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sent to the University of Haifa. That box has been in the basement of the
university’s museum for about 30 years now, with apparently no rigorous
investigation of its contents. Those of us at ABR are, naturally, very curious to
see if modern technology could be used to identify and read any writing on the
plaster fragments. If so, and if the altar is really Joshua’s altar as we believe,
that writing would be from the words of Moses that Joshua, according to his
mandate from Moses, wrote down within 3 months after the death of Moses.
If only a few letters could be discerned, that would give valuable insight into
the development of the alphabet. If, however, some consecutive words or
phrases were found, and these could be correlated with what we have in the
Book of Deuteronomy, that would be the most important discovery ever made
in the field of Biblical studies and Israelite archaeology, more important, and
more decisive in establishing the authenticity of the earliest books of the Bible,
than the Dead Sea Scrolls or any other archaeological discovery.
Steven Rudd is a personal friend of mine, and we have had some
discussion on this matter. I knew that Steve had developed, at his own
expense, a scanning machine that scanned ostraca from the Shiloh dig in both
infrared and ultraviolet, and this made legible faded writings on clay that could
not be read by the unaided eye. But Steve says that his equipment is far
inferior to the scanning equipment that the University of Haifa possesses, and
which he thought was priced at from 70 thousand to 125 thousand dollars. In a
follow-up to the March 24 announcement, on April 4 Scott Stripling said that
there will be an examination of the plaster. He also said that just that morning
he had gotten the results of a Carbon-14 measurement of the date of some
organic material in the plaster, but he naturally did not give the result because
that would be premature at this stage.
I would also mention that there is some danger and difficulty associated
with getting access to the Mt. Ebal site. When Steve Rudd went there in 2005
with Adam Zertal, they were accompanied by armed Israeli soldiers, and Steve
said there were military planes flying overhead. In February 2019, the
Palestinian authority took some of the stones from the site to use as
foundational material for a road they were building. As the site will receive
more publicity in the weeks and months ahead, it is also possible that the
Palestinians will decide to vandalize it because it is evidence that the Jewish
nation has a historical right to the land, something that the Palestinians try to
ignore or deny, even though in their holy book, the Qur’an, it is stated in five
places that Allah gave the Holy Land to the Jewish nation. Qur’an 5:21, 7:137,
10:93, 17:104, 44:54.