Solving a Riddle Written in Silver

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Graphic: A Benediction
Revealed |
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Andrew G. Vaughn/Gustavus Adolphus College
Dr. Gabriel Barkay points to the tomb where
he discovered the tiny biblical artifacts that date from well before the Dead
Sea Scrolls.
By JOHN NOBLE
WILFORD
he
words are among the most familiar and ecumenical in the liturgies of Judaism and
Christianity. At the close of a worship service, the rabbi, priest or pastor
delivers, with only slight variations, the comforting and fortifying
benediction:
"May the Lord bless you and keep you; may the Lord cause his
face to shine upon you and be gracious to you; may the Lord lift up his
countenance upon you and grant you peace."
An archaeological discovery in 1979 revealed that the Priestly
Benediction, as the verse from Numbers 6:24-26 is called, appeared to be the
earliest biblical passage ever found in ancient artifacts. Two tiny strips of
silver, each wound tightly like a miniature scroll and bearing the inscribed
words, were uncovered in a tomb outside Jerusalem and initially dated from the
late seventh or early sixth century B.C. - some 400 years before the famous Dead
Sea Scrolls.
But doubts persisted. The silver was cracked and corroded, and
many words and not a few whole lines in the faintly scratched inscriptions were
unreadable. Some critics contended that the artifacts were from the third or
second century B.C., and thus of less importance in establishing the antiquity
of religious concepts and language that became part of the Hebrew Bible.
So researchers at the University of Southern California have
now re-examined the inscriptions using new photographic and computer imaging
techniques. The words still do not exactly leap off the silver. But the
researchers said they could finally be "read fully and analyzed with far greater
precision," and that they were indeed the earliest.
In a scholarly report published this month, the research team
concluded that the improved reading of the inscriptions confirmed their greater
antiquity. The script, the team wrote, is indeed from the period just before the
destruction of Jerusalem in 586 B.C. by Nebuchadnezzar and the subsequent exile
of Israelites in Babylonia.
The researchers further reaffirmed that the scrolls "preserve
the earliest known citations of texts also found in the Hebrew Bible and that
they provide us with the earliest examples of confessional statements concerning
Yahweh."
Some of the previously unreadable lines seemed to remove any
doubt about the purpose of the silver scrolls: they were amulets. Unrolled, one
amulet is nearly four inches long and an inch wide and the other an inch and a
half long and about half an inch wide. The inscribed words, the researchers
said, were "intended to provide a blessing that will be used to protect the
wearer from some manner of evil forces."
The report in The Bulletin of the American Schools of Oriental
Research was written by Dr. Gabriel Barkay, the archaeologist at Bar-Ilan
University in Israel who discovered the artifacts, and collaborators associated
with Southern California's West Semitic Research Project. The project leader is
Dr. Bruce Zuckerman, a professor of Semitic languages at U.S.C., who worked with
Dr. Marilyn J. Lundberg, a Hebrew Bible specialist with the project, and Dr.
Andrew G. Vaughn, a biblical historian at Gustavus Adolphus College in St.
Peter, Minn.
A companion article for next month's issue of the magazine
Near Eastern Archaeology describes the new technology used in the research. The
article is by the same authors, as well as Kenneth Zuckerman, Dr. Zuckerman's
brother and a specialist in photographing ancient documents.
Other scholars not affiliated with the research but familiar
with it agreed with the group's conclusions.
They said it was a relief to have the antiquity and
authenticity of the artifacts confirmed, considering that other inscriptions
from biblical times have suffered from their uncertain provenance.
Scholars also noted that early Hebrew inscriptions were a
rarity, and called the work on the amulets a significant contribution to an
understanding of the history of religion in ancient Israel, particularly the
time of the Judean Monarchy 2,600 years ago.
"These photographs are far superior to what you can see
looking at the inscriptions with the naked eye," said Dr. Wayne Pitard,
professor of the Hebrew Bible and ancient Near Eastern religions at the
University of Illinois.
Dr. Pitard said the evidence for the antiquity of the
benediction was now compelling, although this did not necessarily mean that the
Book of Numbers already existed at that time. Possibly it did, he added, but if
not, at least some elements of the book were current before the Babylonian
exile.
A part of the sacred Torah of Judaism (the first five books of
the Bible), Numbers includes a narrative of the Israelite wanderings from Mount
Sinai to the east side of the Jordan River. Some scholars think the Torah was
compiled in the time of the exile. A number of other scholars, the so-called
minimalists, who are influential mainly in Europe, argue that the Bible was a
relatively recent invention by those who took control of Judea in the late
fourth century B.C. In this view, the early books of the Bible were largely
fictional to give the new rulers a place in the country's history and thus a
claim to the land.
"The new research on the inscriptions suggests that that's not
true," Dr. Pitard said. In fact, the research team noted in its journal report
that the improved images showed the seventh-century lines of the benediction to
be "actually closer to the biblical parallels than previously recognized."
Dr. P. Kyle McCarter of Johns Hopkins University, a specialist
in ancient Semitic scripts, said the research should "settle any controversy
over these inscriptions."
A close study, Dr. McCarter said, showed that the handwriting
is an early style of Hebrew script and the letters are from an old Hebrew
alphabet, which had all but ceased to be used after the destruction of
Jerusalem. Later Hebrew writing usually adopted the Aramaic alphabet.
There was an exception in the time of Roman rule, around the
first centuries B.C. and A.D. The archaic Hebrew script and letters were revived
and used widely in documents. But Dr. McCarter noted telling attributes of the
strokes of the letters and the spelling on the amulets that, he said, ruled out
the more recent date for the inscriptions. Words in the revived Hebrew writing
would have included letters indicating vowel sounds. The benediction, the
scholar said, was written in words spelled entirely with consonants, the
authentic archaic way.
The two silver scrolls were found in 1979 deep inside a burial
cave in a hillside known as Ketef Hinnom, west of the Old City of Jerusalem. Dr.
Barkay, documenting the context of the discovery, noted that the artifacts were
at the back of the tomb embedded in pottery and other material from the seventh
or sixth centuries B.C. Such caves were reused for burials over many centuries.
Near this tomb's entrance were artifacts from the fourth century, but nothing so
recent remains in the undisturbed recesses.
It took Dr. Barkay another seven years before he felt sure
enough of what he had to announce details of the discovery. Even then, for all
their microscopic examination of the inscriptions at the Israel Museum in
Jerusalem, scholars remained frustrated by the many unreadable words and lines.
About a decade ago, Dr. Barkay enlisted the help of Dr.
Zuckerman, whose team had earned a reputation for achieving the near-impossible
in photographing illegible ancient documents.
Working with scientists at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory,
Dr. Zuckerman's group used advanced infrared imagining systems enhanced by
electronic cameras and computer image-processing technology to draw out
previously invisible writing on a fragment of the Dead Sea Scrolls. The
researchers also pioneered electronic techniques for reproducing missing pieces
of letters on documents. By examining similar letters elsewhere in the text,
they were able to recognize half of a letter and reconstruct the rest of it in a
scribe's own peculiar style.
"We learned a lot from work on the Dead Sea Scrolls," Dr.
Zuckerman said. "But at first a processing job like this would send your
computers into cardiac arrest. We had to wait for computer technology to catch
up with our needs."
As the researchers said in their magazine article, the only
reasonably clear aspect of the inscriptions was the Priestly Benediction. Other
lines preceding or following the prayer "could barely be seen."
To get higher-definition photographs of the inscriptions, Ken
Zuckerman applied an old photographer's technique called "light painting,"
brought up to date by the use of fiber-optic technology. He used a hand-held
light in an otherwise dark room to illuminate a spot on the artifact during a
time exposure. In addition, he photographed the artifact at different angles,
which made the scratched letters shine in stark relief.
The next step was to convert the pictures to digital form,
making possible computer processing that brought out "the subtleties of the
surface almost at the micron level." This analysis was particularly successful
in joining a partial letter stroke on one side of a crack with the rest of the
stroke on the other side. It also enabled the researchers to restore fragments
of letters to full legibility by matching them with clear letters from elsewhere
in the text.
In this way, the researchers filled in more of the letters and
words of the benediction itself and for the first time deciphered meaningful
words and phrases in the lines preceding the benediction.
Scholars were particularly intrigued by a statement on the
smaller artifact. It reads: "May h[e]/sh[e] be blessed by YHWH, the
warrior/helper, and the rebuker of Evil."
Referring to God, Yahweh, as the "rebuker of Evil" is similar
to language used in the Bible and in various Dead Sea Scrolls, scholars said.
The phraseology is also found in later incantations and amulets associated with
Israel, evidence that these artifacts were also amulets, researchers concluded.
"In the ancient world, amulets were taken quite seriously,"
Dr. Zuckerman said. "There's evil out there, demons, and you need protection.
Having this around your neck, you are involving God's presence and protection
against harm."
Dr. Esther Eshel, a professor of the Bible at Bar-Ilan and an
authority on Hebrew inscriptions, said this was the earliest example of amulets
from Israel. But she noted that the language of the benediction was similar to a
blessing ("May he bless you and keep you") found on a jar from the eighth
century B.C.
If the new findings are correct, the people who wore these
amulets may have died before they had to face the limitations of their efficacy.
They might then have asked in uncomprehending despair, "Where was Yahweh when
the Babylonians swooped down on Jerusalem?"
Other scholars, including those previously skeptical, will
soon be analyzing the improved images. In a departure from usual practices, the
researchers not only published their findings in a standard print version in a
journal but also as an accompanying "digital article," a CD version of the
article and the images to allow scholars to examine and manipulate the data
themselves.
The research group said, "As far as we are aware, this is the
first article to be done in this fashion, but it certainly will not be the
last."
http://www.nytimes.com/2004/09/28/science/28scro.html?ex=1097474721&ei=1&en=21605add0f9cbea9
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