Biblia

FROM JORDAN: RESULTS OF THE 1976 SEASON AT SODOM AND GOMORRAH

The third season of the Expedition to the Southeastern Dead Sea Plain was completed between May 25 and July 11, 1979. (For reports on the first two seasons, see the Winter 1977 and Summer 1978 issues of Bible and Spade.) Work was again concentrated at Bab edh-Dhra, thought to be biblical Sodom, and Numeira, thought … Continue reading “FROM
JORDAN:
RESULTS OF THE 1976 SEASON AT SODOM AND GOMORRAH”

EBLA: ARCHAEOLOGICAL DISCOVERIES AND BIBLICAL RESEARCH

Mitchell Dahood, S.J. [Fr. Mitchell Dahood is professor of Ugaritic and Phoenician Languages and Literature, and Dean of Ancient Eastern Studies at the Pontifical Biblical Institute in Rome. Fr. Dahood has written many articles in scholarly journals. He is the author of “Ebla Ugarit, and the Old Testament,” which appeared in the Winter and Spring … Continue reading “EBLA:
ARCHAEOLOGICAL DISCOVERIES AND BIBLICAL RESEARCH”

COINS OF THE BIBLE

Stan Hudson Few tangible reminders of everyday life have seen as little change over the centuries as have coins. Except for production techniques, coins have received little improvement in concept from Bible times. The value of gold and silver as a medium of exchange was widely known, of course, even before the invention of coins. … Continue reading “COINS
OF THE BIBLE”

THE SCRIPTS OF THE ANCIENT NEAR EAST

G. Herbert Livingston [G. Herbert Livingston is Professor of Old Testament at Asbury Theological Seminary in Asbury, Kentucky. He is the author of The Pentateuch in its Cultural Enviroment, from which this article was taken.] More than one ancient community probably possessed a rich fund of oral literature that was passed from generation to generation … Continue reading “THE
SCRIPTS OF THE ANCIENT NEAR EAST”

ARCHAEOLOGY AND THE TEXT OF THE NEW TESTAMENT

Howard J. Vos [Howard J. Vos is professor of history and archaeology at the King’s College, Briarcliffe Manor, New York. He is the author of a number of books on biblical archaeology, including Archaeology in Bible Lands from which this article was taken.] Archaeological discoveries have revolutionized study of the New Testament text. They have … Continue reading “ARCHAEOLOGY
AND THE TEXT OF THE NEW TESTAMENT”

THE TEMPLE SCROLL

On a number of occasions we have reported on the progress of the publication of the Temple Scroll, the last known scroll from the caves at Qumran at the Dead Sea (Bible and Spade, Spring 1972, pp. 49-50; Autumn 1973, pp. 120-121; Spring 1977, pp. 49-55, 60–61; Winter 1978, p. 4; Summer-Autumn 1979, pp. 107-108). … Continue reading “THE
TEMPLE SCROLL”

THE LANGUAGE OF THE ANCIENT NEAR EAST

G. Herbert Livingston [G. Herbert Livingston is Professor of Old Testament at Asbury Theological Seminary in Asbury, Kentucky. He is the author of The Pentateuch in its Cultural Environment, from which this article was taken.] Though scholars a few centuries ago thought that the Hebrew language was directly given by God without human antecedents, the … Continue reading “THE
LANGUAGE OF THE ANCIENT NEAR EAST”