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Biblical Archaeology Review
Exploring archaeology in the lands of the Bible. The Twitter page of Biblical Archaeology Review magazine.
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Biblical Archaeology Review 38 मि॰
Hezekiah relied on the counsel of the prophet Isaiah, perhaps as a court prophet with walk-in privileges (2 Kings 19:2).
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Biblical Archaeology Review 22 घं॰
There are only a few people in the world who could claim that they could understand Jesus in his mother tongue if he were alive today. One such person is Yona Sabar, Professor Emeritus of the University of California, Los Angeles.
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Biblical Archaeology Review 17 अक्तू॰
How the Nag Hammadi texts discovered in Egypt reintroduced the world to Gnostic Christianity:
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Biblical Archaeology Review 17 अक्तू॰
What does Jesus mean when he referred to “eunuchs who have made themselves eunuchs for the sake of the kingdom of heaven” (Matthew 19:11–12)?
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Biblical Archaeology Review 16 अक्तू॰
In the Hebrew Bible, a place called Kadesh was an important stop during the Israelites’ wilderness wanderings. Where is Kadesh?
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Biblical Archaeology Review 16 अक्तू॰
If there’s no Satan in the Hebrew Bible, where does the devil come into the details of Eden?
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Biblical Archaeology Review 16 अक्तू॰
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Biblical Archaeology Review 15 अक्तू॰
There are only a few people in the world who could claim that they could understand Jesus in his mother tongue if he were alive today. One such person is Yona Sabar, Professor Emeritus of the University of California, Los Angeles.
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Biblical Archaeology Review 15 अक्तू॰
What can this inscription tell us about literacy during the time of David and Solomon?
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Biblical Archaeology Review 14 अक्तू॰
In the Hebrew Bible, a place called Kadesh was an important stop during the Israelites’ wilderness wanderings. Where is Kadesh?
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Biblical Archaeology Review 14 अक्तू॰
When it comes to Bible chronology, the difference between a “high” and “low” chronology is a matter of mere decades, not centuries.
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Biblical Archaeology Review 13 अक्तू॰
What does Jesus mean when he referred to “eunuchs who have made themselves eunuchs for the sake of the kingdom of heaven” (Matthew 19:11–12)?
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Biblical Archaeology Review 13 अक्तू॰
Dating to the first century B.C.E., the inscription reads: “Hananiah, son of Dudolos, of Jerusalem”
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Biblical Archaeology Review 13 अक्तू॰
In the first article of a new BAR series called Biblical Archaeology 101, learn about the many techniques archaeologists use to date sites, people, objects, and historical events.
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Biblical Archaeology Review 12 अक्तू॰
What can this inscription tell us about literacy during the time of David and Solomon?
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Biblical Archaeology Review 12 अक्तू॰
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Biblical Archaeology Review ने रीट्विट किया
Ariel Sabar 12 अक्तू॰
Almost every year, as Christmas approaches, people ask, “Sir, is it true that you speak the language of Jesus?” My father, UCLA Prof. Yona Sabar, has a fun first-person piece on "Saving the of Jesus and the Jews" on the cover of the new Biblical Archaeology Review.
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Biblical Archaeology Review 12 अक्तू॰
Dating to the first century B.C.E., the inscription reads: “Hananiah, son of Dudolos, of Jerusalem”
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Biblical Archaeology Review 11 अक्तू॰
When it comes to Bible chronology, the difference between a “high” and “low” chronology is a matter of mere decades, not centuries.
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Biblical Archaeology Review 11 अक्तू॰
What does Jesus mean when he referred to “eunuchs who have made themselves eunuchs for the sake of the kingdom of heaven” (Matthew 19:11–12)?
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