Tel Shiloh 2024: End-of-Season Interview With Dr. Scott Stripling

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  • čas přidán 26. 06. 2024
  • Shiloh is famous as the location of the biblical tabernacle. Archaeological excavations have been taking place annually on the north side of the ancient tel. Excavation director Dr. Scott Stripling believes his team may have found remains from the tabernacle itself, as well as the city gate and sacrificial deposits. In this end-of-season interview, Let the Stones Speak host Christopher Eames interviews Dr. Stripling about finds from the 2024 season, including some intriguing gold items. Could these be offerings for the tabernacle?
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Komentáře • 31

  • @vdoniel
    @vdoniel Před 16 dny +11

    Dr. Stripling is so generous with his time. Every interview of him I've seen is full of information he is wonderful.

  • @arturofuente4832
    @arturofuente4832 Před 15 dny +4

    Enjoying these updates of Dr Stripling & company.
    Kudos to AIBA for keeping the flock informed.
    God's people are wonderful.

  • @kymdickman8910
    @kymdickman8910 Před 15 dny +6

    I have to say that the magazine is the best publication I have ever received on biblical Archeology. Thankyou so much for sharing it freely. What a blessing!!

  • @terryhardaway3285
    @terryhardaway3285 Před 16 dny +14

    Shalom,
    Fascinating stuff!
    Biblical veracity at work.
    Baruch Hashem!
    Am Yisrael chai!
    Be well and be Blessed!

  • @fensterheim
    @fensterheim Před 16 dny +12

    Great interview, Christopher.
    Can't wait to see images of the pendants.
    Strange though that a pendant with a graven image would be a votive offering to an Israelite temple.
    What would Eli the Priest or Samuel the Prophet have said?

  • @Shiryone
    @Shiryone Před 16 dny +5

    Absolutely fascinating and thrilling.

  • @T-RexRita
    @T-RexRita Před 10 dny

    Thank you so much for all the hard work you and your team does! I can't get enough of it ❤ May God bless you in your uncovering the truth! ✝️🙏

  • @thewolfethatcould8878
    @thewolfethatcould8878 Před 16 dny +5

    AWESOME!!!

  • @jameswalters8755
    @jameswalters8755 Před 15 dny +2

    Greeting from south Texas! Really like the quality of the magazine publicaition and your CZcams channel. All the best

  • @krackerToo
    @krackerToo Před 16 dny +5

    I sure wish you good people would do photos of this stuff thank you. Shalom

  • @beckyswicer3504
    @beckyswicer3504 Před 16 dny +3

    Love this stuff!!!!❤

  • @janicemcclure4832
    @janicemcclure4832 Před 15 dny

    Wonderful magazine.

  • @michaelpfister1283
    @michaelpfister1283 Před 16 dny +4

    I always thought the Tabernacle at Shiloh was the same one the Israelites carried through the wilderness. I never considered that they would have built permanent structures to supplement the Tabernacle. Awesome.

  • @thecrew1871
    @thecrew1871 Před 12 dny

    I have received the latest issue of Let the Stones Speak and have just started to read it. I must tell you from my first look at the magazine it promises to be interesting read. Thankyou for another very informative issue!

  • @biblicaltheologyexegesisan9024

    Wow so exciting

  • @michaelwittkopp3379
    @michaelwittkopp3379 Před 16 dny

    There's some things I don't like about ABR, but Dr. Stripling is an archaeologist through and though. I always like listening to him.

  • @theonlyway5298
    @theonlyway5298 Před 15 dny +1

    Has any signs of epigraphy been discovered in the Shiloh dig?

  • @thesignman704
    @thesignman704 Před 4 dny

    My question is: how was this interview done in the last weeks with a referrance time of 2016? Is this an old interview that you're airing for the first time or what?

  • @elijahhodges4405
    @elijahhodges4405 Před 16 dny +10

    Instead of cultic function could we call items found religious function items.

    • @nealcorbett1149
      @nealcorbett1149 Před 16 dny +2

      Yeah, it irks me when archaeologists refer to the worship of the one true God as "cultic".

    • @kathycasey9521
      @kathycasey9521 Před 15 dny +3

      I have learned that we Christians have a negative view of the word cult that historians and scientists do not have. The word cult is the root word for culture and it describes the beliefs and practices of the cult which come from the deities of the people. In that way, the use of the word cult by these scientists is perfectly understandable and acceptable. The word cult to us Christians describes people who have a false religion based on the god being worshipped or the leader of the cult. That, too, is a perfectly acceptable use of the word because it is an accurate description. We often talk about our Christian culture (centered around the teachings of God the Father and his son Jesus) in the USA and how it is at risk in today’s culture. The reason is the change in what people are worshipping and the rules around which their worship is ordered. (Usually we consider these to be godless, but the fervor of their beliefs would seem to suggest otherwise.)

    • @infiniti28160
      @infiniti28160 Před 15 dny

      Yahwist worshippers are cultists. Anat yahu. Its all Baal worship until Plato proposed a creator god that was behind all of creation without being part of creation itself.

  • @margaretdavis8113
    @margaretdavis8113 Před 16 dny +4

    🙏🇮🇱👍👍

  • @ElizabethDMadison
    @ElizabethDMadison Před 16 dny +2

    All this is fascinating. I would really like to see Dr Stripling respond to the contentions that the item he thought was a defixio from Mt Ebal may more likely be something like a fishing weight. I wanted to believe him about it but his interpretation of text on the item was none too convincing. Everyone's capable of being wrong sometimes but the value of Biblical archaeology as a witness to the truth of the Biblical accounts is undermined if archaeologists' credibility suffers from the impression that their findings are dictated by apologetics rather than science.

    • @vdoniel
      @vdoniel Před 16 dny +1

      If you do a little research on Dr. Striplings interviews regarding the defixio you will find the answers to your question. He also publishes papers regularly on Academia. The fishing weight idea is ridiculous.

    • @ElizabethDMadison
      @ElizabethDMadison Před 16 dny

      @@vdoniel On Academia? in other words he self-publishes them? I don't know what the lead object was, I was fascinated about that but I no longer think it has text on it.

  • @ml5554
    @ml5554 Před 17 hodinami

    Only i really don't understand why thinking people want to be associated somehow with H.W. Armstrong.

  • @nealcorbett1149
    @nealcorbett1149 Před 16 dny

    The actual date for the Exodus is about 150 years earlier than the standard view. But that's what you get when you butcher an entire book of the Bible to make it conform to a single verse.

    • @feemevidencias
      @feemevidencias Před 9 dny

      I think that exodus was when hyksos left egypt

    • @nealcorbett1149
      @nealcorbett1149 Před 9 dny +1

      @@feemevidencias Incidentally, my dating for the Exodus also conforms to the radiocarbon dating of the destruction layers of Jericho, Ai, and other Canaanite cities c. 1550 BC.

  • @theomnisthour6400
    @theomnisthour6400 Před 16 dny +2

    Could this be the Middle Eastern Salem? We need to start unraveling the spaghetti of self-centered cultural marxism to the first Garden of Eden and the first chosen species.