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| Volume 7 Number 45 - Tuesday, November 15, 2005 |
A Publication of the ORTHODOX CHRISTIAN LAITY |
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The Orthodox Christian Laity
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The Orthodox Christian News Service |
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JERUSALEM
As if Megiddo, the biblical city of Armageddon
scene of three millennia of battles, the last
cavalry charge of the First World War and the
final showdown between good and evil did not
have enough on its plate, archaeologists now claim
to have unearthed the remains of the oldest
Christian church discovered in the Holy Land.
Unfortunately
for Israel's beleaguered tourism industry, the
find was made behind the walls of one of the
country's maximum-security prisons. Inmates
were put to work alongside the specialists to
excavate a corner of Megiddo jail for the
construction of a new cellblock ready for the next
intake of Hamas and Islamic Jihad militants. Toiling behind the barbed wire and watchtowers, they uncovered a detailed and well-preserved mosaic; the foundations of a rectangular building; and pottery dated to the late Third or Fourth Centuries. One of several inscriptions on the mosaic floor in ancient Greek said the building was dedicated to "the memory of the Lord Jesus Christ." Other
inscriptions name a Roman army officer, Gaianus,
who donated money to build the floor, and a woman
called Ekoptos, who "donated this table to
the God Jesus Christ in commemoration." The
table is believed to have served as an altar. DRAMATIC
DISCOVERY The
Roman Empire forbade Christian rituals before 313
AD, and Christians were forced to worship in
secret. Until this discovery at Megiddo, the
earliest churches include the Holy Sepulcher in
Jerusalem, said to stand on the site of the
Crucifixion, dating from about 330 AD, and the
Church of the Nativity in Bethlehem. The
inscriptions at Megiddo were interpreted by
Professor Leah Di Segni of the Hebrew University. "I
was told these were Byzantine, but they seem much
earlier than anything I have seen so far from the
Byzantine period. It could be from the Third, or
the beginning of the Fourth, Century," she
said. The use of the word "table" in one
inscription, instead of "altar," might
advance the study of Christianity, she explained,
because it is widely believed that rituals based
on the Last Supper were held around a table used
as an altar. The
church might never have been discovered had it not
been for the needs of Israel's ever-demanding
security apparatus. Megiddo prison is home to
about 1,200 "security prisoners," who
are held in "administrative detention"
without ever being told exactly what it is they
are accused of. The
prison is a series of fenced-in compounds with the
bulk of inmates sleeping in long brown army tents
enclosed by barbed wire and surrounded by open
sewers. The prisoners nicknamed the jail "Jabaliya,"
after a poor and overcrowded refugee camp in the
Gaza strip. MOST
IMPORTANT Five
of the conflicts fought in the 30-mile-wide
Jezreel valley around Megiddo are recorded in the
Old Testament. The New Testament names Armageddon
a Greek corruption of the Hebrew word "har,"
meaning mount, and Megiddo as the scene of the
final great battle between good and evil. Some
specialists remain skeptical about the latest
discovery: "I think this is a little myth to
boost tourism," said Michel Piccirillo, a
respected biblical archaeologist. "The idea
that it is ancient comes from the pottery and the
shape of the letters on the inscriptions, but this
is not definitive." Israeli
Tourism Minister Avraham Hirchson is not deterred,
however: "If we nurture this properly, then
there will be a large stream of tourists who could
come to Israel. There is great potential," he
told national television. The
Guardian published the above on November 7. The
original headline is, "Holy Lands
Oldest Church Found at Armageddon: Prisoners
help unearth remains at jail on site of final
biblical showdown."
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