
Part 1: Introduction | Part 2: The Days of Abraham | Part 3: Egypt | Part 4: Canaan | Part 5: David | Part 6: Egypt vs Jerusalem | Part 7: Assyria | Part 8: Jerusalem | Part 9: Babylon
In this series I’ve attempted to identify and describe the highlights of archaeological discoveries that help support the historical reliability of the biblical narrative. I define “highlights” by the discoveries’ historical significance, their level of detail, and their personal interest to me. :-)
Takeaways
Two things to notice about these.
The most significant, I suppose, is how unlikely it is that most of them would be forgeries. Forgers want to make a big splash. For example, in 1983 a German publication released a 62-volume set of diaries purported to be by Adolf Hitler. Some experts were convinced by them, and they stirred up a firestorm until they were debunked. Forgers get their reward by getting a lot of attention—and usually money.
Now, I suppose the Balaam inscriptions at Deir Alla might be suspect on these grounds (though in fact the majority of experts view the inscriptions as genuine), but what about the others? Nebo-Sarsekim? Asayahu? Even Baruch? (why not Jeremiah?) An Assyrian receipt for tribute paid by Judah in the 8th century BC? Libyan soldiers in a relatively minor pharaoh’s army? An adoption tablet from a Mesopotamian city?
Not likely.
For many of these finds, their very triviality argues for genuineness.
A second observation is the distribution of these artifacts. They come from across the Near East, from Egypt to Iran to Syria. They come from throughout the timeline, from 2000 BC to about 535 BC.
The credibility of the biblical account is attested to by Israel’s neighbors, allies, friends and foes.
This is a very strong historical record.
Broader Examples
I’ve limited this selection of discoveries to a relatively narrow topic; there’s plenty available on other archaeological discoveries:
And on and on it goes.
Resources
There’s a lot more than I’ve delineated here. May I recommend a handful of resources?
- James B. Pritchard, Ancient Near Eastern Texts Relating to the Old Testament (expensive; try a library search)
- Bible Places blog (His photo collections are remarkable, too.)
Dessert
One more thing, just to cleanse the palate.
(Dessert doesn’t cleanse the palate, does it? Oh, well. Work with me here.)
In Acts, Luke describes the initial missionary journey of Saul/Paul and Barnabas. They were sent out from Antioch, Syria, and proceeded to preach their way across the island of Cyprus, which was Barnabas’s home. There they interacted with the Roman proconsul of the island, Sergius Paulus, who was then converted (Ac 13.6-7).
Interestingly, multiple inscriptions mention this person. Most particularly, an inscription at Soli, on the northwestern coast of the island, names “Paulus” as proconsul; this would be Sergius Paulus’s family name, so it does not identify him specifically; but this was precisely the time Sergius held that office. Other more specific inscriptions have been unearthed in Pisidian Antioch, which was the first place Paul and Barnabas went after leaving the island. If the proconsul had family roots there, he might well have opened doors to the two preachers for their next stop.
A little taste from the New Testament just to keep you interested.
Photo by Annie Spratt on Unsplash
