Then we continued on our way, prayed together, and then each of us continued our day.
Imagine my surprise when just a few hours later, Shiloh Hakeduma, Ancient Shiloh, the administrators of Tel Shiloh davka publicized the discovery:
photo by Batya Medad |
photo by Batya Medad |
It's believed that the pillar was part of a Byzantine church, the 6th discovered at Tel Shiloh. And one must remember that many holy sites to Judaism, like the Biblical Shiloh, were later adopted by other religions. We, the Jewish People, were in Shiloh before them and after them, too.This is the perfect message and reminder as we Israelis and Jews celebrate seventy 70 years of modern statehood. We have returned to our Ancestral Homeland, the Land of Israel, the Land of the Bible, our Jewish Bible, the Tanach.
No other people ever had an independent country here, just the Jewish People.
Chag Sameach!
4 comments:
It's a capital, not a base. But it's a remadkable find nevertheless.
Thanks, it's really stunning.
Do they know if these churches were all in use at the same time, or when one fell into disuse, a new one was built? 6 seems like there was a HUGE amount of people coming!
Devo, good question. Very little archaeological finds have been of Christians in Shiloh to my knowledge. There was a vineyard and wine production to the west of the tel. Monasteries but not regular communities and not for very long. It's possible that various christian sects built their own churches, sort of like staking flags.
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