Shifting Ground in the Holy Land
Archaeology is casting new light on the Old Testament
- By Jennifer Wallace
- Photographs by Robert Wallis
- Smithsonian magazine, May 2006, Subscribe
(Page 2 of 6)
Yet most archaeologists in Israel insist their work has nothing to do with politics. Their debates, they say, focus on what is in the Bible, and what is in the ground.
For the literalists, the stones at Mount Ebal are crucial. “If this corroborates exactly what is written in that very old part of the Bible,” says Zertal, “it means that probably other parts are historically correct. The impact is tremendous.”
By 1985, Zertal had concluded that the stone structure was Joshua’s altar. It fit the Bible’s description of the site, he says, and its ramp and other features are consistent with ancient accounts of the altar at the Second Temple in Jerusalem—another example of such a structure in ancient Israel. In addition, Zertal says he found charred animal bones at the site, which he interpreted as sacrificial offerings. To Zertal, the “altar” proves that the Israelites crossed the Jordan and entered Canaan, just as the Old Testament says they did.
Zertal, 60, has a poetic affinity for the land he has spent so much time surveying. Talking to local Bedouin shepherds in Arabic about place names and checking them against biblical references, he has found what he says are more than 300 Israelite sites from the early Iron Age (or Iron Age I, as the years 1200 to 1000 b.c. are known), moving gradually westward into Israel.
But he has yet to submit his Ebal finds to radiocarbon dating. And he professes a dislike for the common archaeological practice of establishing chronologies by radiocarbon dating potsherds, or pieces of broken pottery. “Others see things through the narrow keyhole of pottery,” he tells me as I join him on one of his Friday walkabouts. “I prefer to see things in a wider perspective: history, Bible, literature, poetry.”
While Zertal’s findings on Mount Ebal have given comfort to those in Israel and elsewhere who take the Bible literally, few of his fellow archaeologists have accepted his conclusions. In an article in the Biblical Archaeology Review in 1986, Aharon Kempinski of Tel Aviv University contended that the stones were actually part of a watchtower from the first part of the Iron Age, and that there is “no basis whatever for interpreting this structure as an altar.” Most archaeologists have ignored the find. “Adam Zertal is the lone wolf,” says Uzi Dahari, deputy director of the Israel Antiquities Authority. “He’s working alone.”
“There’s definitely an Iron I site there, and there may even be evidence for cultic activity,” says Israel Finkelstein, an archaeologist at Tel Aviv University. “But I don’t think that you can take the Book of Joshua and use it as a guidebook to the architectural landscape. Joshua was put in writing much later than the events it describes and is full of ideologies related to the needs of the writers.”
Though Finkelstein occupies the middle ground between the literalists and the minimalists, he has led the challenge to traditional biblical archaeology in Israel for the past decade. He offers a markedly different picture of Israel’s early history.
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Comments (4)
Outstanding article.
I have visited the Holy Land several times and having been to the places mentioned in the Scriptures you never hear those passages read in quite the same way. Instead of black-and-white and monophonic sound, you see them in living color and Dolby stereo!
Unfortunately, due to the political situation, I could only imagine what the altar described in Joshua Ch 8 might have looked like, until now.
Thank you.
Posted by Jim Evans on May 22,2011 | 02:31 AM
praise the Lord!
Posted by Abby Fox on March 11,2011 | 10:26 AM
I have just returned from three months in Ethiopia deciphering 8th century B.C.E. Sabaean inscriptions, two of which speak of 'BR in the area ruled jointly by four kings and three queens of Sheba. 'BR both in Hebrew and Sabaean means "Those who crossed over" and "Hebrew". These inscriptions on two incense burners (I had white paint cleaned off them) were first recorded in 1973 but no other archaeologist was courageous enough to mention the name as it supported the hypotheses of (i)a substantial local Hebrew population in Old Testament times (ii) the veracity of the Sheba-Menelik Cycle of the Kebra Nagast, and (iii) the probability that Judah and Israel before 586 B.C.E. were in West Arabia not Palestine.
Old Testament archaeology is a disgraceful and politicised discipline. Most of its effort is directed to finding evidence to fit preconceived conclusions. The top "minimalists" are too timid and selfserving to consider that the Old Testament is a true story than might have occurred elsewhere and the Israeli intelligensia too morally corrupt to consider that the Promised Land is in the wrong place.
Posted by Dr Bernard Leeman on October 17,2009 | 10:58 PM
Excellent article. Thanks very much. Sometimes the internet DOES work: credible information at my fingertips. ;-)
Posted by Michael Roman on May 20,2009 | 01:14 AM