At the site of an ancient city on the West
Bank, archaeologists are hunting for evidence of the tabernacle that
once housed the Ark of the Covenant.
Associates for Biblical Research, a consortium of individuals and
universities, recently completed four weeks of excavation in Shiloh with
the goal of eventually locating the tabernacle.
Dr. Scott Stripling, director of excavations at Shiloh and provost at
The Bible Seminary in Houston, Texas, told Fox News that the site could
offer up vital clues. “We have just begun the process of accumulating
evidence but we’re confident that the tabernacle rested at Shiloh,” he
said, adding that that the tabernacle was located at Shiloh for about
350 years. “The tabernacle was set up at Shiloh in 1400 B.C. - Joshua
18:1 mentions it.”
The recent excavation, which ran from May 21 to June 17, unearthed a
huge amount of animal bones, which Stripling believes may be related to
animal sacrifices at the sacred site. “We excavated through a tremendous
amount of bone,” Stripling explained. “You have 350 years of sacrifices
– where do all of those bones go?”
The bones, which were found while
excavating the northern fortifications of the ancient city, have been
sent to ABR’s zoo archaeologist for analysis. “The Bible specifies which
animals are sacrificial animals and it also says that they are young
animals,” said Stripling. “If the bones match the animals of the
Biblical sacrificial system and the type and age specified, then we may
be looking at evidence that the tabernacle sat nearby.”
The group is expecting to receive results from the bone analysis in the
next few weeks.
A host of other items were also found during the recent excavation
including objects used to create seals and scarabs - ancient
beetle-shaped carvings that were used for inscriptions and amulets. “We
registered 700 objects this last [excavation] season – seal impressions,
scarabs, tools, weapons, jewelry, utilitarian objects, cultic objects,”
said Stripling. “And about 2,000 pieces of pottery a day.”
This summer’s dig was the first in a series of at least five annual
excavations at the site by ABR under the auspices of the Civil
Administration of Judea and Samaria.
The wall and storage areas studied by ABR during the recent dig date
back to 1700 B.C. when Shiloh was part of the ancient Canaanite
civilization. The city became a major site of worship for the Israelites
after they arrived there about 300 years later.
The tabernacle was destroyed by the Philistines in 1050 B.C., Stripling
told Fox News, around the same time that they briefly captured the Ark
of the Covenant from the Israelites in a battle nearby. The Ark,
however, was soon back in the hands of the Israelites.
While Shiloh’s link to the Ark of the Covenant is fascinating, Stripling
notes that it was subsequently housed in a number of locations, where
other tabernacles were built. “Later, the tabernacle was set up in other
places, but we assume that it was rebuilt, reconstructed.”
The Ark of the Covenant was brought to Jerusalem by King David around
1000 B.C. but disappeared when the city was destroyed by the Babylonians
in 587 B.C, prompting multiple theories about its fate. While some
people believe that the Ark’s gold was melted down, there have also been
claims that it was taken to cave on Mount Nebo, Jordan, or to Ethiopia.
ABR’s research is focused firmly on locating the tabernacle site at
Shiloh, and Stripling is confident that future digs will deliver
results. The dimensions of a “tel” or “mound” at Shiloh, for example
correspond to biblical descriptions of the tabernacle, he says.
“We’re revealing the material culture of the ancient cultures, they
often do shed light on the biblical texts,” Stripling added.
This is, however, not the first time that archaeologists have focused
their attention on Shiloh. The Times of Israel reports that a major dig
at Shiloh in the 1980s by prominent Israeli archaeologist Israel
Finkelstein did not reveal the tabernacle.
However, the professor of archaeology at Tel Aviv University was not
expecting to find the tabernacle, according to the Times of Israel.
Finkelstein, it notes, does not view the Bible as a blueprint for
archaeological research, opting instead for an “evidence-based”
approach.
“Over two centuries of critical biblical exegesis and over a century of
modern archaeology have shown how complex the biblical text is,”
explained Finkelstein, in an email to Fox News. “Reading the Bible, it
is important to distinguish historical facts from the
ideological/theological stances of the authors. Shiloh is an important
site for studying the rise of ancient Israel in the highlands of Canaan.
This should be the aim of any excavation carried out there.”
Follow James Rogers on Twitter @jamesjrogers
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