Texarkana Gazette

Museum in Jerusalem shows life in Jesus’ time

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JERUSALEM— Jerusalem’s Franciscan friars have opened a new museum filled with artifacts related to daily life in Jesus’ time.

The Terra Sancta Museum’s new wing, built into the ruined remains of Crusader and Mamluk buildings along the Via Dolorosa in the Old City, showcases objects discovered in excavation­s at biblical sites over the past century.

The Custody of the Holy Land— the Franciscan Order’s organ in Israel, the Palestinia­n territorie­s, Jordan, Lebanon and Cyprus—has carried out several archaeolog­ical excavation­s around the region, focusing on sites with connection­s to the Bible.

Many of the items going on display in the new exhibit, titled “The House of Herod: Life and Power in the Age of the New Testament,” have never been shown to the public.

Coins, ceramic fragments, ossuaries and stone slabs bear inscriptio­ns in Hebrew, Greek, Latin and Samaritan, illustrati­ng the kaleidosco­pic variety of cultures present in the Holy Land during the first centuries. The artifacts include everything from elegant Corinthian columns from Herod’s palace to

humble wares from Galilean homes.

Father Eugenio Alliata, the museum director, said it was important to “present something of the real life of people at the time,” given that the teachings of Jesus “are so much intersecte­d with the common life of the people.”

Among the highlights of the exhibit are one of two known silver half-shekel coins minted by Jewish rebels in the first year of the revolt against Rome in A.D. 66. A potsherd with the word Herod, the notorious king from the Gospels, was found during excavation­s at the Judean monarch’s monumental tomb south of Jerusalem.

Shimon Gibson, a University of North Carolina archaeolog­ist excavating Roman-era Jerusalem, said the Franciscan­s’ contributi­on to the field of archaeolog­y in the Holy Land was “pivotal,” and that their collection­s were “a treasure trove of informatio­n.”

“The treasures they’ve accumulate­d over time relating to their work, their mark on the study of the Holy Land, is reflected in the displays there,” he said.

Mundane objects—weights and scales, fishhooks, playing dice, lamps and cookware— the verses of the New Testament to life. A small silver coin bearing the face of Augustus is the same kind that prompts Jesus to say “Render therefore unto Caesar the things which are Caesar’s” in Matthew 22.

Like contempora­ry rabbis, Alliata said, Jesus “was teaching daily life, how to manage in the daily life,” and spoke in terms familiar to the common folk.

 ?? Associated Press ?? ■ Visitors look at an exhibit titled “The House of Herod: Life and Power in the Age of the New Testament,” June 27 at the Terra Sancta Museum in the Old City of Jerusalem. Jerusalem’s Franciscan friars have opened the museum, which is filled with artifacts from biblical sites relating to daily life in Jesus’ time.
Associated Press ■ Visitors look at an exhibit titled “The House of Herod: Life and Power in the Age of the New Testament,” June 27 at the Terra Sancta Museum in the Old City of Jerusalem. Jerusalem’s Franciscan friars have opened the museum, which is filled with artifacts from biblical sites relating to daily life in Jesus’ time.

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