Inscription
Discovery Shoots Down Anti-Bible Claims
Scholars who support the biblical “minimalist”
view—that the Old Testament is myth because the Hebrews were wandering
tribesmen who never learned how to write until sometime after the Babylonian
captivity began in 586 B.C—received a rude awakening last summer. At an excavation in Tel Zayit, an ancient site
about 30 miles southwest of Jerusalem, archaeologists noticed an inscribed stone
imbedded in a wall. Examining it more closely, they realized they had found an
ancient example of an abecedary—a listing of the letters of the alphabet
written out in sequence from beginning to end.
Even more remarkable, an analysis of
pottery and the position of the wall in the ruins showed that the inscription
dated to the 10th century B.C—well before minimalist Bible critics say any
Israelites could write. Inscriptions from the Old Testament period are
extremely rare. Only a few have been found and many critics dismiss them as
forgeries. Only stone, clay and metal objects from this period have survived.
Other writing media, such as papyrus and parchment (which the Bible clearly
says were in use at the time, as recorded in Jeremiah 36), have long since
decayed into dust.
Critics
use such “absence of evidence” as “evidence of absence,” as some
archaeologists put it. They have contended that the lack of actual hard
evidence of writing from this period means that people of that period did not
know how to read and write. Therefore, they have argued, the Bible could not
have been written when it claims to have been written, but was fabricated long
after the supposed events and history recorded in it. Consequently, they have
asserted, the biblical picture of the 10th century—the time when King David
and his son and successor Solomon ruled a powerful Israelite empire—is simply a
fabrication.
This
latest find, like others reported in this section of The Good News, demonstrates
again the shallowness and inaccuracy of such arguments, not to mention the
willful denial of hard evidence. It shows that even in an outlying border town
like this one, far from the national capital at Jerusalem, the Hebrew alphabet
was in use. Further, an analysis of ancient structures at the site indicates
that it likely was a significant border town established by a growing
Jerusalem-centered Israelite kingdom just as the Bible describes, says Ron Tappy, the Pittsburgh Theological Seminary archaeologist
directing the excavations.
From Jan./Feb. 2006 Good News Magazine