Back Cover
Each year archaeologists discover many new finds at sites throughout
the lands of the Bible, but few of them make the news headlines.
Revisionist scholars often seek to undermine and downplay the
relevance of many of the discoveries, believing that Sodom never
existed, the Exodus never happened, Jericho never fell to the
Israelites, and David was never a great king. This work challenges
the minimalist views by bringing together many of the new
discoveries from the last 20 years highlighting the recent finds
that are relevant to the claims of the Bible. Experienced
archaeologist David Graves has assembled a helpful collection of
discoveries that will take you on a journey to:
- Confirm the historicity of the biblical
events and people of the past
- Explore the full range of new
archaeological discoveries, from pottery, inscriptions, seals,
ossuaries, through to coins, manuscripts, and other artifacts
- Present a short history of archaeology,
outlining its characteristics and role in Christian apologetics
- Lay out the limitations of archaeology and
its methodological fallacies
- Explain the meticulous method of excavation
- Explore the significance of manuscripts for
the transmission of the Bible
- Navigate the maze of arguments between the
minimalists and maximalists controversy
This insightful book will:
- Illustrate archaeological finds with more
than 140 pertinent photographs
- Provide numerous detailed maps, carefully
crafted charts and tables of previous discoveries
- Include helpful breakout panes, dealing
with “Quotes from Antiquity,” and “Moments in History”
- Include a glossary defining technical
archaeological terms
- Provide extensive footnotes and
bibliography for future study
This invaluable resource provides an interesting and informative
understanding of the cultural and historical background of the Bible
illustrated from archaeology. This is an accessible resource
intended for laypeople who want to know more about archaeology and
the Bible, whether in seminary courses, college classrooms, church
groups or personal study.
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