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Showing posts with label matzevah. Show all posts
Showing posts with label matzevah. Show all posts

Tuesday, November 18, 2025

Novel Insights About Torah Through Archaeology!

Over the past 20 years I have been closely involved and have become intimately familiar with excavations at the City of David. My particular interest is the Stone Temple at the oldest site, on the eastern slope of Mount Moriah, adjacent to and above En Shemesh (Sun Spring):- Ancient Jerusalem's original water source, which is also known as Gihon. I wrote this to outline the reasons why this  discovery is a phenomena for Torah, Israel and the world.


As exciting as the stream of discoveries has been, nothing has inspired me more than the “aha” moments that enlightened my study and understanding Tanach (24 books of the Bible). With each new discovery there is a certain light that is cast onto often mysterious details.

Take for example the golden bell Eli Shukron discovered in the rainwater channel under the pilgrims road, not far from the Temple Mount. It begged for a new interpretation to describe the adornments on the hem of the High Priests garment. Instead of 36 alternating golden bells, between 36 woven, wool shaped into pomegranates, which has become the mainstream understanding, the golden bell Eli discovered is more likely 1 of 72 pomegranates. The golden, pomegranate shaped bell with internal clapper served as the inner support for an outer purple and blue woven sheaf in colors of the pomegranate. The way we read the holy language of Torah is important, so when Torah says “bell and pomegranate” and after we find these discoveries we obtain new perspectives to interpret and understand the language Torah uses to describe what we now physically see.

Previous followed by New
72 Golden Pomegranate Bells

When I first encountered the Stone Temple I immediately felt its importance, its authenticity and inherent holiness. My first response to David Be'eri and Yehuda Maley (who live in the City of David) was; "If this is what I think it is, you're going to have to move out of your homes". As I got to understand its complexities, I knew the knowledge that had been buried for thousands of years in this time capsule would take time, perhaps decades to unlock its mysteries and understand the magnitude of this discovery. I also discovered that archaeologists report facts, sometimes using language that biases outcomes.

During the early years of our excavations I tried to imagine what it was originally like at a time, when little else existed and few people lived around the mountainside. How did it evolve into the archaeological complexity that remains in their time bound layers? From the outset of our subterranean quest I had a hunch that this was not a Canaanite temple of idolatry, the artifacts that were progressively being revealed left me with no doubt. I needed to explain each of these, but how did so much earth accumulate above it and who knew about it? 

I recently found this amazing 1875 photo looking over the ground under which we were crawling in the video. It shows the extent of burial under thousands of years of accumulated dirt from the natural slope of the mountain. Filip Vukosavović, who led some of the more recent excavations, once told me that on a slope like this if unattended for 5-10 years, the slope and the Stone Temple would have been buried  depending on wind, rain and other natural conditions.



When I arrived on the scene, Eli Shukron and Ronny Reich had recently excavated the double wall of the Spring House construction leading to the valley floor. It arrived immediately adjacent to the springs source. I found it strange that double wall more closely aligned with the south side of the spring rather than directly over it. Therefore, from the Kidron Valley floor, the imposing double wall seemed to be less about dominating over the water source, more like a barrier that blocked north-south passage along the bedrock, while forming a gateway, or entrance into the tunnel system adjacent to and higher than the spring.  

Morning sun shines on En Shemesh (Sun Spring) 


Double Wall

Eli Shukron made a statement shortly after the double wall discovery had been excavated: "This is the citadel of King David, this is the Citadel of Zion, and this is what King David took from the Jebusites".

2 Samuel 5:7-9
וַיִּלְכֹּ֣ד דָּוִ֔ד אֵ֖ת מְצֻדַ֣ת צִיּ֑וֹן הִ֖יא עִ֥יר דָּוִֽד׃
But David captured the stronghold of Zion; (expanded) it is (became) the City of David.

I wandered, where was the "Zion" King David was seeking when he captured its Citadel or Stronghold?

The prophet Samuel goes on to tell that David's men captured the Jebusite water channel, that he stayed in the place they captured and expanded the stronghold or citadel of Zion into the City of David. Therefore, this must be a defining principle for geo-locating the general proximity of Zion. 
 
Archaeology confirms that in the few hundred years before the Citadel of Zion became the City of David most people were living along the valley floor around the water at En Shemesh, but they progressively migrated to safety at the the top of the ridge and carried their daily water to the top. Given a population between 200 growing to 1000 people living on top of the ridge, water demands would have kept water carriers busy. 

2 Samuel 5:8
וַיֹּ֨אמֶר דָּוִ֜ד בַּיּ֣וֹם הַה֗וּא כׇּל־מַכֵּ֤ה יְבֻסִי֙ וְיִגַּ֣ע בַּצִּנּ֔וֹר וְאֶת־הַפִּסְחִים֙ וְאֶת־הַ֣עִוְרִ֔ים (שנאו) [שְׂנוּאֵ֖י] נֶ֣פֶשׁ דָּוִ֑ד עַל־כֵּן֙ יֹֽאמְר֔וּ עִוֵּ֣ר וּפִסֵּ֔חַ לֹ֥א יָב֖וֹא אֶל־הַבָּֽיִת׃ 
On that occasion David said, “Those who attack the Jebusites shall reach (in) the water channel (TZiNoR) and [strike down] the lame and the blind, who are hateful to David.” That is why they say: “No one who is blind or lame may enter the House.”

The internal water supply route runs through a long dry tunnel, elevated 20 meters above the spring, quarried through the mountain bedrock. It was used to carry water to the end of the tunnel where it was hauled up another 20 meters (see the haul point in the blue box - image below) to the Water Gate that exited closer to the top just north of and above the Stone Temple site. Archaeologists called the tunnel Warrens Shaft System, but its name often leads to an incorrect characterization of the tunnels use. Instead, Tanach teaches us that by commandeering the tunnel, Davids troops gained control of the water supply route, which brought the entire population under David's control.  

Route along dashed (earlier) line dotted line (alternative).

Iron Age King David, must have been compelled to come to this seemingly insignificant hill after he had reigned for 7 years as Judean King in Hebron. So, why did he want to control the lower section of Mount Moriah, before the temple mount summit was incorporated and why did he foresee this would become the nation's capital? Whatever it was, he must have known and been compelled by some previous tradition or cultural history that inspired his decisive actions?

Commentators on Genesis often attribute activities on Mount Moriah, during the post flood, Middle Bronze Age (MBA), to Malchi-Tzedek (considered to be Shem, Noah's son), Abraham, Isaac and Jacob. The image below depicts, from the valley, what the discovery made by Eli Shukron in 2010 may have looked like back in the MBA. 

Middle Bronze Age Depiction

In the following video, Eli Shukron details features of the Stone Temple  (its definitely worth watching). 



One of the most inconspicuous features of the Stone Temple is its westerly orientation, which contradicts every other pre-first temple cultic site in Israel. It's important because priests, in all other forms of cultic worship in Israel would face the rising sun when sacrificing on the altar. Therefore, the idol worshippers altar would sit between the priest and the sun. The raised platform of the Stone Temple, on which altars would be constructed from time to time, requires priests turn their backs to the rising sun to make the sacrificial offering. Priests facing west is prescient for Israel's Tabernacle as well as first and second temples that adopted the same practice as was later prescribed by Torah (The Old Testament Bible). 


The room with  the raised platform and liquids channel served as the base for many altars that would have been constructed from local stones gathered at or around the site on the day sacrifice was to be performed. It resembles a highly specific feature extrapolated in the oral teachings of Torah. The Gemara (Zevachim 53b) asked: What is the reason that there was no base on the southeast corner of the altar? The question related to the second temple altar platform, perhaps also considering the first temple. Similarly, in the Stone Temple we see that the southeast corner of the altar platform is 'open' where the others, abutting bedrock walls are 'closed'. The map below was produced by Rashi to demonstrate the Gemara's argument pertaining to the second temple.

Top right map shows tribal boundary for Judah and Benjamin

Notice the liquids channel runs east from the southeast corner. This appears to follow the description from the vision of Ezekiel 47:1 " I was led back to the entrance of the temple, and I found that water was issuing from below the platform of the temple—eastward, since the temple faced east—but the water was running out at the south of the altar, under the south wall of the temple."

Southeast corner with no base intersects boundary from
En Rogel at En Shemesh and out to the desert

Map by Ronny Reich.

Here we have another prescient example, in archaeology that predates the first temple by 600+ years, of a practice that was later recorded in Torah and practised by the nation of Israel. In Kabbalah, southeast represents the Divine confluence of Kindness and Mercy described in ancient Biblical theology. But, there is much more in this place of worship that obeys traditional Jewish laws antithetical to the structures of cultic idol worship. The images below show the remnant of an olive oil press that was once used to extract oil from crushed olives and to keep the oil in its pure state, connected to the bedrock. This is not a production press which would flow the pressed oil out of the bedrock cavity into vats. Here the oil was scooped out in stone vessels to maintain purity and used on the altar or for anointment.  


The next set of images of the room that was used for processing slaughtered animals demonstrates (from left to right) that small animals were tethered to the edge of the bedrock wall. According to Torah law, animals for slaughter must be no younger than 8 days and must be unblemished, therefore young animals are more likely to meet the unblemished condition, which would explain why the location to tether animals was made under adult knee height. 


To process animal offerings water must also be available, in the very least, to wash the bloody bedrock after slaughter and preparation. Initially this water may have been carried from the spring up the eastern facing slope, in front (east) of the Stone Temple, as evidenced by the carbon dating of a wall (image below). The lower sections were dated to between 1820 and 1750 BCE which overlaps the time that Abraham (according to Codex Judaica) summarized in biblical chronology: 

Biblical Date 1948 Abraham (son of Terach) was born. -1813 BCE
Biblical Date 2018 THE COVENANT (BRIT BEIN HABETARIM) WITH ABRAHAM. -1743 BCE
Biblical Date 2048 Abraham circumcised himself and his son Yishmael. -1713 BCE


Without any in-situ artifacts, other than the matzevah or standing stone, the entire complex could not be accurately dated. Therefore, the archaeologists referred to Cambridge University and Weizmann Institute to carbon date organic matter from mortar in walls, ash layers on the bedrock and a water channel at the rear of the Stone Temple, that once provided water to priests serving in the temple. The next video outlines the uncanny overlap of the samples found in the water channel samples with Biblical Jacob.



Biblical Date 2185 Jacob went to Charan. -1576 BCE
Biblical Date 2192 Jacob married Leah and Rachel. -1569 BCE
Biblical Date 2205 Jacob left Charan. -1556 BCE
Biblical Date 2208 Benjamin was born. -1553 BCE
Biblical Date 2216 Joseph was sold. -1545 BCE
Biblical Date 2238 JACOB (AND HIS FAMILY) WENT TO EGYPT. -1523 BCE

The context of the Stone Temple continued to develop for me to the point that it became overwhelmingly clear this was the main temple the patriarchs frequented including where Jacob experienced his famous “stairway to heaven” dream and set the matzevah or standing stone to make a covenant with God. 


Almost 1000 years after Isaac and Jacob, when the eastern defensive wall of King Uzziah was excavated, it became clear that the flimsy matzevah that was purposely surrounded by soft sand had been preserved. Around 2700 BCE the entire Stone Temple complex that had been completely buried under the natural accumulation of sand and debris, probably resembled the 1875 photo. 

Eastern Defensive Wall

The wall builders, seeking a solid bedrock foundation for their massive wall probed the soft sand penetrating the voids of the Stone Temple rooms below. When they eventually built their significant defensive wall in front of the matzevah and over the bedrock of the Stone Temple rooms, they understood this holy artifact needed special care. A bulla (royal seal) found in front (east) of the Stone Temple with the name “Meshulam” indicates that a royal instruction was unsealed at the site of the wall construction.


After the wall construction was completed Jerusalem was challenged by the Assyrian army and around 100 years later the city was destroyed by the Babylonian Army and all its people were forced into exile. The city lay empty for more than 70 years and the eastern slope was abandoned. Neglected, natural sand, dirt and debris covered the Stone Temple, the defensive wall, the double wall and En Shemesh, the spring. It lay buried until the spring was excavated during the second temple construction because the waters that flowed from the spring kept running through the lower water tunnel that King Hezekiah built and it filled the recently excavated Shiloh or Siloam Pool at the southern end of ancient Jerusalem, The City of David.

As I have described, The Stone Temple discovery is completely consistent with Biblical heritage and with Jewish practices that have continued through millennia. The sacred site of patriarchal worship is the likely reason that inspired King David to move his kingdom, but we now know, from the carbon dated samples, he did not find the Zion he was seeking. Instead he built a personal altar on the summit of Mount Moriah and declared it the national altar. 

Now that we have found David’s Zion what would the patriarchs and David want of us and absent any other definitive altar location can we revert to the original?




Friday, August 29, 2025

The Quest for Biblical Jacob: An Exposé on Archaeological and Textual Evidence

In the ever-evolving pursuit of bridging ancient texts with modern archaeology, a fascinating conversation unfolded with a user intent on exploring whether a recent discovery by Cambridge University and the Weizmann Institute—focusing on radiocarbon dating of a water channel in Jerusalem's City of David—could prove the existence of the biblical Jacob. The inquiry began with a simple question: "does this discovery by Cambridge university and Weizmann institute prove the existence of biblical Jacob?" 

The story of biblical Jacob, a pivotal patriarch in the Hebrew Bible, has long been debated as a blend of history, legend, and theology. Yet, recent archaeological discoveries in Jerusalem's City of David, combined with textual traditions and scholarly analyses, paint a compelling picture that Jacob—or his traveling clan—may have been directly involved in augmenting a rock-cut temple site with a plastered water channel, constructed around 1545 BCE and last used by 1535 BCE, during the 30 years after he returned to Canaan before the famine-driven exile to Egypt (as recounted in Genesis 35:6–15). This narrative unfolds through a series of milestones, each building on evidence from radiocarbon dating, excavations, ancient texts, and interpretive traditions, progressively increasing the probability of Jacob's historicity and involvement from 0.05% to approximately 89.6%. Let's trace this step by step.

Our journey begins with Milestone 1: Radiocarbon Data and Chronological Overlap. A 2021 study by researchers from the Weizmann Institute and Cambridge University, published in the journal Radiocarbon, recalibrated Jerusalem's Middle Bronze Age timeline using high-resolution dating of organic samples from the City of David. Key samples RTD-9964 (a seed) and RTD-9965 (a twig) from ash layers in a plastered water channel, behind a rock-cut-temple site, 35 meters above the Gihon Spring yielded a narrow use phase of 1545–1535 BCE. This 10-year window strikingly aligns with Jacob's final 30 years in Canaan (1553–1523 BCE, per traditional Codex Judaica chronology), a period of return to his ancestral sites before the protracted Egypt sojourn. The study's quote on Jerusalem's unique occupational gap after ~1500 BC—unlike the 250–300-year zenith at other sites (Greenberg 2019)—suggests abrupt disuse, possibly due to natural burial or abandonment post-exile, making random coincidence less likely and boosting initial probability to ~0.05%.

Building on this temporal foundation is Milestone 2: Matzevah and Rock-Cut Site Features. Excavations by Eli Shukron revealed a standing stone (matzevah) in the rock-cut complex adjacent to the water channel, with an altar platform and tribal boundary alignments (Judah-Benjamin per Rashi on Zevachim 53b). The matzevah's uniqueness—integrated into a cultic temple setup without parallels in northern Bethel candidates like Beitin—supports identification as Jacob's Beit El stone (Genesis 35:14), where he poured oil and vowed. Though matzevot are common in Levantine archaeology, this site's ritual context raises probability to ~0.07%.

Milestone 3: Relocation of Ai/Bethel to align with Rock-Cut site and IAA Reports on Ras al-Amud further refines the geography. Analyses propose Ai at Ras al-Amud (1.3 km east of City of David) and Bethel at the rock-cut temple, supported by IAA reports (articles 1020, 1025, 1026) confirming MB II (1670–1530 BCE) occupation with fortifications and destruction layers. This east-west alignment fits Genesis 12:8 (Abram's tent west of Ai) better than northern sites, narrowing the mismatch and aligning with Jacob's route, elevating probability to ~1.5%.

Milestone 4: Dead Sea Scrolls and Textual Continuity adds ancient attestation. Fragments 4QGen^b and 1QGen (~200–100 BCE) preserve Genesis 27–35 with 95% fidelity to the Masoretic Text, implying scribal traditions dating back further. This continuity refutes purely mythical origins, boosting to ~2.4%.

Milestone 5: Grammatical inference and thematic humility explores Hebrew roots like 's’chach' (overshadowing) in Succot/Mishkan, emphasizing modest sanctity fitting the site's features. This contrasts Canaanite grandeur, supporting Jacob's humble Beit El, to ~4.9%.

Milestone 6: Site Preservation and David's non-discovery highlights undisturbed ash and matzevah sealed under sand until 2010, with Uzziah's wall (~750 BCE) exposing rooms. This implies David conquered the Citadel of Zion (2 Samuel 5:7) without finding the hidden temple, aligning with midrashic search, to ~7.2%.

Milestone 7: Continuity and Sophistication at Ras al-Amud with Hammerstones notes Neolithic-to-MB continuity and tool abundance (1670–1530 BCE), bolstering Ai and Beit El candidacy, to ~9.58%.

Milestone 8: Intentional preservation of matzevah amid idolatry purge, liquid staining, temple context, and anti-Sun orientation notes Hezekiah-era burial despite reforms (2 Kings 18:3–4), front staining from oils (Genesis 28:18), and westward anti-sun alignment (Maimonides Guide 3:45), to ~14.0%.

Milestone 9: Alignment with Jewish Law and temple features includes oil press for purity (Mishnah Kelim 2:1), three-fingerbreadth platform (Mishnah Yoma 5:2), and tethers for unblemished animals (Leviticus 22:19–24), mirroring Temple, to ~19.2%.

Milestone 10: Genesis 12:6–9 Journey and tent site alignment fits Abram's tent west of Ai (blog map, Ohel Abraham church), to ~26.5%.

Milestone 11: Sefaria sources on Jacob's Compulsion emphasizes divine/ancestral ties, to ~35.2%.

Milestone 12: Machpelah burials and scribal continuity confirms historicity via site reverence and textual fidelity, to ~46.1%.

The significant shift between Milestone 12 and 13 is the result of a well defined theory with strong evidentiary support: Its worth repeating the argument:

"This artist image depicts an unoccupied Mount Moriah and the rock-cut temple, inferring spiritual seekers looking up at the activities being conducted there. The article outlines a development theory supported by the Weizmann Institute's findings ("(Greenberg Reference Greenberg2019), which in our model would be 1790–1500 BC"), showing the upper mountain ridge lacked artifacts during these years, indicating the population was confined (as backed by archaeological evidence) to the lower eastern slopes near the Kidron Valley floor and the spring. This is further supported by Hillel Geva's article linked in the blog. The article correctly posits that initial Middle Bronze Age population growth to the mountain was spiritually motivated, as evidenced by the fact that only after 1500 BCE did settlement expand (per archaeological records) to the highest ridge, where the population eventually resided—likely driven by security needs against marauders, especially at night. However, abundant water was available only from En Shemesh, also known as the Gihon Spring, in the valley floor. As people moved from the valley floor to the ridge, transporting water up the steep 70-meter slope became burdensome. Eventually, senior community members at the top managed water distribution for the populous. The local king, who controlled the supply, added protective layers to efficiently move through concealed bedrock routes to elevate water to the ridge. Today, this route is known as Warren's Shaft, extending about 50 meters from the source, through mountain bedrock tunnels rising up to a collection and delivery point for daily consumption by the growing summit population. This point was probably known as the Water Gate. The original spiritual impetus for growth at the spring gradually shifted to general expansion to and along the southern section of Mount Moriah's upper ridge. Then, at the end of the Late Bronze Age and early Iron Age, Egypt expelled Israel, initiating the Exodus. Regional knowledge spread that Israel would return to its homeland and recognize Mount Moriah as its spiritual center. This prompted allies of tribal leaders and regional kings to converge and aid the local king in building defenses against Israel's anticipated arrival. During this period, the citadel over the spring was constructed, as identified in dating by Israel Antiquities archaeologist Joe Uziel and the Weizmann Institute particularly at its northeast corner. It is well known that the citadel's scale exceeded the local labor pool (as noted by Hillel Geva), requiring significant labor contributions from allies. This citadel and resistance held Israel at bay for around 300 years, from Joshua to King David. Ultimately, David conquered the city on Mount Moriah by attacking the water system's weakest point and controlling it. He naming it the Stronghold or Citadel of Zion. This scenario posits that the local king and allies were enemies with prior cultural knowledge of Mount Moriah's importance to the Israelites, who linked it to their forefathers, including Jacob. The substantial economic investment in constructing the citadel to protect the water and control its flow preempted the Israelites' return. This further underscores Jacob's compulsion to return to the rock-cut temple and positions it as the Zion David sought. With this added weight, reassess the probability." 

Milestone 13: Moriah Development Theory and Preemptive Defenses posits spiritual MB growth at Gihon, ridge shift, Warren's Shaft, and IA citadel with allies (Uziel, Geva) preemptive against Israel's return, implying memory of Jacob's site, to ~65.9%.

Milestone 14: Amarna Letters Support for Jerusalem Tensions (To ~89.6%)

Amarna letters (c. 1350–1330 BCE) from Abdi-Heba of Urusalim (Jerusalem/Moriah) pleading aid against Hapiru (possibly Hebrews), e.g., "The Hapiru plunder all the lands," reflect post-Exodus threats, supporting preemptive defenses and cultural memory of Israelite significance to Moriah. This boosts odds via 14th-century BCE diplomatic evidence.

Overall Trend and Current Probability

These milestones collectively shifted the probability from negligible odds to ~89.6% through cumulative Bayesian updates, emphasizing chronological, geographical, textual, preservation, cultural sophistication, ritual/intentional, law/Temple, directional, compulsion, burial/scribal, and defensive coherence. The progression reflects a strengthening fringe hypothesis (southern Beit El/Ai), but mainstream archaeology favors northern locations and views Jacob as semi-legendary. Reaching 100%+ would require direct epigraphy or consensus shift—e.g., expanded Ras al-Amud excavations or lab confirmation of oil residues on the matzevah.

Wednesday, May 7, 2025

Ai - Your Time is Up!

City of Ai Discovery (IAA)

Introduction

The conventional identification of biblical Bethel with the modern Arab village of Beitin, approximately 12–13 km north of Jerusalem, has long influenced archaeological and biblical scholarship. Similarly, the city of Ai has traditionally been associated with Et-Tell, located just east of Beitin. However, recent archaeological findings and a reevaluation of biblical geography suggest the need for a reassessment. This proposal centers Bethel at the rock-cut temple site on the eastern slope of Jerusalem's Mount Moriah, corresponding to the Bethel of Jacob's vision in Genesis, and positions Ai east of Ras al-'Amud, adjacent to Bethany (al-‘Azariya) and Jabal Batin al-Hawa.

Part I: Reframing Bethel

1. Bethel of Jacob: Mount Moriah’s Eastern Slope

The rock-cut temple complex on the eastern slope of Mount Moriah, facing the Kidron Valley, has yielded Middle Bronze Age material remains, including cultic features consistent with ritual use. Traditional Jewish sources have long associated Mount Moriah with divine encounters (Genesis 22), and the architecture of the site resembles high places described in the Hebrew Bible. This supports the hypothesis that Jacob’s Bethel, where he dreamed of a ladder to heaven (Genesis 28:10–22), could have been located here rather than 13 km to the north.

2. Confusion Introduced by Beitin

The modern identification of Beitin as Bethel dates to 19th-century explorers such as Edward Robinson. While the phonetic similarity is compelling, the chronological and cultic evidence is less definitive. Beitin shows Iron Age occupation, but the Middle Bronze Age cultic prominence seen at Mount Moriah’s slope is largely absent. This suggests that Beitin may instead be the later Bethel of Jeroboam, where he established a royal shrine with a golden calf (1 Kings 12:28–29), reflecting a secondary and political use of the name Bethel.

Part II: Reconsidering Ai

1. Biblical Ai: East of Bethel

The book of Joshua (7–8) locates Ai east of Bethel. If Bethel is relocated to Mount Moriah’s eastern slope, then Ai must be sought in the adjacent eastern territories — specifically, Silwan, Ras al-‘Amud and its surrounding slopes.

2. Archaeological Evidence from Ras al-'Amud

Two excavation reports published in Israel Antiquities Authority Hadashot provide compelling evidence:

  • 2011–2012 Excavation (Report #2181) uncovered occupation layers from the Intermediate and Middle Bronze Ages through the Iron Age, including domestic structures, pottery assemblages, and rock-cut installations.

  • 2013 Excavation (Report #3340) revealed Late Bronze and Iron Age agricultural installations and ceramics, indicating sustained settlement.

These findings suggest that the site in Ras al-‘Amud was a continuously occupied, agriculturally productive, and potentially fortified site during the periods relevant to the conquest narratives. The location is 1.3 KM east of Mount Moriah’s Bethel, fulfilling the biblical geographic requirement.

Part III: The Role of Bethany and Jabal Batin al-Hawa

Bethany (al-‘Azariya) and Jabal Batin al-Hawa lie adjacent to Ras al-‘Amud respectively north-east and south-east of the rock-cut temple. This region:

  • Preserves ancient routes connecting Jerusalem to Jericho and the Jordan Valley.

  • Has archaeological evidence of Bronze and Iron Age occupation.

  • Could represent the broader region of Ai, or a confederation of sites described in Joshua 8.

Furthermore, Batin al-Hawa phonetically echoes Beitin, as does the BTN of BeThaNy suggesting possible confusion in later periods between the Bethel of Jacob and that of Jeroboam.

Conclusion

This revised model:

  • Centers Jacob’s Bethel at the rock-cut temple on Mount Moriah’s eastern slope.

  • Repositions Ai at Ras al-‘Amud, with strong Late Bronze and Iron Age continuity.

  • Attributes Beitin to the politically repurposed Bethel of Jeroboam, explaining textual and geographic discrepancies.

Further excavations, especially at Ras al-‘Amud and the Mount Moriah temple site, could decisively clarify the identities and roles of these ancient places in Israel’s formative history.

Friday, February 21, 2025

Jerusalem's Final Altar Location

The Context

The altar is the beacon for construction of Israel's temples. It must be positioned at Akeida, the site that Isaac was offered as a sacrifice by his father Abraham. Recently, the stone temple discovered on the eastern slopes of Mount Moriah presented authorities with the most challenging discovery of our time. It has shed new light on key biblical events that occurred over thousands of years including Akeida. To help comprehend the impact of this discovery these videos have been produced.

Hebrew

English

 


The Proof

More than 12 years after it was first uncovered, the stone temple began to yield irrefutable evidence, supported by Weizmann Institute and Cambridge University. The evidence continues to send shockwaves through archaeological and biblical fraternities, it cannot be ignored.


The Question

After 7 years in Hebron, King David conquered a Jebusite fortress on the lower slopes of Mount Moriah and moved his kingdom. The summit, which later became the Temple Mount, was open territory, but the young King had no interest in it until the end of his reign. Why?






Tuesday, January 21, 2025

Torah In Middle Bronze Age Archaeology

Jewish Male Circumcision At 8 Days Old

Israelite rituals that preceded the Old Testament were transcribed into it and many have been retained through the ages including by today's contemporary Orthodox Jews. For example; post wedding celebrations are held by families and friends each day for seven days, the practice was first described by Jacob's father-in-law. Or male circumcision on the eighth day after birth was instituted by Abraham for his son Isaac. Or the passage of Levite priesthood that continues to be passed from father to son in todays Jewish communities. Each of these rituals began hundreds of years before Moses transcribed the Old Testament. Ongoing practice of Biblical traditions underlie the authenticity of orthodox Judaism. 

One such glaring example relates temple worship and was recently discovered in a stone temple carved in the bedrock of Mount Moriah's eastern slope - we will call this complex Temple Zero since it precedes Jerusalem's First and Second Temple. Carbon dated evidence from the bedrock surface proves that Temple Zero was not used for worship after1535 BCE, at the time Jacobs Family emigrated from the region. The small number of artifacts discovered in Temple Zero and their periods obfuscated clues as too how the site was originally used, but its original Middle Bronze Age, bedrock bound, features strongly relate to Biblical writings, Jewish laws, customs and traditions.



View the 
videos captured on the recent tour of Temple Zero

The most essential and uniquely Jewish feature, is Temple Zero's western orientation, precisely defined by the altar platform (Room 1 above) and matzevah (room 4). No other Middle Bronze Age cultic structure with a western orientation exists in Israel. All other cults, of this time, faced east to pay homage to the sun. Monotheism, attributed to Abraham and the high priest of Salem, Malchi-Tzedek to whom Abraham tithed, turned against the sun.

More than six hundred years later this orientation found its way into the western facing structure and priestly practices in the Holy of Holies of the Tabernacle that Moses built, then into Jerusalem's permanent Temples. Finally synagogues of the world expressed this by facing prayer structures toward the Temple Mount in Jerusalem and priestly services turned their backs to the entrance. The cultic origins of Christianity enshrined the orientation of its priests and altars toward the rising sun in the east and in modern churches priests face toward the entrance. 

Until the temple in Jerusalem is rebuilt, the daily Orthodox ritual is to verbalize the prescribed sacrificial offerings of Jerusalem's temples. However, well before contemporary prayer was instituted, the Book of Leviticus, as evidenced by the 2000 year old burnt Leviticus scroll described sacrificial rites in detail, yet Temple Zero already facilitated many of these. Mostly these sacrificial rites are expounded in Jewish law requiring animals, wine, flour, oil and water. These laws describe that purity was retained only in stone or bedrock vessels. The construct and features of Temple Zero facilitated these rituals hundreds of years before the Leviticus text was transcribed by Moses.

The main elements of Jewish sacrifice includes oil, flour, wine and young domesticated sheep. Only unblemished animals could be sacrificed for the holy altar, this always biased selection to younger animals. Carved low in the bedrock of the room 5 (see below) that was once used to process slaughtered animals for the offering altar, we found a place to tether animals. The tether was low (~30cm) to the ground which supports its primary use for younger, smaller animals. 

Animal tether. Simulated use seen in image below


Olives would have been pressed to protect purity by flowing oil into a bedrock or a stone vessel that was not connected to a pipe or channel, typically used for vollumous production. These features are evident in the oil press (room 2) carved into the bedrock of the mountain. Once pressed oil would have been cupped out of the bedrock vessel into a stone vessel and immediately poured over refined or parched flour and offered with a sacrifice.

Pouring liquids onto corners of the altar included wine, water or blood that once flowed into a liquids channel to a pit or onto dust that was cleared daily and deposited outside the area of the temple. During slaughter blood from the animals neck was captured in a convex based stone vessel. At the base of the altar, a convex vessel would rest in its concave counterpart carved in the bedrock (see Room 1 below) in preparation for sprinkling blood of the sacrificed animal on the altar.  



The South-East (SE) corner of the foundation of the First and Second Temple altar drew on a tradition (Zevachim 53b) sourced in the biblical verse that it was in the tribal territory of Judah, the other corners were in Benjamin: “Benjamin is a wolf that tears apart; in the morning he devours the prey, and in the evening he divides the spoil” (Genesis 49:27). Now, based on Ronny Reich's declaration that the Gihon Spring was known as Ein Shemesh, the tradition conclusively followed the altar at Temple Zero. 

These rich features on the bedrock of Temple Zero support the Jewish origins of our pre-Biblical Israelite (Jacob) heritage and are uncannily aligned with the declaration in Deuteronomy 33:4 that:  

תּוֹרָ֥ה צִוָּה־לָ֖נוּ מֹשֶׁ֑ה מוֹרָשָׁ֖ה קְהִלַּ֥ת יַעֲקֹֽב׃ 

The Torah Moses charged us with is the heritage of the congregation of Jacob.













 




Thursday, October 10, 2024

This Discovery Will Eventually Change The World!

Open water drain or channel
Organic fragments in drain



On the eastern slopes of Mount Moriah, within the City of David, archaeologists have uncovered a significant Middle Bronze Age water system. This system includes remnants of a reservoir and a rock-hewn channel that once fed water to two of four rooms hollowed out of bedrock. These rooms form part of an ancient rock-cut temple, situated 35 meters above the Gihon Spring.

Carbon dating of organic samples, carried out by Cambridge University and the Weizmann Institute, placed the construction and final use of the water channel between 1545 and 1535 BCE. The samples were extracted close to the plaster remains of an open drain, which ran from the elevated reservoir, along the bedrock slope into the rooms below. This system revealed that water last flowed through the channel more than 3,500 years ago, as confirmed by the landscape mapped by the Israel Antiquities Authority.

The most revealing samples, found directly beneath and just above the plastered drain, align precisely with the traditional biblical chronology of the final 30 years Jacob lived in Canaan before relocating with his family to Egypt. The dating shows the water system was built and exclusively used during a narrow period that falls within these 30 years. Once Jacob departed, the temple complex was abandoned and eventually buried under falling sand and debris from the steep terrain. Subsequent occupants of the mountain built above it and it lay buried for almost 800 years. 

Functionally, the water system was designed to cleanse blood and waste from two adjoining rooms—one used for slaughtering and processing animals, and the other for offering sacrifices on an altar made of stones. Between them lies a chamber with a standing stone, or matzevah. Given the channel’s dating, this standing stone can be confidently associated with the one Jacob erected at Beth El, after his divine encounter at Mount Moriah, when he finally received the name Israel (Genesis 35:7–15).

Count the fused stones on the front?

Compare the view from the back!

Senior archaeologist Ronny Reich, in his book Excavations in the City of David, opens with a chapter titled "A Moment in Which to Be Born." There, he notes that the spring east of the city—beneath the rock-cut temple—was never called Gihon in the Bible, but En Shemesh (Sun Spring). The spring is characterized as a seasonal gusher, intermittently surging like a pump—fitting the Hebrew word gihon, meaning “bursting forth.” However, each morning, to this day, sunlight, (shemesh in Hebrew) illuminates the entrance to the spring.

Reich used this En Shemesh identification to resolve a longstanding difficulty in interpreting a boundary passage in the Book of Joshua. That passage describes a point where the tribal borders of Judah and Benjamin converge—precisely where, by design, the altar’s raised bedrock foundation sits. This location supports Reich's identification and reinforces the site's significance.

Note the South East corner of the altar foundation

Importantly, the southeastern corner of the altars' foundation marks a location that complies not only with Reich’s En Shemesh boundary but also with traditional Jewish law. This stands in contrast to the First and Second Temple altars, which were situated further up the mountain—on today’s Temple Mount. Those higher placements do not align with either the En Shemesh boundary or the location of the ancient spring.

Furthermore, the altar’s westward orientation matches the description in Maimonides' Guide for the Perplexed (Part 3, Chapter 45 page 355), which asserts that while the ancient world worshipped facing east (toward the sun), Abraham, on Mount Moriah, turned west—toward the future Sanctuary—his back to the sun.

This altar foundation, composed of native bedrock, would have supported temporary assemblies of stones during sacrifices. This matches the description in Genesis 35:7, where Jacob names the place El-Bethel, commemorating God’s earlier revelation to him at that spot, during his flight from Esau—22 years prior—when he had the dream of the stairway to heaven and erected a matzevah.

The terminus post quem (TPQ) probability
of overlap with Jacob is more than 90%.

How then, can we reconcile this matzevah, altar and water system—dated to Jacob’s time—with the later First Temple altar built by Solomon on the summit of Mount Moriah? The answer lies in David’s sin and repentance. According to 1 Chronicles 21:17 (and 2 Samuel 24), David, after his census error, was instructed by the prophet Gad to ascend Mount Moriah’s summit and erect an altar. David purchased the land from the Jebusite king—who had controlled the upper slopes of the mountain—and the summit eventually became the site of the Temple Mount. Unlike Jacob’s site, David’s altar was initially chosen to atone for David's specific transgression.

The newly discovered altar and its associated temple, located lower on the eastern slope—above En Shemesh—thus appear to be the original site associated with Jacob, Isaac, Abraham, and perhaps even the priest-king Melchizedek. These overlapping but distinct sacred sites pose deep theological and historical questions.

Approximately 600 years before King David

Today, the location of the ancient temple remains at the heart of Israel’s struggles. Militant Islamic groups often depict the Temple Mount—home to the Dome of the Rock and Al Aqsa Mosque—in their imagery. Tradition holds that this mountaintop is where Abraham bound Isaac. Yet, with the discovery of this rock-cut temple—complete with altar foundation, Jacob’s matzevah, and west-facing orientation—perhaps it is time to reconsider the true site for Israel’s final temple: not the summit of Mount Moriah, but its eastern slope, where ancient topography, archaeology, and scripture converge.





Wednesday, January 10, 2024

Timeline of Jacob at Jerusalem's Stone Temple



Biblical events and archaeology, on the eastern slope of Mount Moriah are complex.  Here, I constructed this dual timeline, from creation with Gregorian dating.

According to Biblical chronology Jacob's first encounter on Mount Moriah took place in 1573 BCE. Twenty two years later, in 1553 BCE, he returned with his family to Mount Moriah. Later Jacob immigrated to Egypt, where his descendants remained for 250 years before they returned to their ancestral land.

The overlapping 100 year use of the water channel (1535 BCE) with time of Jacob makes this discovery remarkable particularly because of its exciting context with the rock-cut-temple and matzevah, stone pillar found within the stone temple location. According to the Bible Jacob erected a matzevah at this location (Genesis 35:14).


Part One
Biblical Dating


Part Two
Archaeology



The video weaves the time bound elements of this remarkable discovery at the City of David, Jerusalem.



Sunday, August 13, 2023

Water, Water Everywhere, Will Archaeologists Drink?

The water channel behind rock-cut-rooms
was dated 600 years before King David

On the eastern slopes of Mount Moriah in the City of David, a Middle Bronze Age water system included remnants of a reservoir and a water channel that was carbon dated to 1535 BCE. No other evidence of water supply to rooms of the rock-cut-temple was found, yet despite this some archaeologists still insist that the rock-cut-temple should instead be dated to the Iron Age. 


The evolution of Mount Moriah 

Over simplification and context myopia, distorts academic understanding at this complex, ancient location. However, the video below offers a comprehensive contextual explanation. Before viewing, it's important to illustrate the passage of water as it once flowed to the rooms, more than 3500 years ago  during the Middle Bronze Age (follow the Area U/C map below). 


Room 2 (with tethered animal for slaughter) 

Room 1 (with impression of sacrificial altar on platform)

Water passage. Room 2 (center-foreground)
 Room 1 (upper right-background)


 
Area U water system leading to
 Area C rooms (1 and 2) also in next image


The video explains that the rock-cut-temple was active up until 1500 BCE (Middle Bronze), then buried, out of site until 700 BCE (Iron), exposed at that time, reburied during wall construction and finally excavated 13 years ago. From this Middle Bronze period through the early Iron Age there is an absence of evidence at this installation. 


The next video explains more about the archaeological detail relative to the context of the temple that existed 700 years before the Temple of Solomon on Mount Moriah and why King David never discovered it.