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The American archaeologist and the French Dominican

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    by Damien F. Mackey       A famous name for his authentication of the Dead Se a Scrolls , [Albright] can be a most fascinating study. Although a conventional scholar, schooled in a system of chronology and archaeology that disallows its exponents from being able to demonstrate the historicity of the Bible – and imbued also with the erroneous, pre-archaeological JEDP Documentary Theory – professor Albright yet had the ability occasionally to burst through the seams of that suffocating system and to produce some very insightful new observations.       Introduction   The nation of ancient Egypt, which had been so biblically prominent when Abram came to Canaan (c. 1900 BC), who was then forced to go to Egypt to survive a famine, and which completely dominated the biblical landscape during the long years of (Jacob) Joseph and Moses, will fade right out of the Bible now, for centuries, after the devastating Plagues, ...

Apollonius governor of Greater Syria poised as Quirinius of Luke’s Census

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    by Damien F. Mackey     “His position as the Governor (Legate) of Syria at this time is confirmed by the discovery of a tombstone in Beirut, known popularly as the Q. Aemilius Secundus inscription. In it, Quirinius is called the “legato Augusti Caesaris Syria”.” Bryan Windle     Efforts to correlate the life of Herod ‘the Great’ with the Birth of Jesus Christ, and with the census – and there are many of them – are generally quite tortuous to read, and they tend to arrive at rather unhelpful conclusions. Here is a part of one such example from the Christian Publishing House Blog : Reconciling Herod's Death: A Debate Between 4 B.C.E. and 1 B.C.E. Through Biblical and Historical Lenses - Christian Publishing House Blog   Are the Conflicting Dates for Herod’s Death Irreconcilable?   Exploring the Dispute Over Herod’s Death   The timing of Herod the Great’s death has long been a source of discussion in ...