Friday, July 30, 2021

Jerubbaal.

Byzantine Monastery in southern Israel

A worker for the Israel Antiquities Authority stands on the mosaic floor of a monastery unearthed during excavations in Hura, east of Beersheba April 1, 2014. | 

Israeli archaeologists excavating in the Judean foothills have uncovered an extremely rare 3,100-year-old inscription from the era of the biblical judges and carrying a name from the book of Judges.

The inscription — the name “Jerubbaal” — on a small jug from 1,100 BCE, which the archaeologists uncovered from a storage pit at the Khirbet el Rai site, could be the first hard evidence of a name from the biblical stories of the judges that is on an artifact contemporary to the period, The Times of Israel said. CP.

The Last Supper.

  A new film exploring the days before and after Jesus' resurrection is now in theaters, giving families of faith a chance to experience...