Jump to navigation

  • The BAS Library Explore the Library

  • Demo
  • Magazines
  • Books
  • Encyclopedia
  • Collections
  • Videos
  • Notables
  • FAQs
  • Institutions
  • Spring 2022

⇽Go to BAS Home

Home
Biblical Archaeology Society Online Archive
  • SUBSCRIBE
  • Log In
  • My Account
  • Support
  • Explore the Library

  • Demo
  • Magazines
  • Books
  • Encyclopedia
  • Collections
  • Videos
  • Notables
  • FAQs
  • Institutions
  • Spring 2022

Your Filters

  • (-) Remove Testament filter Testament
  • (-) Remove Authors: William H.C. Propp filter Authors: William H.C. Propp
  • (-) Remove Authors: Stephen J. Patterson filter Authors: Stephen J. Patterson
  • (-) Remove Authors: Frank Moore Cross filter Authors: Frank Moore Cross
  • (-) Remove Authors: Yizhar Hirschfeld filter Authors: Yizhar Hirschfeld
  • (-) Remove Content type: Feature Article filter Content type: Feature Article
  • (-) Remove Authors: Philip J. King filter Authors: Philip J. King
  • (-) Remove Authors: W. D. Davies filter Authors: W. D. Davies
  • (-) Remove Authors: Hanan Eshel filter Authors: Hanan Eshel
  • (-) Remove Authors: Alan R. Millard filter Authors: Alan R. Millard
Displaying 1 - 20 of 24 results

My Odyssey in New Testament Interpretation

By W. D. Davies
010 Karl Marx, when he was living in Highgate, London, was once asked to address a group of theologians. On his arrival, the meeting place was full of tobacco smoke, and Marx remarked, “Theologians always cloud the issues.” When I remind...
Bible Review, June 1989

Yes, Virginia, There Is a Q

By Stephen J. Patterson
039 Eta Linnemann’s article on the Q hypothesisa takes Burton Mack and me to task not only for our scholarship, but also for what she takes to be our attack on traditional Christian beliefs. It’s a clever exercise in apologetics. However, this...
Bible Review, October 1995

The History of Israelite Religion

A Secular or Theological Subject?
By Frank Moore Cross
042 If we propose to study the history of the religion of ancient Israel, we must be governed by the same postulates that are the basis of modern historical method. Our task must be a historical, not a theological, enterprise. We must trace the...
Biblical Archaeology Review, May/June 2005

Q

The lost gospel
By Stephen J. Patterson
034 The Lost Gospel. The very concept provokes a flood of questions. If it is lost, how do we know it ever existed? How do we know what was in it? Who lost it? And how was it lost? Perhaps most intriguing of all: Will it ever be found? A new book...
Bible Review, October 1993

Bah, Humbug!

A scholar rips Handel’s Messiah
By William H.C. Propp
043 Every December, concert halls and churches throughout the English-speaking world resound with the strains of George Frederic Handel‘s mighty Messiah. For centuries, music lovers have gone home humming the arias and choruses that Handel‘s...
Bible Review, December 2002

Kings Og’s Iron Bed

Fact or fancy?
By Alan R. Millard
016 017 In Moses’ famous speech that comprises most of Deuteronomy, he describes the Israelite conquest of two kingdoms east of the Jordan—Heshbon, led by a king named Sihon, and Bashan, led by...
Bible Review, April 1990

Exorcising Demons

By William H.C. Propp
014 Pazuzu...Lamashtu...Khatyu...Sheseru...Sasam...Lilith...Asmodeus...Beelzebub.... Names to conjure with. Literally. Years ago, when I was a student at Harvard, my teacher Frank Moore Cross raised a puzzling question: Why do demons—so prominent...
Bible Review, October 2004

Daniel and Belshazzar in History

By Alan R. Millard
073 The party was in full swing, the wine flowed freely, and everyone felt on top of the world. There was no power on earth to rival Babylon, and no gods in heaven to equal hers. This is the setting of the famous fifth chapter of the Book of...
Biblical Archaeology Review, May/June 1985

The Gospel of Thomas

Does it contain authentic sayings of Jesus?
By Helmut KoesterStephen J. Patterson
028 Scholars have long theorized that collections of Jesus’ sayings circulated in the decades following his death and that therefore they would be among the earliest witnesses to his message. Modern critical scholars have even been able to...
Bible Review, April 1990

Tiberias: Preview of Coming Attractions

By Yizhar Hirschfeld
044 045 This is the story mostly of what will be rather than what has been. It is a report on what we hope to do more than what we have already done. It tells of the tantalizing clues that keep...
Biblical Archaeology Review, March/April 1991

II: Original Biblical Text Reconstructed from Newly Found Fragments

Scrolls provide a fresh understanding of apocalyptic elements in late biblical religion
By Frank Moore Cross
026027 In the last issue of Bible Review, Professor Cross presented a description, based on his study of the Dead Sea Scrolls, of how the text of the Hebrew Bible developed (“The Text...
Bible Review, Fall 1985

A Country Gentleman’s Estate

Unearthing the Splendors of Ramat Hanadiv
By Yizhar HirschfeldMiriam Feinberg Vamosh
018 019 020 On a ridge about 3 miles east of Caesarea, deep in the Carmel range, Baron Edmond de Rothschild is buried alongside his wife...
Biblical Archaeology Review, March/April 2005

Ebla and the Bible

What’s left (if anything)?
By Alan R. Millard
018 019 I remember it well. It was early October 1975. We were sitting on top of the tell having lunch. One of our guests, Afif Bahnassi, the director of the Department of Antiquities of Syria...
Bible Review, April 1992

Whose Bones

New Qumran Excavations, New Debates
By Magen BroshiHanan Eshel
026 026 027 Under the headline, “Digging for the Baptist,” the August 12, 2002 issue of Time magazine asked its readers: “Have...
Biblical Archaeology Review, January/February 2003

Literacy in the Time of Jesus

Could His Words Have Been Recorded in His Lifetime?
By Alan R. Millard
037 How likely is it that someone would have written down and collected Jesus’ sayings into a book in Jesus’ lifetime? Several lines of evidence converge to suggest it is quite probable. The first factor to consider is how prevalent literacy was...
Biblical Archaeology Review, July/August 2003

Circumcision

Who Did It, Who Didn’t and Why
By Philip J. King
049 Pottery is probably the archaeologist’s most important diagnostic tool, not only for dating a stratum of an excavation, but also for determining the culture and ethnicity of the ancient people who lived there at the time. In 1969, however, at...
Biblical Archaeology Review, July/August 2006

I: The Text Behind the Text of the Hebrew Bible

By Frank Moore Cross
012013 012 This is Part I of a two-part article; the second part will appear in the next issue of Bible Review. Part 2 will discuss the...
Bible Review, Summer 1985

The Oxyrhynchus Papyri

The Remarkable Discovery You’ve Probably Never Heard Of
By Stephen J. Patterson
Discovered in the Egyptian desert over a century ago, the Oxyrhynchus Papyri have provided invaluable insights into the life and times of an early Roman Christian community of the Nile Valley. As our author explains, these priceless documents, which include everything from little-known gospels to revealing personal letters, intimately portray the beliefs and daily lives of ordinary Romans and Christians, making them one of the greatest archaeological finds ever.
Biblical Archaeology Review, March/April 2011

The Dead Sea Scrolls and the People Who Wrote Them

By Frank Moore Cross
After a quarter century of discovery and publication, the study of the manuscripts from the desert of Judah has entered a new, more mature phase. True, the heat and noise of the early controversies have not wholly dissipated. One occasionally hears the agonized cry of a scholar pinned beneath a collapsed theory. And in the popular press, no doubt, the so-called battle of the scrolls will continue to be fought with mercenaries for some time to come. However, the initial period of confusion is past. From the burgeoning field of scroll research and the new disciplines it has created, certain coherent patterns of fact and meaning have emerged.
Biblical Archaeology Review, March 1977

The Great Eighth Century

By Philip J. King
022023 022 A century is a wholly arbitrary block of time. History surely does not proceed by 100-year chunks. And to mark the beginning and...
Bible Review, August 1989

Pages

  • 1
  • 2
  • next ›
  • last »

Search the Library

E.g. 1 Kings 9:28 or 1 Kgs 9:28

Authors

  • (-) Remove Alan R. Millard filter Alan R. Millard
  • (-) Remove Stephen J. Patterson filter Stephen J. Patterson
  • (-) Remove Frank Moore Cross filter Frank Moore Cross
  • (-) Remove Yizhar Hirschfeld filter Yizhar Hirschfeld
  • (-) Remove Hanan Eshel filter Hanan Eshel
  • (-) Remove Philip J. King filter Philip J. King
  • (-) Remove W. D. Davies filter W. D. Davies
  • (-) Remove William H.C. Propp filter William H.C. Propp
  • Hershel Shanks Apply Hershel Shanks filter
  • Jerome Murphy-O’Connor Apply Jerome Murphy-O’Connor filter
  • Ben Witherington III Apply Ben Witherington III filter
  • James C. VanderKam Apply James C. VanderKam filter
  • Robin M. Jensen Apply Robin M. Jensen filter
  • David R. Cartlidge Apply David R. Cartlidge filter
  • Harvey Minkoff Apply Harvey Minkoff filter
  • Leonard J. Greenspoon Apply Leonard J. Greenspoon filter
  • James D. Tabor Apply James D. Tabor filter
  • Lawrence Mykytiuk Apply Lawrence Mykytiuk filter
  • Molly Dewsnap Meinhardt Apply Molly Dewsnap Meinhardt filter
  • Ronald S. Hendel Apply Ronald S. Hendel filter
  • Suzanne F. Singer Apply Suzanne F. Singer filter
  • André Lemaire Apply André Lemaire filter
  • Birger A. Pearson Apply Birger A. Pearson filter
  • Bruce Chilton Apply Bruce Chilton filter
  • Carey A. Moore Apply Carey A. Moore filter
  • Dale C. Allison Jr. Apply Dale C. Allison Jr. filter
  • David Noel Freedman Apply David Noel Freedman filter
  • James Fleming Apply James Fleming filter
  • James A. Sanders Apply James A. Sanders filter
  • John Dominic Crossan Apply John Dominic Crossan filter
  • Lawrence H. Schiffman Apply Lawrence H. Schiffman filter
  • Marcus J. Borg Apply Marcus J. Borg filter
  • Mark R. Fairchild Apply Mark R. Fairchild filter
  • Richard Elliott Friedman Apply Richard Elliott Friedman filter
  • Rolf Rendtorff Apply Rolf Rendtorff filter
  • William G. Dever Apply William G. Dever filter
  • Yitzhak Magen Apply Yitzhak Magen filter
  • Boaz Zissu Apply Boaz Zissu filter
  • Dan P. Cole Apply Dan P. Cole filter
  • George Howard Apply George Howard filter
  • Geza Vermes Apply Geza Vermes filter
  • Israel Finkelstein Apply Israel Finkelstein filter
  • John J. Collins Apply John J. Collins filter
  • John J. Hughes Apply John J. Hughes filter
  • John Van Seters Apply John Van Seters filter
  • Joseph A. Fitzmyer Apply Joseph A. Fitzmyer filter
  • Kathleen Ritmeyer Apply Kathleen Ritmeyer filter
  • Kenneth Atkinson Apply Kenneth Atkinson filter
  • Kenneth A. Kitchen Apply Kenneth A. Kitchen filter
  • Mendel Nun Apply Mendel Nun filter
  • Paul W. Lapp Apply Paul W. Lapp filter
  • Pieter W. van der Horst Apply Pieter W. van der Horst filter

Publication

  • Bible Review Apply Bible Review filter
  • Biblical Archaeology Review Apply Biblical Archaeology Review filter

Content type

  • (-) Remove Feature Article filter Feature Article

Date

  • 2011 Apply 2011 filter
  • 2006 Apply 2006 filter
  • 2005 Apply 2005 filter
  • 2004 Apply 2004 filter
  • 2003 Apply 2003 filter
  • 2002 Apply 2002 filter
  • 1995 Apply 1995 filter
  • 1993 Apply 1993 filter
  • 1992 Apply 1992 filter
  • 1991 Apply 1991 filter
  • 1990 Apply 1990 filter
  • 1989 Apply 1989 filter
  • 1985 Apply 1985 filter
  • 1984 Apply 1984 filter
  • 1977 Apply 1977 filter

Information

  • About Us
  • Advertise
  • Customer Service
  • Donate
  • Press Room
  • Masthead
  • Contact Us
  • Employment
  • Site Map
  • Terms of Use
  • Privacy Policy
  • Copyright

Publications

  • Biblical Archaeology Review
  • Bible History Daily
  • Archaeology Odyssey
  • Subscribe to BAR
  • Bible Review
  • Free E-Books
  • Give a gift subscription
  • Manage your subscription

Biblical Archaeology Society Network Links

  • Network Home
  • Events
  • Bible History Daily
  • Donate
  • Biblical Archaeology Review
  • Current Archaeological Digs
  • BAS Library