Return to Jericho

By | September 15, 2004

For the last four years, it hasn’t been very easy (or always safe) to visit Jericho. Today I had the opportunity and took it. The tell hasn’t really changed, but was good to be back and think about related things. Jericho is, of course, famous for being destroyed first in the conquest of Joshua, but the Bible records many other events occurring there. I did a loop around the tell, trying to make sure I hadn’t missed anything in visits before, and taking 1GB worth of photos. I was struck by just how well remains are preserved in balks and trenches, with clear outlines of sometimes hundreds of mudbricks visible. I also was glad I checked on the storejars that Kenyon left in her balk (square H2 if I remember correctly), as the erosion of the balk has made the storejars stand out more clearly than before. The best part of the visit? Showing Luke and Mark the various things (isn’t it something when Mark asks a question that demands an answer of “Kathleen Kenyon”? :-)). And talking about the story with them. I don’t think the impressions will ever leave them. Afterwards they went on a camel ride; I include a couple of photos from that.

A long way

By | September 10, 2004

It’s 7,594 miles from where I grew up in Camarillo, CA to Jerusalem, according to the calculations of indo.com. This weekend my parents move out of their house of 29 years to the area of Grants Pass, Oregon, which is a 400 miles closer at 7,147 miles. This may not seem right until you realize that the closest way from here to there is over the North Pole. Next question: what two inhabited places are the furthest apart (and how far)? I don’t know. I see that Jerusalem is 9,994 miles from Christchurch, New Zealand. And it’s 10,893 miles from Reykjavik, Iceland to Christchurch. Ok, back to work.

Jerusalem in the 10th/9th centuries BC

By | August 27, 2004

This article by Margreet Steiner, published by Bible and Interpretation, does not start a new debate but it is a new article with a couple of my photos. The article is not long and gives the new “minimalist” position rather clearly. (The old “minimalist” position, adhered to by the teacher of the article’s author, Kenyon, was that Jerusalem never expanded beyond the Eastern Hill in the OT period; they can’t advocate that anymore with the evidence, so they’re trying a new minimalist approach.) I think writing a critique of this article would be pretty easy for students of my Jerusalem Archaeology class (and even better if they’ve had History of Ancient Israel, which deals with these issues on a more global basis). It’s almost remarkable that such can be regarded as scholarly work. I guess you can just ignore all the literary sources (the Bible and the Amarna Letters), but why you should be taken seriously if you do is not obvious. But of course the debate is much bigger. For the “complete picture” of this perspective, see Finkelstein and Silberman, The Bible Unearthed. For a careful explanation for why the biblical record can’t be ignored, see the first 3 chapters of Provan, Long, and Longman, A Biblical History of Israel. Both should be required reading for all grad students in biblical studies today.

More on John the Baptist Cave

By | August 23, 2004

After posting the previous message about the cave, I decided to add this to the BiblePlaces.com website with a few photos (here). In the last few days I’ve added some new links to that page. I’ll include such here as well:

Letter by James Tabor, giving details not in published sources
Christianity Today Weblog, suspicious of the claim
NTGateway Weblog, refers to a number of sources (including my article)
AKMA’s Random Thoughts, observations of a doubter
Search for the Sacred (Newsweek), a longer article giving some of the background of biblical archaeology and concluding with the assessment of the cave by some scholars (“It’s pure fiction. It’s not archeology,” says one).
Video of John the Baptist Cave (xtra) – 42 second clip by a news organization.

Cave of John the Baptist

By | August 17, 2004

The AP published a report yesterday, run by everyone, that an archaeologist had found “the cave of John the Baptist.” You can find it online everywhere, including this CNN page which has 3 photos (also Haaretz and Jerusalem Post). People have asked me what I think, so what follows is my response. I would note that I know Shimon Gibson, respect him and his work, and even participated in the excavation of this cave with our students on a handful of days in the past couple of years.

The question is: how do we know that this cave is associated with John the Baptist? In the last decades, scholars have been criticizing “biblical archaeology,” particularly for its haste in associating sites and levels with biblical events. Archaeological “proof” for such biblical stories is hailed until a later discovery shows the evidence to be flimsy and the conclusion incorrect.

Gibson is not a “biblical archaeologist” and has no intention to prove the Bible correct. But I believe he makes the same mistakes as previous archaeologists in jumping to a conclusion for which the evidence is slim – particularly a conclusion which associates it with the Bible and therefore makes it headline-worthy. If this was just another Iron Age cistern used by hermits in a later period, no one would know about it (and no one would contribute to Gibson’s archaeological fund). But if it’s identified with an important, and little known, biblical figure as John the Baptist, the potential attention is profound and book sales multiplied (book is released today – here it is at Amazon). And yesterday’s headlines bore this out – every website I visited had a link to the story, and the book’s sales rank at Amazon skyrocketed to #335.

Gibson says he is certain of the identification. He said, “I am now certain that this cave was connected with the ancient cult of John the Baptist. Indeed, this may very well be’the ‘ cave of the early years of John’s life, the place where he sought his first solitude in the ‘wilderness ‘ and the place where he practised his baptisms” (source). This is the claim that must be evaluated.

First, it must be noted that the main claim is that this cave was used by followers of John the Baptist, hundreds of years after his death (in the Byzantine period, 330-630 A.D.). Pilgrims allegedly came to this cave to commemorate this man. The next issue is whether or not this pilgrim tradition is correct – if so, the cave could have been used by John the Baptist himself. These are two separate issues and answering one affirmatively doesn’t necessarily mean that the second is also true. If the first is true, but not the second, what is being hailed is yet another cave that pilgrims visited (erroneously). There are hundreds of such caves in Israel! Among the many examples, Byzantine pilgrims visited the cave where Mary allegedly breastfed Jesus (and milk dropped on the ground) – this is the Chapel of the Milk Grotto in Bethlehem (and pilgrims still visit/worship here).

So I am not impressed if this is another cave that the Byzantines believed to be a holy place. But I’m not convinced that this was such a cave in the first place. It’s a cistern. It has steps leading into it. There is a drawing of a man on the wall and another drawing of a head without a body. There is a foot carved into a rock. The cave is about 2.5 air miles (4 km) from Ein Kerem, the traditional place where John the Baptist was born (not grew up, not ministered). It is about 1 mile from the “St. John in the Wilderness” monastery, built over another cave which was the site of a chapel in the Crusader period (12th century). From the reports and from my own knowledge of the site, that’s the evidence.

The strongest support, in my opinion, is the location. The closest thing to this cave as far as important biblical events or people is John the Baptist. But a figure sketched on the wall – what does this mean? There is nothing that identifies this as an important person, let alone John. There are no inscriptions or direct evidence to tie this to the biblical figure. The evidence is all circumstantial, and appears to me to be weak. I know of no other person (scholar, archaeologist) who follows Gibson in this identification, though perhaps some will come to light with this dramatic announcement.

It bears repeating that I have great respect for Dr. Gibson and wish him all the best in his current and future endeavors. (And a book out last year by him is highly recommended for those interested in the subject as I am: Jerusalem in Original Photographs). But I always felt in the time at the site and now with this announcement that the claim was very bold and the evidence meager. Perhaps the book contains the evidence, but it seems strange that such would be missing from the press conference.

Email

By | August 13, 2004

If I haven’t written you back yet, I apologize. It’s not for lack of trying. Today I wrote 37 emails, this week 108, and this year 2932. And my inbox is still full. Some are short and easy to write, and some more complicated. Some I like to write; some I don’t. I do wish I could work faster. It’s now the end of Friday afternoon and I’m going home. Shabbat shalom!

Israeli-Arab Conflict by the Numbers

By | August 13, 2004

This was apparently written recently by Dennis Prager and augmented by Clarence Wagner, but I couldn’t find an original online source, so I’ve reproduced it here. Numbers of course don’t tell the whole story, but they are interesting.

  • Number of times Jerusalem is mentioned in the Old Testament: 881
  • Number of times Jerusalem is mentioned in the New Testament: 144
  • Number of times Jerusalem is mentioned in the Koran: 0
  • Number of times Palestine is mentioned in either the Old or the New Testament, or the Koran: 0
  • Number of Arab leaders who visited Jerusalem when it was under Arab rule (1948 to 1967): 1, King Abdullah of Jordan, who was shot and killed by a Palestinian as he entered the Al-Aqsa Mosque in 1952
  • Number of Arab refugees who fled the land that became Israel: approximately 600,000
  • Number of Jewish refugees who fled Arab countries: approximately 600,000
  • Number of United Nations agencies that deal ONLY with Palestinian refugees: 1
  • Number of UN agencies that deal with ALL OTHER refugees in the world: 1
  • Number of sovereign Jewish states that have existed on the land called Palestine: 3
  • Number of sovereign Arab or Muslim states that have existed on the land called Palestine: 0
  • Number of terrorist attacks by Israelis or Jews since 1967: 1
  • Number of terrorist attacks by Arabs or Muslims since 1967: tens of thousands
  • Percentage of Jewish leaders who have praised the Jewish terrorist: approximately 1%
  • Percentage of Palestinian leaders who have praised Islamic terrorists: approximately 90%
  • Number of Jewish countries: 1
  • Number of Jewish democracies: 1
  • Number of Arab countries: 19
  • Number of Arab democracies: 0
  • Number of Arab women killed annually by fathers and brothers in “honor killings”: thousands
  • Number of Jewish women killed annually by fathers and brothers in “honor killings”: 0
  • Number of Christian or Jewish prayer services allowed in Saudi Arabia: 0
  • Number of Muslim prayer services allowed in Israel: unlimited
  • Number of Arabs Israel allowed to live in Arab settlements in Israel with full Israeli citizenship rights: 1,250,000
  • Number of Jews Palestinian Authority allows to live in Jewish settlements in PA areas: 0%
  • Percentage of UN Commission on Human Rights resolutions condemning an Arab country for human rights violations: 0%
  • Percentage of UN Commission on Human Rights resolutions condemning Israel for human rights violations: 26%
  • Number of UN Security Council resolutions on the Middle East between 1948 and 1991: 175
  • Number of these resolutions against Israel: 97Number of these resolutions against an Arab state: 4
  • Number of Arab Muslim countries that have been members of the UN Security Council: 16
  • Number of times Israel has been a member of the UN Security Council: 0 (Israel is the only nation ever forbidden to sit on the Security Council)
  • Number of UN General Assembly resolutions condemning Israel: 322
  • Number of UN General Assembly resolutions condemning an Arab country: 0
  • Percentage of UN votes in which Arab countries voted with the United States in 2002: 16.6%
  • Percentage of UN votes in which Israel voted with the U.S. in 2002: 92.6%
  • Percentage of Middle East studies professors who defend Zionism and Israel: approximately 1%
  • Percentage of Middle East Studies professors who believe in diversity on college campuses: 100%
  • Percentage of people who argue that, of all the countries in the world, only the Jewish state has no right to exist and who also believe some other country has no right to exist: 0
  • Percentage of people who argue that the Jewish state has no right to exist and who also deny they are anti-Jewish: approximately 100%
  • Number of Muslims in the world: more than 1 billion
  • Number of Muslim demonstrations against Islamic terror: approximately 2

Unknown Archaeologist

By | August 9, 2004

There are maybe two other people who would appreciate this and almost certainly they won’t see this, but nonetheless, for my own amusement, I proceed. I was reading tonight an article in Artifax, sourced to the Jerusalem Post (and here’s an online quotation of relevant section). The article describes the recent excavations of the Pool of Siloam and mentions that the Byzantine period pool was “discovered by archeologist Blis Vediki at the end of the century.” I did a double-take, not recognizing this archaeologist. I have taught the subject and shame on me for not knowing about this apparently important scholar! Well, I don’t want to spoil the surprise – go back, scratch your head and see if you can figure out who Blis Vediki is. – – – – – – – Actually he is two people, and the phrase was something the journalist apparently copied down in haste without bothering to check himself. Ve is “and” in Hebrew – it’s Blis AND Diki, or more correctly, Bliss and Dickie. Frederick Jones Bliss and Archibald Campbell Dickie.

New Newsletter from Dr. Doug Bookman

By | August 5, 2004

I have the happy opportunity of being the first in the world to announce the new “BookNotes” – periodic comments on biblical and theological subjects by Dr. Doug Bookman. You can sign up here: www.bibleplaces.com/booknotes.htm or here. Now you might wonder how I got this distinct honor. Good question. Does Bookman know about this? Kinda. Has he agreed to do it? Not exactly. Will he if thousands of people sign up? More likely than if there are just two (that’s the current count – two of my email addresses :-)). Have I been after him to do this for 2.6 years? Yes. Actually setting it up was the genesis of the BiblePlaces Newsletter (once I figured out how to do his, I figured I’d do one myself). Since that time, I switched mine (and his) over to an ad-free service (provided most graciously by Brad Hilton and his employers!). Will there be a BookNotes website? Yes. Do we need someone to design it? Also yes.

Tell anyone you know who might be interested to sign up. (Link again: www.bibleplaces.com/booknotes.htm)