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Total results: 3278.
Beyond Today Dailys
by Darris McNeely
2015-12-09
Archaeologists uncover an artifact validating the existence of a familiar Bible character.
Beyond Today Magazine
by Peter Eddington
Recent archaeological findings regarding an altar and curse tablet corroborate the Bible’s record of the Israelites’ entry into the Holy Land as a people in covenant with God.
Vertical Thought
by Amanda Stiver
Research at the site of Tel Megiddo in Israel, famous in the New Testament as Armageddon, is being done by a combination of archaeologists and scientists—specifically chemists and biologists.
Beyond Today Magazine
by Scott Ashley
We’re used to seeing headlines about bloody clashes between Arabs and Israelis over the Temple Mount. But another battle, involving old arguments, is reemerging—being waged over history and archaeology as it relates to where the Jerusalem...
Beyond Today Magazine
by Tom Robinson
Archaeological discoveries are regularly made in and around the land of Israel that relate to the Bible. Here is an annotated list of 12 reports of such finds within the past three years.
Good News
by Mario Seiglie
Did the Exodus really happen? Did God deliver the ancient Israelites from Egyptian slavery as the Bible describes? Contrary views have generated much publicity, but the facts of the Bible's side of the argument are seldom told.
Beyond Today
by Mario Seiglie
Did the Exodus really happen? Did God deliver the ancient Israelites from Egyptian slavery as the Bible describes? Contrary views have generated much publicity, but the facts of the Bible's side of the argument are seldom considered.
Good News
by Mario Seiglie, Scott Ashley, Tom Robinson
What is a pim? That is what translators asked themselves when they were finishing the King James Version of the Bible back in the 17th century. They had never heard of the term outside of the Bible and had to guess as to its meaning—which...
Vertical Thought
by Amanda Stiver
In the complex business of trying to find human tracks in the evolutionary record, there seems to be some dispute.
Good News
by Jerold Aust, John Ross Schroeder
Until now, few remains from Nehemiah's time in Jerusalem (444-432 B.C.) have been uncovered. But now, Eilat Mazar, a Hebrew University archaeologist digging in the city, believes she has identified remnants of that famous wall that...
Beyond Today Dailys
by Darris McNeely, Steve Myers
2013-04-04
Have archaeologists found the "Gates of Hell" in Turkey? Where did we get our popular ideas on hell, anyway?

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