[NYT] New Evidence on When Bible Was Written: Ancient Shopping Lists

TEL AVIV ”” Eliashib, the quartermaster of the remote desert fortress, received his instructions in writing ”” notes inscribed in ink on pottery asking for provisions to be sent to forces in the ancient kingdom of Judah.

The requests for wine, flour and oil read like mundane, if ancient, shopping lists. But a new analysis of the handwriting suggests that literacy may have been far more widespread than previously known in the Holy Land around 600 B.C., toward the end of the First Temple period. The findings, according to the researchers from Tel Aviv University, could have some bearing on a century-old debate about when the main body of biblical texts was composed.

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Posted in Theology, Theology: Scripture