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 3 of 6)
Finkelstein and co-author Neil Asher Silberman rocked the world of biblical archaeology with the publication, five years ago, of The Bible Unearthed. The book argues that the biblical accounts of early Israelite history reveal more about the time they were written—the seventh century b.c.—than the events they describe, which would have taken place centuries earlier. The book also maintains that Israeli archaeologists have indulged in a kind of circular reasoning, drawing on biblical references to date a potsherd, for example, and then using it to identify places described in the Bible. The Bible, Finkelstein believes, should be used far more cautiously in interpreting archaeological sites.
Last year, Finkelstein received the $1 million Dan David Prize for innovative research, awarded by an international venture based at Tel Aviv University. But his work has proved controversial. Several archaeologists have challenged his finding that some ruins related to Solomon are too recent to fit into the biblical account of his reign (“a huge distortion,” says Amihai Mazar of the Hebrew University in Jerusalem). David Hazony, editor of a journal sponsored by a conservative Israeli think tank, wrote that “the urge to smash myths has overtaken sound judgment” in Finkelstein’s work. In an essay in the Israeli daily Ha’aretz, Hershel Shanks, editor of the Biblical Archaeology Review, likened Finkelstein to the minimalists, who, he said, were “anti-Israel” and “anti-Semitic” for their “faddish lack of pride in Israel’s history.”
Over lunch on the Tel Aviv University campus, Finkelstein, 57, jokes that his more conservative colleagues “are the guardians of the true faith. We are the simple apostates.” More seriously, he adds: “I was surprised that some scholars are completely deaf and blind, in my opinion, and they don’t accept the inevitable and very clear evidence.”
He cites the fact—now accepted by most archaeologists—that many of the cities Joshua is supposed to have sacked in the late 13th century b.c. had ceased to exist by that time. Hazor was destroyed in the middle of that century, and Ai was abandoned before 2000 b.c. Even Jericho, where Joshua is said to have brought the walls tumbling down by circling the city seven times with blaring trumpets, was destroyed in 1500 b.c. Now controlled by the Palestinian Authority, the Jericho site consists of crumbling pits and trenches that testify to a century of fruitless digging.
Finkelstein says that rather than following Joshua out of the desert into Canaan and conquering the indigenous population, the early Israelites were actually Canaanites—that is, they were the indigenous population. Yes, he acknowledges, there was a wave of new settlements on the hills to the east and west of the Jordan River around 1200 b.c. But Finkelstein says such settlements are not necessarily a sign of conquest—archaeological evidence instead suggests a waxing and waning of the population both before and after that time. Instead of marching armies and massive slaughter, he sees a slow and gradual evolution of Israelite culture. “The emergence of the different ethnic identities was a very long process,” he insists.
More and more archaeologists have accepted the idea that “the Joshua invasion as it is described in the Bible was never really a historical event,” as Amihai Mazar puts it. But they disagree about the exact nature and origins of those who built the ancient hilltop settlements on the West Bank.
Even more vexing is the question of a united kingdom under David and then Solomon. Trying to answer it has taken Finkelstein to the ruin of Megiddo, which most archaeologists once believed was the site of a palace King Solomon built sometime between 970 and 930 b.c.
An hour’s drive northeast of Tel Aviv, Megiddo is a huge archaeological tell, or mound, the result of centuries of city-building in the same confined space. The tell is complicated, featuring stone walls from 30 layers of habitation spanning six millennia. Date palms have sprouted from seeds that previous excavators spit on the ground. A magnificent view sweeps from Mount Carmel in the northwest to Nazareth to Mount Gilboa in the northeast.
Many Christians believe this will be the site of Armageddon, where, according to the New Testament’s Book of Revelation, the final battle between good and evil will be waged, followed by the second coming of Christ. Evangelical Christians regularly gather at Megiddo to pray. But the site is also the focus of the debate over whether the biblical story of Solomon can be supported archaeologically.
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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