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Old 02-22-2005, 11:33 AM   #31
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Originally Posted by PhilosopherJay
I remember seeing a lecture by a noted Israeli archaeologists a few years ago. He spent about an hour telling the enthralled young college audience how archaeology had proved the Bible to be amazingly historically accurate. The audience treated him like a holy man, practically singing hallelujah, with every miraculous find he described.

When I pointed out that no evidence had been found for a united kingdom of Israel and Judea and that no evidence for the exodus had been found, he treated me as an ignorant and blasphemous unbeliever. He did concede that perhaps the exodus did not involve 500,000 people but only a few thousand, but this too could be explained without doubting the basic truthfulness of the biblical texts.

The session taught me that the archaeologist with the bible in one hand and a spade in the other is still very much alive and thriving.
If he was Israeli, that sounds like Zertal. And he isn't quite mainstream.
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Old 02-22-2005, 08:31 PM   #32
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Originally Posted by Vorkosigan
That's one of the things that struck me about the Mesha Stele. The strong resemblence of "moabite" to Hebrew, as though a forger was working from a known example....
Proximity might rather be the key to the strong resemblance. It is not just Moabite that strongly resembles paleo-Hebrew. Of course, we might speak of their strong resemblance to Phoenician.
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Old 02-22-2005, 08:44 PM   #33
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Originally Posted by S.C.Carlson
Not exactly because the forgery involved Christianity, but because Golan's previous forgeries were basically first-temple period forgeries and the James Ossuary represented a foray into a new field he did not know well at all.
Thanks for the clarification. I wondered if this is what you might have meant.

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When the subject matter pertains to something that has strong ideological resonance to potential victim, it reinforces the willingness to believe and suspends the otherwise normal skepticism in that victim.
While I understand and whole-heartedly agree, I also wonder if people don't sometimes overemphasize this point with respect to the supposed gullibility of the religious (note especially the mention of religion in the indictment). I live in the heart of the Bible belt, and could hardly find another Christian who knew of the James ossuary. To those who did know of it, it made no difference, as their faith did not depend upon such physical evidence.
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Old 02-24-2005, 05:14 AM   #34
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In the indictment, there is this:
  • h. Pottery jug bearing the inscription “תעבר ןיי ךס×* והיתממלâ€?, published in
    the scientific literature, and which scholars believed was given as a
    contribution to the Temple.

Is that object described somewhere on the net, and imaged? What does the inscription say? How much is extant?

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