Posted on 01/13/2003 10:51:29 AM PST by vannrox
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w w w . h a a r e t z d a i l y . c o m |
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Sensation or forgery? Researchers hail dramatic First Temple period findingAn inscription attributed to Jehoash, the king of Judea who ruled in Jerusalem at the end of the ninth century B.C.E., has been authenticated by experts from the National Infrastructure Ministry's Geological Survey of Israel following months of examination. The 10-line fragment, which was apparently found on the Temple Mount, is written in the first person on a black stone tablet in ancient Phoenician script. The inscription's description of Temple "house repairs" ordered by King Jehoash strongly resembles passages in the Second Book of Kings, chapter 12.Dr. Gabriel Barkai, a leading Israeli archaeologist from Bar Ilan University's Land of Israel Studies Department, says that if the inscription proves to be authentic, the finding is a "sensation" of the greatest import. It could be, he says, the most significant archaeological finding yet in Jerusalem and the Land of Israel. It would be a first-of-its kind piece of physical evidence describing events in a manner that adheres to the narrative in the Bible. According to Dr. Barkai, such a finding, which appears to furnish proof of the existence of the Temple, must be made available for examination by scholars, and can not be kept a virtual secret. Detailed research findings about the inscription are to be disclosed in a collection of articles published by the Geology Survey of Israel, a government research institute. Research studies have been prepared by Dr. Shimon Ilani, Dr. Amnon Rosenfeld and Michael Dvorchik, the institute's chief technician who carried out electronic microscope tests of the inscription that, the three say, were largely responsible for the finding's authentication. Apart from noting that the discovery was made in Jerusalem, the researchers do not disclose where the inscription was found. But sources have indicated that the writing surfaced in the Temple Mount area as a result of widescale excavation work done in recent years in the area by Muslims, and that Palestinians relayed the fragment to a major collector of antiquities in Jerusalem. The Jerusalem collector is represented by attorney Isaac Herzog, a former cabinet secretary and currently a Knesset candidate on Labor's list. The collector offered to sell the inscription to the Israel Museum, but museum curators who examined the fragment cast doubt on its authenticity, though they did not state categorically that the writing was a forgery. Ilani and Rosenfeld refused yesterday to discuss the Israel Museum's response with Ha'aretz. But officials from the Geology Survey said that results of the battery of examinations that were carried out must be taken as conclusive: It's inconceivable that such extensive testing would fail to reveal a forgery, they said. The inscription is authentic, they insisted, and the finding is an archaeological sensation that could have global repercussions and that effectively vindicates Jewish claims to the Temple Mount. The inscription lauds repairs carried out by King Jehoash in ways reminiscent of the description in the Second Book of Kings. It includes the king's request that priests collect public money to be used for the repair of the First Temple; and there are references to the purchase of timber and quarried stones for the carrying out of repairs on the Temple. The inscription contains fragments from 2 Kings 12:15: "And they did not ask an accounting from the men into whose hands they delivered the money to pay out to the workmen; for they dealt honestly." The researchers believe that the sandstone used for the inscription was brought from southern Jordan, or the Dead Sea region. Materials that covered the inscription over the years date from 200-400 B.C.E., they suggest. Ilani and Rosenfeld speculate that during this period, the inscription began to be covered up as a buried object. Should this hypothesis be correct, it would mean that the inscription was exposed to the elements for hundreds of years, before being buried some 500-600 years after it was written. In his conversation with Ha'aretz, Dr. Barkai noted that "the problem here is that circumstances of the finding are not clear... We should wait for the official scientific publication, at which time we will be able to probe this finding carefully. Right now, of course, we can't rule out any possibility. It's too bad that a matter of this sort was kept under wraps, apparently due to business concerns."
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How PC!!!
The first temple was completed by King Solomon around 960 B.C. It was destroyed by the Babylonians under King Nebuchadnezzar in 586 B.C. After the Babylonian Captivity, the second temple was built, under Zerubbabel's leadership, and dedicated in 516 B.C. That temple was renovated and expanded by Herod the Great, starting around 20 B.C. The temple was destroyed finally by the Romans, under Genreal Titus, in A.D. 70. It has never been rebuilt. All that remains are some stones visible in the Western ("Wailing") Wall.
You might also take note of the fact that Jesus was what today would be called an Orthodox Jew who would undoubtedly use the same term of reference. There is no record of Jesus ever using a different calendar than the traditional Hebrew calendar which, FYI, has been in use for at least 1,000 years longer than any version of the calendar presently used by most of the world.
You appear to be either incredibly ignorant or incredibly insensitive to others' beliefs if you can't accept that others may believe differently than you do. The whole concept of "PC" is, to be sure, a load of crap at best. But this has NOTHING to do with PC. It is a simple unwillingness by those who believe differently from you to adopt your language and your points of reference. Oh, by the way, it is not intended as an insult to you or your religion - it is merely speaking in terms that are acceptable to the writer and most of his/her intended audience - and it has always been and will always be just that.
You both need to either educate yourselves better, read more carefully or open your minds a bit - or all three.
This small portion of the retaining wall around the entire Temple complex has been revered by Jews for nearly 2 millenia because a) it is all that is left; and b) a portion of the Wall is the closest that one can come to where the Holy of Holies (which, in the First Temple, is where the Ark of the Covenant rested) is believed to have been.
However, the point remains that this reference to "B.C.E." in the article was anything but PC - a simple glance at the top of the page would have shown both of you that it was written by a presumably Jewish writer for an Israeli paper, whose audience doesn't hold the same beliefs as you do. I could only understand your angst at the "PC" of this phrase IF it had been written by some PC non-Jew writing for a paper whose audience wasn't overwhelmingly Jewish. In short, my main message is : Pay attention before you spout off.
In Book VII of The Wars of the Jews, the first-century historian Flavius Josephus records that in the months after the destruction of Jerusalem (in A.D. 70), the Romans (and also some other scavengers) dug up the foundation of the city looking for plunder, which included gold. I could not find any place where he gets as precise as to describe that it was the gold that had melted and run down between the stones.
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