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Topic:
The Book Of Joshua -- A Brief Overview,
Part 3 Of 3
The value of modern discoveries in their relation to Old Testament
history has been thus well described: "The difficulty of
establishing the charge of lack of historical credibility, as against
the testimony of the Old Testament, has of late years greatly increased.
The outcome of recent excavations and explorations is altogether against
it. As long as these books contained, in the main, the only known
accounts of the events they mention, there was some plausibility in the
theory that perhaps these accounts were written rather to teach moral
lessons than to preserve an exact knowledge of events. It was easy to
say in those times men had not the historic sense. But the recent
discoveries touch the events recorded in the Bible at very many
different points in many different generations, mentioning the same
persons, countries, peoples, events that are mentioned in the Bible, and
showing beyond question that these were strictly historic. The point is
not that the discoveries confirm the correctness of the Biblical
statements, though that is commonly the case, but that the discoveries
show that the peoples of those ages had the historic sense, and,
specifically, that the Biblical narratives they touch are narratives of
actual occurrences."
References Collection: ; Joshua 24:29-33 ; Joshua 10:12-15 ;
From: Easton's Bible Dictionary. Fair Use. Presented for educational
purposes only.
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