by Encounters in Archaeology | Aug 16, 2022 | Uncategorized
Walled mother cities had stores of weapons and grain so they could withstand an enemy siege. The army, wealthy merchants, and the priestly class lived within the walled city while the poor lived outside the walled city, in the daughter villages. Kings and priests...
by Encounters in Archaeology | Aug 6, 2022 | Uncategorized
In the Bible it is presented to the prophet Samuel, and later to Nathan, that the Lord is not so hot on the idea of the people having a king who might abuse his power. Nor is the Lord hot on the idea of them having a temple. What is wrong with the tabernacle? The...
by Encounters in Archaeology | Aug 4, 2022 | Uncategorized
Samuel went to Bethlehem looking for a king and found David, a scrawny boy who kept the sheep. Let’s look at the kingship more in relation to David. David spilled innocent blood when he killed Uriah the Hittite because of his lust for Bathsheba. Nathan would...
by Encounters in Archaeology | Jun 30, 2022 | Uncategorized
Where does Jesus get his notion of servant-king? He gets it from scripture. Kings are to be servants. The two on the road to Emmaus were in despair because the person they thought was to be king was killed by the very Romans he was to overthrow. The stranger...
by Encounters in Archaeology | Jun 23, 2022 | Uncategorized
Let us continue to look at how Jesus presented the kingdom of God as he spent time with people who others forgot in Luke chapter 7. There were two healings at Nain. The widow who had already lost her husband has now lost her only son through that husband. The...