Emergency dig finds tower built by Bible's Nehemiah
Present-day wall of Jerusalem
Iran's President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad may want to see Israel wiped off
the map and its Jews sent to Europe or Alaska, but an archaeological
discovery announced this week marks an event recorded in the Bible when
his country – Persia, at the time – literally helped put the Jewish
people back on the map in their capital city of Jerusalem.
Dr. Eilat Mazar, one of Israel's top archaeologists, ended her
presentation Wednesday to the 13th Annual Conference of the Ingeborg
Rennert Center for Jerusalem Studies on "New Studies on Jerusalem,"
with a surprise announcement. She had discovered remnants of the fifth
century B.C. wall built by Nehemiah, the account recorded in the Old
Testament book of the same name.
According to the biblical account, Nehemiah served as cupbearer for the
Persian King Artaxerxes in the city of Susa. The Persians had conquered
the Babylonian empire that had destroyed Jerusalem in 586 B.C. and
taken most of the inhabitants of Judah into captivity in what is now
modern Iraq.
The account reads:
In the month of Nisan, in the twentieth year of King Artaxerxes, when
wine was before him, I took up the wine and gave it to the king. Now I
had not been sad in his presence.
And the king said to me, "Why is your face sad, seeing you are not
sick? This is nothing but sadness of the heart."
Then I was very much afraid. I said to the king, "Let the king live
forever! Why should not my face be sad, when the city, the place of my
fathers' graves, lies in ruins, and its gates have been destroyed by
fire?"
Then the king said to me, "What are you requesting?"
So I prayed to the God of heaven. And I said to the king, "If it
pleases the king, and if your servant has found favor in your sight,
that you send me to Judah, to the city of my fathers' graves, that I
may rebuild it."
Nehemiah's rebuilding of the city began with its walls, a project that
was resisted by hostile neighbors who had occupied the area around
Jerusalem in the Jews' absence.
But when Sanballat and Tobiah and the Arabs and the Ammonites and the
Ashdodites heard that the repairing of the walls of Jerusalem was going
forward and that the breaches were beginning to be closed, they were
very angry. And they all plotted together to come and fight against
Jerusalem and to cause confusion in it. And we prayed to our God and
set a guard as a protection against them day and night.
With tools in one hand and weapons in the other, Nehemiah's workmen
toiled dawn to dusk, completing the wall in a record 52 days.
Archaeological evidence for Nehemiah's project has been lacking.
Jerusalem has been rebuilt, destroyed and rebuilt in the almost 2,500
years since.
Mazar, who is perhaps best known for her recent excavation that many
believe has revealed the palace of King David, was working on an
emergency project to shore up remains of a tower long believed to date
from the Hasmonean period, 142-37 B.C., that was in danger of
collapsing.
According to an account of the conference in "The Trumpet," Mazar said,
"Under the tower, we found the bones of two large dogs – and under
those bones a rich assemblage of pottery and finds from the Persian
period. No later finds from that period were found under the tower."
Had the tower been built during the Hasmonean dynasty, the Persian-era
artifacts would represent an unexplained chronological gap of several
hundred years. The tower, said Mazar, had to have been built much
earlier than previously thought and the pottery data placed it at the
time the Bible says Nehemiah was building it.
Todd Bolen, of BiblePlaces.com, noted that excavations in the
Philistine city of Ashkelon during the same Persian era, found 800 dog
burials like those uncovered by Mazar.
Nehemiah described 10 gates in the wall around Jerusalem as well as
several towers designed to protect the entrances to the city, among
them the Tower of the Hundred, the Tower of Hananel, the Tower of the
Ovens, and an unnamed tower "projecting from the upper house of the
king at the court of the guard" in the vicinity of Mazar's most recent
dig.
WND reported Mazar's confirmation that what appeared to be chopped-up
carved stone, unearthed by recent trenching on the Temple Mount by the
holy site's Islamic custodians, were indeed antiquities with attributes
of the Second Temple-era during the ministry of Jesus.
Mazar has urged Christians to help save the holy site.
"The Christian world and all those who care about safeguarding the
Temple Mount must immediately join us in our efforts to protect the
holy site and demand that the Israeli government stop the Waqf
construction," she said.
"The Temple Mount is important to people of all religions. Now is the
time to act before more antiquities are erased."
Original
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Archaeologist uncovers Scriptures' famed wall
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