03/24/2024
Undeniable Archaeological Evidence that proves the God of the Bible is real!
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Some background information: The Lord commanded the Ancient Israelites to conquer Jericho by marching around it for 7 days and nights. And so, a section of the wall came tumbling down.
Now, archaeologist have confirmed that the Bible is correct- that God did the miracle. If he did a miracle, that means God exists!
A MDPI article concludes that "Thus, archaeological excavations and analysis at Jericho appear to place the destruction of the final Bronze Age city ca. 1400 BC in a manner consistent with the account in the book of Joshua."
MDPI is a peer reviewed journal btw.
Some of the things found:
1) Grain was burned, consistent with the Bible. There was no long siege, otherwise it would have been gobbled up
2) The city was burned, consistent with the Bible
3) A section of the wall was destroyed, forming a ramp that allowed the Israelis to conviently run into the city.
4) Dame Kathleen Kenyon cited the lack of exotic wares such as Cypriot bichrome and chocolate on wine for her late dating, but it was found in her expedition reports, published posthumously.
Thus confirming that the site of Jericho was indeed inhabited, during the late bronze iib- fitting the timeline of the Bible
5) Furthermore, a miracle wrought by God was indeed present, as not only was there a section of the wall destroyed, but no signs of any destruction caused by siege weapons (catapults/battering rams).
Archaeologist are forced to conclude, of course, that it's an earthquake. If an earthquake did occur, why didn't it destroy the walls or damage the buildings nearby?
This is clear sign of God's miracle.
Just to be clear: the miracle here is that a section of the wall came tumbling down, and there is no such thing as an earthquake where ONLY one section of the wall comes down.
And coincidentally at the right time when the Israelites wanted to conquer it too! Otherwise, the Jerichoans would have patched it up immediately.
The ancient city of Jericho, located at the archaeological site of Tell es-Sultan west of the Jordan River and adjacent to the Ein es-Sultan spring on the edge of modern Jericho, has often been associated with the biblical city of Jericho and the story found in the book of Joshua. The identification...