It
is probably one of the greatest finds of all time and, by the bizarre rules of
biblical archeology, it’s also one of the least reported. Basically, in 1967, in
Deir Alla, Jordan, Dutch archeologists discovered some kind of pagan house of
worship or seminary. On its walls, there was a 2,800-year-old inscription in
black ink. Key phrases are highlighted in red ink and the whole writing is
framed in red. First of all, this is the oldest Aramaic inscription every
found. But if that’s not enough to make it a world-headline, the inscription is
600-800 years older than the Dead-Sea Scrolls. And if that’s not enough to
merit international attention, the inscription mentions a prophet, or “seer”,
named “Balaam son of Beor”. This is the exact name mentioned in the Torah/Bible
(Numbers 22:2–24:25). This is the only instance where a specific individual
mentioned in the story of the biblical Exodus can be pointed to in archeology.
Read
the complete article at -- http://www.simchajtv.com/prophets-sex-archeology/
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