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Archaeological and External Evidence
for the Bible
Archeology
consistently confirms the Bible!
Archaeology
and the Old Testament
- Ebla
tabletsdiscovered in 1970s in Northern Syria. Documents
written on clay tablets from around 2300 B.C. demonstrate that
personal and place names in the Patriarchal accounts are genuine.
In use in Ebla was the name "Canaan," a name critics once said
was not used at that time and was used incorrectly in the early
chapters of the Bible. The tablets refer to all five "cities
of the plain" mentioned in Genesis 14, previously assumed to
have been mere legends.
- Greater
proportion of Egyptian words in the Pentateuch (first five books)
than in rest of the Old Testament. Accurate Egyptian names:
Potiphar (Gen.39), Zaphenath-Paneah (Joseph's
Egyptian name, Gen. 41:45), Asenath (Gen.41:45), On
(Gen. 41:45), Rameses (Gen. 47:11), Oithom (Exodus
1:11).
- Finds
in Egypt are consistent with the time, place, and other details
of biblical accounts of the Israelites in Egypt. These include
housing and tombs that could have been of the Israelites, as
well as a villa and tomb that could have been Joseph's.
- Confounding
earlier skeptics, but confirming the Bible, an important discovery
was made in Egypt in 1896. A tabletthe Merneptah Stelawas
found that mentions Israel. (Merneptah was the pharaoh that
ruled Egypt in 1212-1202 B.C.) The context of the stela indicates
that Israel was a significant entity in the late 13th century
B.C.
- The
Hittites were once thought to be a biblical legend, until their
capital and records were discovered in Turkey.
- Crucial
find in Nuzi (northeastern Iraq), an entire cache of Hittite
legal documents from 1400 B.C. Confirms many details of Genesis,
Deuteronomy, such as: (a) siring of legitimate children through
handmaidens, (b) oral deathbed will as binding, (c) the power
to sell one's birthright for relatively trivial property (Jacob
& Esau), (d) need for family idols, such as Rachel stole from
Laban, to secure inheritance, (e) form of the covenant in Deuteronomy
exactly matches the form of suzerainty treaties between Hittite
emperors and vassal kings.
- Walls
of Jerichodiscovery in 1930s by John Garstang. The walls
fell suddenly, and outwardly (unique), so Israelites could clamber
over the ruins into the city (Joshua 6:20).
- In
1986, scholars identified an ancient seal belonging to Baruch,
son of Neriah, a scribe who recorded the prophecies of Jeremiah
(Jer. 45:11).
- In
1990, Harvard researchers unearthed a silver-plated bronze calf
figurine reminiscent of the huge golden calf mentioned in the
book of Exodus.
- In
1993, archaeologists uncovered a 9th century B.C. inscription
at Tel Dan. The words carved into a chunk of basalt refer to
the "House of David" and the "King of Israel." And the Bible's
version of Israelite history after the reign of David's son,
Solomon, is believed to be based on historical fact because
it is corroborated by independent account of Egyptian and Assyrian
inscriptions.
- It
was once claimed there was no Assyrian king named Sargon as
recorded in Isaiah 20:1, because this name was not known in
any other record. Then, Sargon's palace was discovered in Iraq.
The very event mentioned in Isaiah 20, his capture of Ashdod,
was recorded in the palace walls! Even more, fragments of a
stela (a poetic eulogy) memorializing the victory were found
at Ashdod itself.
- Another
king who was in doubt was Belshazzar, king of Babylon, named
in Daniel 5. The last king of Babylon was Nabonidus according
to recorded history. Tablet was found showing that Belshazzar
was Nabonidus' son.
- The
ruins of Sodom and Gomorrah have been discovered southeast of
the Dead Sea. Evidence at the site seems consistent with the
biblical account: "Then the Lord rained down burning sulfur
on Sodom and Gomorrahfrom the Lord out of the heavens."
The destruction debris was about 3 feet thick and buildings
were burned from fires that started on the rooftops. Geologist
Frederick Clapp theorizes that that pressure from an earthquake
could have spewed out sulfur-laden bitumen (similar to asphalt)
known to be in the area through the fault line upon which the
cities rest. The dense smoke reported by Abraham is consistent
with a fire from such material, which could have ignited by
a spark or ground fire.
Archaeology and the New Testament
- The
New Testament mentions specific individuals, places, and various
official titles of local authorities, confirmed by recent archeology.
Luke sites exact titles of officials. (Titles varied from city
to city so they are easily checked for accuracy.) Lysanias
the Tetrarch in Abilene (Luke 3:1)verified by inscription
dated 14-29 A.D. Erastus, city treasurer of Corinth (Romans
16:23)verified by pavement inscription. Gallioproconsul
of Achaia (Greece) in A.D. 51 (Acts 18:12). Politarchs
("city ruler") in Thessalonica (Acts 17:6). Chief Man of
the Island on Malta (Acts 28:7). Stone Pavement at
Pilate's headquarters (John 19:13)discovered recently.
Pool at Bethesda discovered in 1888. Many examples
of silver shrines to Artemis found (Acts 19:28). Inscription
confirms the title of the city as "Temple Warden of Artemis".
Account of Paul's sea voyage in Acts is "one of the most instructive
documents for the knowledge of ancient seamanship."
- Census
of Luke 1. Census began under Augustus approximately every 14
years: 23-22 B.C., 9-8 B.C., 6 A.D. There is evidence of enrollment
in 11-8 B.C. in Egyptian papyri.
- Problem:
Historian Josephus puts Quirinius as governor in Syria at
6 A.D. Solution: Recent inscription confirms that Quirinius
served as governor in 7 B. C. (in extraordinary, military
capacity).
- Problem:
Herod's kingdom was not part of the Roman Empire at the
time, so there would not have been a census. Solution: it
was a client kingdom. Augustus treated Herod as subject
(Josephus). Parallela census took place in the client
kingdom of Antiochus in eastern Asia Minor under Tiberius.
- Enrollment
in hometown? Confirmed by edict of Vibius Maximus, Roman
prefect of Egypt, in 104 A.D. "...it is necessary for all
who are for any cause whatsoever way from their administrative
divisions to return home to comply with the customary ordinance
of enrollment."
- Opinion
of Sir William Ramsay, one of the outstanding Near Eastern archeologists:
"Luke is a historian of the first rank; not merely are his statements
of fact trustworthy; he is possessed of the true historic sense;
he fixes his mind on the idea and plan that rules in the evolution
of history, and proportions the scale of his treatment to the
importance of each incident. He seizes the important and critical
events and shows their true nature at greater length...In short,
this author should be placed among the very greatest of historians."
- Diggers
recently uncovered an ossuary (repository for bones) with the
inscription "Joseph Son of Caiaphas." This marked the first
archaeological evidence that the high priest Caiaphas was a
real person. According to the gospels, Caiaphas presided at
the Sanhedrin's trial of Jesus.
External References to Jesus and the Christian Church.
- Josephus.
Born to priestly family in A.D. 37. Commanded Jewish troops
in Galilee during rebellion. Surrendered, and earned favor of
Emperor Vespasian. Wrote 20 books of Antiquities of the Jews.
Refers to John the Baptist (killed by Herod) and to James, the
brother of Jesus (condemned to death by stoning by the Sanhedrin).
Passage about Jesus:
"And
there arose about this time Jesus, a wise man, if indeed
we should call him a man, for he was a doer of marvelous
deeds, a teacher of men who receive the truth with
pleasure. He led away many Jews, and also many of the Greeks.
This man was the Christ. And when Pilate had condemned
him to the cross on impeachment by the chief men among us,
those who loved him at first did not cease; for he appeared
to them on the third day alive again, the divine prophets
having spoken these and thousands of other wonderful things
about him, and even now the tribe of Christians, so named
after him, has not yet died out."
(Note:
We know from Origen and others that Josephus was not a Christian,
so this text may have suffered some corruption from emendations
by Christian scribes. It may be that the "if indeed we
should..." phrase is original, a tongue-in-cheek reference
to Christian belief. The phrase "the truth" (alethe)
may have originally been "strange things" (aethe).
Also, such phrases as "they say" or "supposedly"
may have been piously deleted by scribes. Still, it seems
certain that Josephus did refer to Jesus as a miracle-worker
crucified under Pontius Pilate.)
- Early
Gentile writers, referred to by Christian apologists in 2nd
century.
- Thalluswrote
a history of Greece and Asia Minor in A.D. 52. Julius Africanus
(221 AD), commenting on Thallus, said: "Thallus, in
the third book of his histories, explains away the darkness
[during the crucifixion] as an eclipse of the sununreasonably,
as it seems to me [since the Passover took place during
a full moon.]"
- Official
Roman records of the census, and Pontius Pilate's official
report to the Emperor. Justin Martyr wrote his "Defense
of Christianity" to Emperor Antonius Pius, referred
him to Pilate's report, preserved in the archives. Tertullian,
writing to Roman officials, writes with confidence that
records of the Luke 1 census can still be found.
- Roman
historians
- TacitusGreatest
Roman historian, born 52 A.D., wrote a history of the reign
of Nero in 110 A.D. "...Christus, from whom they got
their name, had been executed by sentence of the procurator
Pontius Pilate when Tiberias was emperor; and the pernicious
superstition was checked for a short time only to break
out afresh, not only in Judea, the home of the plague, but
in Rome itself, .. " (Annals 15:44)
- SuetoniusAD.
120. In his Life of Claudius: "As the Jews were
making disturbances at the instigation of Chrestus, he expelled
them from Rome."
- Pliny
the YoungerGovernor of Bithynia in Asia Minor, wrote
the emperor in A.D. 112 about the sect of Christians, who
were in "the habit of meeting on a certain fixed day,
before it was light, when they sang an anthem to Christ
as God."
Note:
A good web site for biblical archaeology is
www.christiananswers.net.
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