Digital Logos Edition
With over 200 vibrant images, this book reveals some of the many archaeological discoveries authenticate and illustrate biblical history narratives. Clive Anderson and Brian Edwards’ notes are informative and assume no prior archaeological experience as they follow historical accounts from Genesis to Revelation.
“On the other hand, three distinguished palaeographers (those who study ancient scripts), the Frenchmen André Lemaire and Emile Puech and the Israeli Ada Yardeni, maintained that the inscription is genuine (bar Nov/Dec 2004). After five years of court proceedings, nearly 12,000 pages of witness testimony, numerous scholarly articles, several documentary movies and at least four books, an Israeli court concluded that the ossuary text was not a forgery (bar Mar/Apr 2012).” (Page 143)
“‘my scrolls, especially the parchments’ (2 Timothy 4:13). The word for ‘parchments’ is a Latin word (membranae) and it referred to an early form of notebook of parchment or wood with fold-over leaves. Paul’s many and long letters, all well before AD 70, reveal how important the written word was for the early Christians.” (Page 145)
“began in AD 26 and ended in disgrace ten years later. He continued to offend the Jews and after a spat with” (Page 146)
“… the Tiberium which Pontius Pilate, the Prefect of Judea dedicated’” (Page 146)