than the lowest-value note. The face value of circulation coins is usually higher than the gross value of the metal used in making them, but this is no longer generally the case with historical circulation coins made of precious metals.

Israel, officially the State of Israel, is a country in Southwest Asia located on the southeastern edge of the Mediterranean Sea. It has borders with Lebanon in the north, Syria and Jordan in the east, and Egypt on the southwest, and contains geographically diverse features within its relatively small area. The West Bank and Gaza Strip, which are partially administrated by the Palestinian National Authority, are also adjacent. With a population of about 7.2 million, the majority of whom are Jews, Israel is the world’s only Jewish state. It is also home to Arab Muslims, Christians and Druze, as well as other religious and ethnic minority groups. Jerusalem is the nation’s capital, seat of government, and largest city.
The modern state of Israel has its roots in the Land of Israel, a concept central to Judaism for over three thousand years. After World War I, the League of Nations approved the British Mandate for Palestine with the intent of creating a “national home for the Jewish people”. In 1947, the United Nations approved the partition of the Mandate of Palestine into two states, one Jewish and one Arab.

In this movie there are the following parts:

* Biblical coins
* Ancient Hebrew Coins
* Ancient coins from Jerusalem

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Revolutionary Strategies in Early Christianity

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Catalogue of the Western Asiatic Seals in the British Museum: Pre-Achaemenid and Achaemenid Periods (Cylinder Seals) (v. 3)

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This volume of the “Catalogue of the Western Asiatic Seals in the British Museum” provides an inventory of the impressions of Near Eastern stamp seals on cuneiform tablets and clay bullae, as well as on jar handles from Palestine, in the collections of the British Museum. The material is presented in chronological arrangement, but a typological arrangement is partially provided in the Pictorial Typological Index. The volume is supplemented with an Index of Subjects based on the descriptions in the Catalogue.

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Wedding Music

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Take Notes: People and Places on Banknotes of Israel

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Handbook of Biblical Numismatics from Abraham to the Crusades


An expanded and updated version of the first book that introduced novice collectors and history buffs to the ancient coins issued by Judaea and related coins of the Greeks, Romans etc. These “Bible coins” offer unique insights into Jewish, Christian and Islamic history in the Holy Land.
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Lost Coin: Parables of Women, Work, and Wisdom (Biblical Seminar)


A collection of feminist interpretations of parables about women and women’s work. This volume not only fills a gap in the scholarly literature on parables, but brings to life vignettes from ancient Mediterranean women’s lives and offer insights into the place of women in the ministry of Jesus, the early church, and Christian theology. It is a rich resource for scholarship, teaching and preaching.Contributors include the editor, Elisabeth Schnssler Fiorenza, Linda Maloney, Kathleen Nash, Pheme Perkins, Barbara Reid, Kathleen Rushton, Holly Hearon, and Adele Reinhartz. Topics include feminist readings of the Parable of the Persistent Widow, the ôWise and Foolish Virgins,ö the Prodigal Son, the Faithful Steward, and the ôBrideö in John 3.>
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