Bibliology Session 6-Historicity of the Bible Part 2
Notes
Transcript
Defending Inspiration
The Historicity of the Bible Part 2
Defending Inspiration
The idea that the Bible is a supernatural book
sourced in God has come under immense attack in
the last couple hundred years, however, we are
going to defend the idea of inspiration by using
two main angles…
1. The Historic Nature of the Bible
2. The Supernatural Nature of the Bible
Historicity of the Bible
1. The Bible Claims to be Historically Accurate &
Based upon Eyewitness Accounts (Deut.
4:32-40; Luke 1:1-4; Acts 4:20; 26:24-27; 1 Cor.
15:6; 1 John 1:1-4).
2. The Bible Can be Demonstrated to be
Historically Accurate by Examining Evidence
from History & Archeology.
In 1993, archeologists digging at Tel Dan in northern Israel found a fragment of a stone
inscription that clearly refers to the “house of David” and identifies David as the “king
of Israel.” This is the first inscription outside the Bible that confirms that David was the
king of Israel in the ninth century BC. Some critics suggested that the find was a fake.
But the following summer two additional fragments of the original were found.
Hezekiah’s Tunnel
According to 2 Kings 20:20, King Hezekiah brought water
into the city of Jerusalem in preparation for the impending
invasion of Sennacherib.
In 1880 some school boys were wading in the Pool of Siloam
when one waded about nineteen feet into the conduit and
discovered some peculiar marks cut in the east rock wall
above the water level. When they informed their teacher,
Professor Conrad Scheck, he and Dr. Sayce visited the spot
and copied the inscription. It consisted of six lines written in
ancient Hebrew.
“Now this is the story of the boring through; while the excavators were
still lifting up their picks, each toward his fellow, and while there were
yet three cubits to excavate, there was heard the voice of one calling to
another, for there was a crevice in the rock, on the right hand. And on
the day they completed the boring through, the stone-cutters struck
pick against pick, one against the other; and the waters flowed from the
spring to the pool, a distance of 1000 cubits. And a hundred cubits
was the height of the rock above the heads of the stone-cutters.”
Excavations at Bet She’an
Upon Saul’s death, 1 Samuel records that his armor was put in the temple of Ashtaroth
in the city of Bet She’an. Yet the book of Chronicles states that his head was put in the
temple of Dagon. So which was it? This was thought to be an error because it seemed
unlikely that a Canaanite and Philistine temple would be in proximity. However,
excavations have revealed that there are two temples at this site that are separated by
a hallway: one for Dagon, the other for Ashtaroth.
Black Obelisk of Shalmaneser
The obelisk was created from black limestone in Calah (the
modern city of Nimrud) and erected in 825 bc. It was discovered
there in 1846 and is now housed in the British Museum. This
cast is located at the Oriental Institute in Chicago.
Black Obelisk of Shalmaneser
A bas-relief sculpture that
commemorates the military
exploits of Assyrian King
Shalmaneser III (r. 858–824 bc)
during the first 31 years of his
reign. The obelisk features five
rows of reliefs that depict five
subdued kings bringing tribute
to Shalmaneser, one of whom
is widely believed to be Jehu of
Israel (reigned 841–814 bc)
Biblical Belshazzar
It was long believed by liberals that King Belshazzar of
Daniel 5 was a myth because no historic record of him
existed, and the Babylonian chronicles named Nabonidus
as the ruling king when Babylon fell to Persia.
Biblical Belshazzar
- The “Babylonian Chronicles”
are a group of clay tablets that
were transferred to the British
Museum after 19th century
excavations in Babylon, and
subsequently left undeciphered
in the archives for decades.
- Between the years 1887 to 1956
several of these tablets were
translated into English and
published.
Biblical Belshazzar
- From these chronicles we learned that
although Nabonidus was king of Babylon
when the city fell, he had been away from
the city for sometime, down in the
southern part of his empire. In his
absence, he had appointed his son,
Belshazzar, to rule in his stead. This
explains why Daniel was awarded the third
highest position in the kingdom; it was the
highest position Belshazzar could give.
- Apparently, the person who wrote the
book of Daniel had a firsthand account of
the court life in Babylon, since other
accounts written in antiquity seem
unaware of Belshazzar.
Captives of Shishak
This relief comes from a wall in Lepsius (Egypt) where Pharaoh
Shishak boasts of the captives he brings back from his invasion of
Judah (2 Chron. 12:2-9).
Lachish Reliefs
The Lachish reliefs are plaster panels that lined the walls of a
small inner chamber (Room 26) of the southwest palace of
Sennacherib at Nineveh. They date to 700–699 bc, when
construction began on the palace (Russell, “Sennacherib’s
Lachish Narratives,” 72). The British diplomat Sir Austen
Henry Layard, who discovered the reliefs between 1847 and
1851, described them as the best preserved of all of the basreliefs in the palace (Layard, Discoveries, 125–29). Most of
the pictures are well-preserved and bear captions, but any
cuneiform text that may have been at the top of the slabs is
missing. The slabs were taken to the British Museum in 1852.
The Lachish reliefs were the first discovered artifacts to
mention a place and event referenced in the Bible. They
depict Sennacherib’s conquest of a city identified in a caption
as Lakitsu. If this association is correct, the reliefs confirm the
Bible’s record that Sennacherib fought against and captured
Lachish (2 Kgs 18:13–14, 17; 19:8; 2 Chr 32:9; Isa 36:2; 37:8),
along with all other fortified cities of Judah (2 Kgs 18:13; Isa
36:2), before moving on to Libnah (2 Kgs 19:8; Isa 37:8).
According to Micah 1:13, this conquest served as judgment
against Judah. The reliefs, along with Sennacherib’s other
texts recording his third military campaign, largely support the
Bible’s account of Hezekiah’s rebellion and subsequent
defeat.
Pontius Pilate Inscription
The Pilate stone is a damaged block (82 cm x 65 cm) of carved
limestone with a partially intact inscription attributed to, and
mentioning, Pontius Pilate, a prefect of the Roman province of
Judaea from AD 26–36. It was discovered at the archaeological
site of Caesarea Maritima in 1961. It is contemporary to Pilate's
lifetime, and accords with what is known of his reported career.
In effect, the writing constitutes the earliest surviving record
and a contemporaneous evidence for the historical existence of
this person; otherwise known from the New Testament, Jewish
Literature and brief mentions in retrospective Roman histories,
which have themselves survived in still-later copies.
Pontius Pilate Inscription
- The limestone block was discovered in June 1961 by Italian
archaeologists led by Dr. Antonio Frova while excavating in
the area of an ancient theatre built by decree of Herod the
Great around 22–10 BC.
- It is likely that Pontius Pilate made his base at Caesarea
Maritima, a city that had replaced Jerusalem since AD 6 as the
administrative capital and military headquarters of the
province, and the site where the stone was discovered. Pilate
probably travelled to Jerusalem, the central city of the
province's Jewish population, only as often as necessary.
The Pilate stone is currently located at the Israel Museum in
Jerusalem. Replica castings can be found at the
Archaeological Museum in Milan, Italy, and on display in
Caesarea Maritima itself.
Red Sea Crossing
Controversy of Archeological Finds & Debates
Archeology for Red
Sea Crossing
Many archeologists such as
Zahi Hawass, who is an
Egyptian Archeologist & and
formerly Egypt's Minister of
State for Antiquities Affairs,
claim "Really, it’s a myth...
Sometimes as archaeologists
we have to say that never
happened because there is no
historical evidence."
Ron Wyatt
Ron Eldon Wyatt (1933-1999) was a very controversial
amateur archeologist who claimed to make over 100
discoveries of Biblical sites and events.
Most mainstream scholarship including conservative Bible
scholars cast doubt on the credibility of Ron Wyatt for a
number of reasons.
Yet Wyatt claimed to have discovered the actual location of
the Red Sea Crossing. A DVD was called “Revealing God’s
Treasure” summarizes his claims. Here is an overview.
Solomon’s Column?
This column matches one on the other side
of the gulf in Saudi Arabia which had the
inscriptions intact. The Hebrew words
Mizram (Egypt), death, water, pharaoh,
Edom, Yahweh, and Solomon were on that
column.
King Solomon had these columns erected
400 years after the miracle of the crossing
of the Red Sea on dry land. Solomon's sea
port was at the northern tip of the Gulf of
Aqaba at Eilat (I Kings 9:26) and he was
very familiar with the Red Sea crossing site,
as it was in his neighborhood.
Colin Humphreys a
Cambridge University
physicist came out with a
book in 2004 called “The
Miracles of the Exodus”
in which he agrees with
Ron Wyatt.
Lennart Moller, who is a
medical doctor for the
University of Stockholm
wrote, “The Exodus
Case,” in which he also
agrees with Ron Wyatt.
Moller’s book was
succeeded by a DVD in
2001 also supporting
Wyatt’s claims.
Peter Elmer
Peter Elmer, a 38 year old forklift mechanic from Keynsham England
was inspired by Ron Wyatt Videos, and in 2003 traveled to the site of
the Red Sea crossing to verify Wyatt’s claims.
In June 2003, WND interviewed Bible enthusiasts who dove the waters
of the Red Sea, alleging they found and photographed parts of
chariots that may be the actual remains of the catastrophe brought
upon the Egyptian army which pursued the Israelites, according to the
Book of Exodus in the Bible.
“I am 99.9 percent sure I picked up a chariot wheel,” said Peter Elmer,
a forklift mechanic from Keynsham, England, who made two diving
trips to the Gulf of Aqaba branch of the sea. “It was covered in coral.”
Micheal Rood
Michael Rood, a Hebrew-roots teacher, has
produced a video (2011) proffering evidence
Elmer is absolutely correct.
His DVD, titled “The Red Sea Crossing,”
documents the work of numerous researchers
from the U.S. and overseas who have probed an
underwater land bridge between a beachhead at
Nuweiba, Egypt, and what is today Saudi Arabia.
“What they found strewn across the bottom of
the reed sea has shaken the religious and
scientific community,” says Rood. “Cameras
mounted on remote-controlled submarines
revealed coral-encrusted chariot parts, horse
and human remains strewn like battlefield
wreckage on the bottom of the reed sea.”
Cairo University
Faculty of
Archaeology?
Cairo University Faculty of
Archaeology led a team of divers in
the gold of Suez and announced on
Oct. 25, 2014 that the remains of a
gigantic mass of human bones and
two war chariots were discovered.
This news has been claimed a hoax by
other sources… due to the fact that
this news source is known for satire,
and issues a disclaimer that most
news on its sight is fiction.
Verified?
These claims and artifacts have had difficulties
in verification because of the Egyptian
Government not allowing artifacts to be removed
and authenticated. Ron Wyatt & his sons were
actually arrested & imprisoned for 78 days by
the Arabian government because of their search
for Mt. Sinai in Arabia.
Yet Have Confidence
Though the Red Sea Crossing
or other Biblical events are not
yet verified and therefore still
under extreme controversy,
recall Biblical archeology is still
in its infancy.
Have no doubt that in time
more artifacts will be uncovered
and evidence put forth.