10 Jul 2023

Where Was David’s Palace?

From time to time, I’ll take a break here from writing about current events in and about Israel. History and culture are interesting topics, as well. So it is I want to talk about another archaeological topic this week.

It’s in the news, anyway.

Only in the last several years have the Israelis been serious about excavating a section just across the street from Jerusalem’s Old City walls. The site goes all the way down a long hill and winds up in the Palestinian village of Silwan. Archeologists believe this site is the famous palace of King David, 3,000 years ago.

It’s quite an impressive place, although you really have to let your mind’s eye even begin to understand what you’re looking at. Incidentally, the area is also across a small street and a temporary white privacy fence, enclosing the fortress of Antiochus Epiphanes—also just recently discovered…under a parking lot!

David’s palace is now a major tourist attraction, named “The City of David.” I have the green ballcap to prove it. I was there a few weeks ago, as many of you know. Annually now, 400,000 people tour the ancient site. By the way, it’s very easy to see, at the summit, how David could have looked down the hill at Bathsheba.

All the way down the hill is the Gihon Spring (looks like a big ol’ mudhole!) and Hezekiah’s tunnel, created to bring water in during the Assyrian siege in the 8th century B.C.

There has been a lot of speculation for decades as to whether David existed or not (what could be called an extreme “minimalist” position), and if he did, where was the great kingdom we read about in the Bible?

I recently read an article by an archaeologist that had a very good answer to this question. Of late, archaeologists like Israel Finkelstein have taken quasi-minimalist positions by saying yes, such a figure probably existed. He just wasn’t the glorious leader we think he was. Often, the “evidence” for such a position is that we don’t in fact find massive ancient structures around Israel.

But the article I mentioned explains that nicely. He basically said that a kingdom in that region, in that time period, would not have had such gigantic structures. At least not like we see in Egypt or even Babylon. Instead, King David could certainly have been everything the Bible says he was, and ruled from less-than-impressive buildings. The culture of the ancient Israelites was simply not ostentatious. Interestingly, Israelis today are famous for their lack of pretension. Even in the Knesset, it’s fairly rare to see a suit. Mostly open-collar attire.

In any event, the City of David is impressive. It commands a high view of the surrounding area below, and the extensive stone walls are anything but small.

I’m almost surprised that Christianity Today magazine has given a fairly positive view of David as a real king, in a June article. A very interesting comment comes near the end of the article:

“’If you don’t have David, you don’t have a lot of things,’ [Michael, of Southern Adventist University] Hasel said. David is mentioned around 1,000 times in the Bible. He’s credited as the author of 73 psalms. His history is tied with Jerusalem becoming Israel’s capital and the site of the temple. And through the line of David, the Messiah is promised.

“’Without David, that is all put into question,’ Hasel said. ‘He is a very significant figure not only for Israel but for the history of Christianity and Judaism. They all draw their identity back to that one person.’”

Herein lies a problem for the Church, specifically the American Church. Did you catch what Hasel said? In effect, he’s saying that if biblical figures like David were not real, then that calls into question the Messiah Himself, since He is from the line of David. On a broader scale, people well understand that if, say, Genesis is not real history, then why are you talking to me about Jesus? Did He exist? What about the Resurrection? The Atonement?

Hasel is exactly correct.

Meanwhile, a Popular Mechanics article had this gem:

“According to a new report from archaeologist Yosef Garfinkel, the biblical King David had a true kingdom. But not everyone agrees that was the case, as bickering continues over a debate that has become part politics, part theology, and part archaeology.

“In a new peer-reviewed article published in the Jerusalem Journal of Archaeology, the Hebrew University professor writes that ‘the earliest fortified sites in the kingdom of Judah in the early 10th century BCE feature a casemate city wall lined with abutting belt of houses.’ Urban planning seen across multiple sites connected by roads shows that five cities were connected to Jerusalem, all dated by Garfinkel to the time of King David.

“’If you take all these sites, they have the same urban concept, they are all sitting on the border of the kingdom and sitting where you have a main road leading to the kingdom,’ he tells the Times of Israel. ‘These cities aren’t located in the middle of nowhere, it’s a pattern of urbanism with the same urban concept.’”

Very interesting.

In other words, if a person has a bias that says the Bible is largely myth, he or she will overlook certain evidences. If one is at least open-minded, compelling evidence springs forth.

I believe David existed. I believe every detail about him in the Bible. An objective person will see that the Bible confirms his existence, as well as archaeological evidence.

Jim1fletcher@yahoo.com

www.patreon.com/TheGodThatAnswers

3 Jul 2023

Peace Long Time Gone

Just when you thought it was safe to go back into the Palestinian Islamic Jihad water, word comes that the terror group is building on its rocket attacks from last month by opening “training camps” for youth.

Islamic Jihad had always been, at least publicly, less robust than Hamas or Lebanon’s Hezbollah. Stretching back to the 90s, the group operated on a smaller scale than their better-known rivals.

And even last month’s barrage of 1,000 rockets from Gaza might not have been due to their efforts, according to some reports, although at the time, major media outlets were definitely pointing at Islamic Jihad. As a source in Israel told me: “They don’t make a move without Hamas giving them the greenlight.” It was thought that perhaps Islamic Jihad was taking the fall, so as to give public cover to Hamas, already on thin ice as Israel talked of a large-scale incursion into the Gaza Strip.

Whoever was responsible, the week-long attacks provided Islamic Jihad with its own metaphorical merit badge for terror. Now it seems they’re building on that reputation.

On June 12, PIJ, the recruiting arm of the Jerusalem Brigades, opened their training camps, calling them “The Camps of Operation Free Men’s Revenge.” They were held at the training camps of the Jerusalem Brigades and were open to youth 14-16. Ahmed al-Ra’I, spokesman for the group, said response had been so great, they had to break the sessions into two phases. All this stemming from Operation Breaking Dawn in August of last year.

This is always the way the terrorist operate. Israel is forced to defend itself from the terrorism inflicted on it by lunatic jihadists. The response then is “an answer” to “Israeli aggression.”More than 1,500 young people have joined these operations, where they are given “crash courses” in tactics. In other words, they are cannon fodder for confrontations and in rare cases, breakouts of war. From Egypt to Lebanon and Syria, many youth are raised on a diet of hate for Israel and they are eager to be martyrs for the cause.

Problem is, they don’t realize that the leadership cares nothing for them and considers them useful in harassing Israel. There hasn’t been a break in this fervor for 100 years.

Even the trainers in this terrorism cover their faces with masks, so that photographs can’t identify them. This is cowardly, but I don’t even think they care if we call them that. For them, everything is justified in “fighting the Zionists.”

The religious angle is important, too, in whipping these impressionable youth into a frenzy. Specifically, they “fostered connection to Islam and the path of the Prophet Muhammad,” an integral part of the groups’ ideology. Remember, even though Yasser Arafat himself wasn’t especially religious, he well understood that it would be a key catalyst for persuading thousands of young men to give up their lives for “Palestine.”

Instruction included land fighting, storming the enemy’s positions, and shooting. Psychological operations also ensured they would not stray from the path.

A huge outcome of all this, according to PIJ leaders, is to send a message to Israel: the efforts from Operation Shield and Arrow, to uproot the terror group’s leadership and training facilities, only served to swell the ranks of recruits, and to rebuild the physical training centers.

After 10 days, the training camp came to an end and a ceremony was held near Khan Yunis.

A fascinating op-ed appears this week in the Jerusalem Post, and sheds light on the never-ending circle of violence:

“A two-state solution to the Israel-Palestinian conflict, long the dream of Jewish liberals like me, is increasingly unlikely and probably has been since the end of the Six-Day War in June 1967 – a war in which Israel expelled Jordanian forces from the West Bank.

Prior to the Jordanian exit, there was a two-state solution of sorts – a Jewish state (Israel) and an Arab state (Jordan) occupying the entirety of what had been Mandatory Palestine.

A short time later Israel’s government, headed by Labor Party prime minister Levi Eshkol, offered to return the West Bank to Jordan in exchange for peace, an offer Jordan rejected and concurrently abandoned its claim to the West Bank in favor of the newly created Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO).

The writer, Alfred Moses, believes more should be done to improve the lot of Palestinians.

Yet this approach has also been tried for decades! Untold billions of dollars from the U.S. and Europe has poured into the Palestinian territories. Much of it was stolen by the leadership. When Israel pulled out of Gaza entirely in 2005, they left business infrastructure such as farms and sophisticated irrigation. The Palestinians swept in and

Madness.

Enormous effort has been expended in “improving the lives of Palestinians,” but right up to this moment they continue poisoning their own culture because of hatred for Jews.

It’s fascinating that Moses believes there was never a real chance at peace, stretching back 60 years. And it’s true that Jordan basically served as the Palestinian state, until King Hussein kicked Arafat and the PLO out of his country. The terror football was tossed back in Israel’s direction.

As Christians, and ones that believe in Bible prophecy, we know that no human solution exists to bring real peace to the region. It is frustrating that madmen have so much power to cause so much harm. And it’s all unnecessary. Israel has made serious overtures to the Palestinians since 1967, but the PLO has always preferred that their own people be used as pawns.

This week, remember especially the 1,500 young people being shoved into the meatgrinder by the terrorists. Pray they will have both discernment and a way out of that hellhole.

 

Jim1fletcher@yahoo.com

www.patreon.com/TheGodThatAnswers