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The Liberty Loft
The Liberty Loft
16 May 2023
Richard Moorhead


NextImg:Researchers Use X-Ray on Item Found at Biblical Site, Make Incredible Discovery That Could Connect to 1 Specific Verse

On a site in modern-day Israel, academics believe they’ve found the oldest Hebrew text ever discovered, with an apparent link to a scene described in the Old Testament.

A team of scholars affiliated with universities in Israel, the United States, Germany and the Czech Republic are credited with the find, according to The Jerusalem Post.

The findings were published Friday in the academic journal Heritage Science.

The text is described as a “curse tablet” — with an inscription one might expect to find in some of the darker passages of the Old Testament.

“You are cursed by the God YHW,” the text reads — using the sacred Hebrew name for God.

“You will die cursed—cursed you will surely die. Cursed you are by yhw-cursed,” the tablet reads, according to the Jewish News Syndicate.

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The tiny lead tablet — only 2 x 2 centimeters square — was first recovered with other materials in a 1980s excavation at Mount Ebal, near the city of Nablus.

However, it remained unnoticed amid discarded material from the excavation until the material was reexamined by a new team in 2019, the Jewish News Syndicate reported.

The tablet is at least 200 years older than the previously oldest find in the Hebrew language, according to scholars.

“The text … is the oldest Hebrew text found within the borders of ancient Israel … by at least two centuries,” the authors wrote in Heritage Science.

Mount Ebal is featured in the Old Testament.

The Israelite leader Joshua, who succeeded Moses, is described as building an altar to God at the site in Joshua 8:30 — 35.

  “Then Joshua built on Mount Ebal an altar to the Lord, the God of Israel, as Moses the servant of the Lord had commanded the Israelites. He built it according to what is written in the Book of the Law of Moses—an altar of uncut stones, on which no iron tool had been used. On it they offered to the Lord burnt offerings and sacrificed fellowship offerings. There, in the presence of the Israelites, Joshua wrote on stones a copy of the law of Moses. All the Israelites, with their elders, officials and judges, were standing on both sides of the ark of the covenant of the Lord, facing the Levitical priests who carried it. Both the foreigners living among them and the native-born were there. Half of the people stood in front of Mount Gerizim and half of them in front of Mount Ebal, as Moses the servant of the Lord had formerly commanded when he gave instructions to bless the people of Israel.

  “Afterward, Joshua read all the words of the law—the blessings and the curses—just as it is written in the Book of the Law. There was not a word of all that Moses had commanded that Joshua did not read to the whole assembly of Israel, including the women and children, and the foreigners who lived among them.”

The 1980s excavations, carried out by University of Haifa professor Adam Zerta, identified two altars constructed in the Bronze Age and the Iron Age.

One American academic involved in the finding of the new tablet is emphasizing that Zerta’s excavations uncovered the site in an area featured in the Bible.

“The big point here is that we have evidence of Hebrew writing in Israel earlier than has previously been established, as well as mention of two of names of the Hebrew God, all from the site where the Bible said Joshua built an altar,” Scott Stripling, provost at the Bible Seminary in Katy, Texas, told JNS.

The post Researchers Use X-Ray on Item Found at Biblical Site, Make Incredible Discovery That Could Connect to 1 Specific Verse appeared first on The Western Journal.