Showing posts with label Julie Stahl. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Julie Stahl. Show all posts

Wednesday, January 30, 2019

Israel Uses Engineering Innovation to Save a Shrinking Sea of Galilee - CBN News Julie Stahl


Israel Uses Engineering Innovation to Save a Shrinking Sea of Galilee
01-28-2019
CBN News Julie Stahl
JERUSALEM, Israel – Israel is having a rainy winter and there's snow on Mount Hermon but the country is still suffering from a water shortage after five years of drought. That means trouble for Israel and a famous biblical body of water.  
More than a million tourists visit the Sea of Galilee each year but the biblical lake is shrinking after several years of drought.
This is the same Sea of Galilee that Jesus walked on. From out on the lake it looks like there's plenty of water but in reality, it's a different situation.
"There are altogether 21 boats on the Sea of Galilee and because the level of the water is so low, for example in (Kibbutz) Ginosar, instead of three piers we use only one," said Daniel Carmel who owns two of those boats.  
Carmel operates Sea of Galilee Worship Boats and takes Christian groups out on the lake for a unique worship experience.
Carmel says the visitors he takes out on the lake don't understand the severity of the water situation.  
"They don't know how is the Sea of Galilee when it's full," Carmel told CBN News. "This is the lowest that I ever saw (it). In 25 years that I'm here this is the lowest." 
Israel's rainy season begins in late October and continues until mid-March.  After that, it usually doesn't rain. 
Uzi Welish was born in a kibbutz on the Sea of Galilee and has lived on kibbutz Ginosar since it was founded in 1937.  
"The lake is the main thing that characterizes our life here from every point of view in my opinion, although today, unfortunately, we cannot make our living from fishing," Welish told CBN News.
Welish has seen the lake at all different levels.
"When my first daughter was married – it was 93 – it was very full. The wedding was on the lawn here in front of my house," Welish said. 
Pointing at the shoreline, he explained that the rocks near his front yard about 200 meters (650 feet) from the current shoreline had been put there in the 1970s as a barrier from the stormy seas, which was eroding the soil. 
"The rocks were put there in the 70s to defend from the storm. You know with the storm, this storm and the waves chopped the soil so they build these rocks," he said.
Welish said trouble started before Israel was a state when the British built a dam. 
"The moment you stopped the Jordan (which feeds the Sea of Galilee), you're beginning to control," Welish said. 
"But only in '64 (Israel) added the big pumps that delivered the water from the Sea of Galilee to the south, or to the middle of Israel.  Then it became even more severe," he added.  
On top of that Israel gives Jordan 50 million cubic meters of water as part of the 1994 peace agreement and Jordan is asking for more.
The lake has been low in the past and recovered, like 30 years ago after the receding waters revealed a hidden treasure: an ancient fishing boat.
"This boat is really completely unbelievable," Welish said.
Unofficially, dubbed the "Jesus Boat", the fishing vessel is like one Jesus' disciples would have used. Found by two brothers in the mud on the shores of the Sea of Galilee, it soon became a national sensation.
"Then it was really something, the whole state, a boat from 2,000 years ago. And such a significance, it really can be related to Jesus," Welish added.
Treasures aside, the Kinneret as it's called in Hebrew or the Sea of Galilee, used to be one of Israel's main sources of drinking water. But Israeli Water Authority spokesman Uri Schor said that's no longer the case.
"Until not so long ago, the Sea of Galilee was one of three main natural sources that supplied water.  The Sea of Galilee supplied a third of the quantity of water that was needed in Israel.  Now, it hardly supplies," Schor told CBN News
Growing population, increasing demand and a drop in the quantity of water have all contributed to the situation.
The lake is more than 15 feet below the full line.  In a rainy winter, it would normally rise about five-and-a-half feet.  Then it begins to evaporate again in the summer.
Schor said when Israel saw the current drought was prolonged it stopped pumping out of the lake into the main water system.
"We cut down the pumping there from about 400 million cubic meters per year to less than 30.  Nevertheless, the level of the water of Sea of Galilee continues going down," Schor said.
If the water level drops too low, the lake will become salty and then it will be lost as a drinking source permanently. 
That's why Israel tried a unique approach. 
"Israel planned and started building water carriers that will bring water from the desalination plants to the Sea of Galilee in order to keep the level of the water high enough in order not to lose the Sea of Galilee as a drinking water point," Schor explained.
Schor said they can't fill the lake completely with desalinated water but they can add enough so as not to lose the quality of the water.
"I do not think that you have another lake in the world that people fill it with manmade water in order not to lose it.  So, we'll be pioneers about that as well," he said.
Shor said once every 20-30 years Israel gets enough rain to fully restore the Sea of Galilee in one winter but they can't count on it.
In addition to not pumping water out and pumping desalinated water in Carmel had this advice.
"Pray hard for rains. That's what we need, a lot of prayers," Carmel said. "You know, pray for rains, even when you are here."
WATCH REPORT HERE: SHRINKING OF GALILEE

Saturday, December 15, 2018

The Place Where Jesus Was Baptized Was Laced with Landmines, Now Israel Is Fixing That - CBN News Julie Stahl, Chris Mitchell


The Place Where Jesus Was Baptized
Was Laced with Landmines, Now Israel Is Fixing That

12-12-2018

QASR AL YAHUD, Jordan Valley – Qasr al Yahud on the Jordan River is the place many believe John the Baptist baptized Jesus. It's also thought to be where the children of Israel crossed over to the Promised Land and the site of Elijah's ascent to heaven.
Just about six miles from Jericho, Israel opened its side of the baptismal site to visitors in 2011, more than a decade after Jordan opened its side in 2000. But the 250-acre area around the site – known as the Land of the Monasteries – remained off limits.
The area surrounding the baptismal site covered with mines and other explosives from past conflicts like the Six-Day War. Due to safety concerns access to the churches was blocked. Now that's changing.
Moshe Hilman is the Israel National Mine Action Authority (INMAA) supervisor here.  INMAA is part of Israel's Ministry of Defense.

INMAA Supervisor Moshe Hilman, Photo, CBN News
"We are working here almost one year and specifically in this monastery we work here three months," Hilman said. "It takes us time to clean the area — clean from mines, clean from mortars, booby traps. In the past it was a firing zone."
Seven churches have property here. Three monasteries have already been cleaned and CBN News toured two of them.
The Franciscan Chapel was built in 1956 and belongs to the Vatican.

Franciscan Chapel, Qasr al Yahud, Photo, Israel Ministry of Defense
The Ethiopian monastery was much larger and had a bakery and guest house.
INMAA Director Marcel Aviv works with Halo Trust, the world's oldest and largest humanitarian mine clearance charity, to clean this area.

INMAA Director Marcel Aviv, Photo, CBN News
"Every millimeter from this side is checked at least by three people. As you understand, it's very dangerous and difficult job," Aviv explained. "When we will finish all the job here, those lands will be given to their owners and the owners are the churches."
During the Six-Day War, this church-owned land came under Israeli control. It became an easy target for the Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO) to carry out attacks on Israeli soldiers. Eventually, the monks abandoned the area and explosives were spread around.
Hilman told CBN News that Israel has maps of the mines, but due to rain over the decades many have shifted. And there are other challenges too.
"It was here full of metal. It was a firing zone. It was irrigation zone," he continued. "The monks have a small farm in this monastery so it take[s] us time to clean and to deal with the monasteries' metals here."

Ethiopian Monastery Guest Houses at Qasr al Yahud, Photo, CBN News
And once the ground outside is cleared, the inside of the buildings must be checked for booby traps. They used drones to look from above and peer into doors an windows.
"The first process was to search and to learn [from] above the building, to learn from windows and visible doors, open doors what there is inside the first time," he said.

Ethiopian Monastery at Qasr al Yahud, Photo, CBN News
"The second stage is to pull everything and to shake everything so that there is no wire and booby traps that's connected to [a] bed, to [a] door, to [a] window, to everything."
Some 800,000 people visit the baptismal site each year. That's expected to triple once the monasteries are back.

Baptismal Site at Qasr al Yahud, Photo, CBN News
Hilman says he's excited to work on such a project.
"I hope that this garden that was left 50 years ago will be green again and all of us will be happy to visit here and to see this amazing area. I hope that it will be and I sure that it will be," he said.
Did you know?
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Saturday, September 29, 2018

Israel Discovers Second Nuclear Site in Tehran - JULIE STAHL CBN NEWS

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu points out a second nuclear site found in Iran. (Israeli PM YouTube channel)

Israel Discovers Second Nuclear Site in Tehran

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu told the United Nations General Assembly that Iran has hidden a second atomic site in Tehran and vowed that Israel would find whatever Iran hides.
Just a few months after Netanyahu revealed that Israel had discovered a secret Iranian atomic archive, he revealed a second facility.
"In May, we exposed the site of Iran's secret atomic archive. It's right here—in the Shorabad district of Teheran. Today, I am revealing the site of a second facility; Iran's secret atomic warehouse. It's right here, in the Turouzabad district of Teheran, just three miles away," he said.
Addressing the U.N. General Assembly with his classic visual aids, Netanyahu said Iran didn't destroy the sites because its goal is a nuclear weapon.
"In fact, it planned to use both of these sites in a few years when the time would be right to break out to the atom bomb," he said. "But ladies and gentlemen, rest assured, that won't happen. It won't happen because what Iran hides, Israel will find."
Iran, meanwhile, denied the allegations and said there was nothing to what the Iranian Foreign Minister called Netanyahu's "arts and crafts show."
But Netanyahu said Iran's aggression is clear.
"In Syria, Iran is trying to establish permanent military bases against us and has already launched missiles and drones into our territory. In Gaza, Iran is arming terror groups to launch rocket attacks into our cities and terror attacks against our civilians," he said. 
For the rest of this story, visit our content partners at CBNNews.com. Copyright The Christian Broadcasting Network, all rights reserved.

Wednesday, September 26, 2018

Thousands of Christians Celebrate Sukkot in Jerusalem - CBN News Julie Stahl,Chris Mitchell

Christian Pilgrims at the ICEJ's 38th Annual Feast of Tabernacles, Photo, CBN News, Jonathan Goff
Christian Pilgrims at the ICEJ's 38th Annual Feast of Tabernacles, Photo, CBN News, Jonathan Goff
Thousands of Christians Celebrate Sukkot in Jerusalem
09-26-2018
CBN News Julie Stahl,
JERUSALEM, Israel – Israel is celebrating the biblical Feast of Sukkot when thousands of Christians 
from around the world come to see prophecy fulfilled and attend the Feast of Tabernacles celebration.

Shofars (traditional rams' horns) sounded at the opening of the International Christian Embassy 
Jerusalem's (ICEJ) 38th annual Feast of Tabernacles celebration in Jerusalem.

It's a gala event. Christian pilgrims, many dressed in national costumes, celebrating the Feast in 
Jerusalem.

Related

Prophetic Preview: Christians Celebrate Sukkot in Jerusalem


Sukkot Reflects Longing to Tabernacle with God

Photo, CBN News, Jonathan Goff
This year, more than 5,000 Christians from nearly 100 countries are here for the weeklong celebration. 
They came to worship the God of Israel and stand with His people.

"I know it's going to be a life-changing experience," said Charity, a young woman from Vermont, who 
is here for the first time. "I love Israel and I think that it's a time when things are going to turn around 
and it's very prophetic and to be a part of being able to give back to the people that gave to us."


Photo, CBN News, Jonathan Goff
David Parsons, vice president of the ICEJ, told CBN News why Christians come up to Jerusalem at 
this time of the year.

"They're following the invitation of Zachariah 14 where it says that one day all the nations will come 
up to celebrate this biblical feast here in Jerusalem, to worship the Lord and keep the Feast of 
Tabernacles and we're showing up now as a statement of faith that that day is coming when the 
Messiah will rule here," Parsons said.

He said this year's theme – 'Dare to Dream' – comes from Psalm 126.

"'When the Lord turned again the captivity of Zion we were like those that dream' and it's about the 
dream of Israel, all those centuries being restored back to the Land ending the exile, coming back here 
and we live in the day of Israel's restoration," Parsons said.

"Israel's now 70 years old as a reborn state and there's much to celebrate. They've overcome many wars,
 terror attacks, rocket barrages, economic boycotts, other attempts to strangle it," he said.

As part of this year's celebration, people are getting the CBN documentary "To Life: How Israeli 
Volunteers are Changing the World." The film shows how Israel works to be among the first to respond 
to disasters and needs around the world.

"We're very happy that all the Feast pilgrims are going to go back with copies of it in English and 
we're partnering with CBN to also provide Hebrew copies to all Israeli guests to the Feast this week," 
Parsons said.

The excitement and joy at being here for the Feast is palpable. The Christians are definitely glad to be 
here.


Photo, CBN News, Jonathan Goff

Ludy Capuyan, is a Filipino caregiver here in Israel. She and her friends, also from the Philippines and 
also caregivers here, all came to the Feast.

"It's great. It's part of prophetic words from the Bible," Capuyan said.

"I came because I love Israel and I want to see the prophecies fulfilled," said Ray Landis, a first-time 
visitor from Vermont, USA. "We've just been studying the things of the Bible and it talks about how 
Jerusalem is going to be restored and Israel is going to be restored and we want to be part of that. It's 
amazing," said Landis, who hopes to be back again.


Photo, CBN News, Jonathan Goff
Mario DeCosa, from Angola, is also a first-time visitor.

"I'm really delighted and thrilled at what I have been witnessed since yesterday evening and I think 
now I take with me a commitment to pray more for Israel, for the peace of Israel, for Jerusalem and 
even do more to mobilize more people to work toward the peace of Israel," DeCosa told CBN News.

Monday, September 10, 2018

Sounding the Shofar, a Call to Repentance - CBN News Julie Stahl















Sounding the Shofar, a Call to Repentance
09-10-2018
CBN News Julie Stahl
JERUSALEM, Israel – Israel is celebrating the fall feasts, a special season of biblical holidays. These 
annual holy days begin with Rosh Hashanah, the Jewish New Year, and include Yom Kippur, the Day 
of Atonement.

But there's more to this season and the Bible points the way.
Rosh Hashanah literally means "the head of the year," the New Year, but biblically it's much more than 
that.

In the Book of Leviticus, it's called Yom Hateruah, the day of the blowing of trumpets or ram's horns – 
the Judgment Day.

"The only mitzvah, the only commandment during Rosh HaShanah, is actually to hear the sound of the 
shofar. And so everybody [is] gathering in the synagogue to hear the sound of the shofar," Eli Ribak, 
co-owner of Ribak and Barsheshet Shofarot Israel told CBN News. "It's something that people connect 
to their soul to hear the sound of the shofar."

The piercing blast of the shofar is meant to remind the hearer to repent for his sins and make things 
right with his brothers and sisters.The rabbis say that reconciliation with God and man will confound 
the enemy.

"The shofar is a musical instrument made from a horn," Ribak continued. "This is the oldest musical 
instrument and the Jewish Orthodox who have committed to hear the sound of the shofar during the 
New Year, our Judgment Day."

As part of the business, Ribak is the third generation of shofar makers at the same location in Tel Aviv 
since 1927.

"We take the raw horn – the process is grinding, polishing…open [the] mouthpiece –and this is quick, 
but it's a lot of experience and a lot of handwork because each horn is a different size, a different 
thickness. So you have to be experienced to make a good shofar," he explained.

The ram's horn is used as the traditional shofar because when Abraham showed his willingness to 
sacrifice his son, Isaac, God provided a ram to be used in his place (Gen. 22).

"Actually all types of horns are kosher – except for the cow," Ribak said.

That's because the Jewish people don't want to remind God of the time Israel worshipped the golden 
calf in the wilderness (Ex. 32).

Besides the distinctive tones of the different horns, there are three different blasts sounded.

The shofar is blown in synagoges and at the Western Wall each morning for a month before the holiday 
to give plenty of time for repentence.

"You and I both know that we need a lot of reminders in our daily life to repent, to think of the things 
of God," Boaz Michael, founder of First Fruits of Zion told CBN News. "It's like an alarm clock for
 the soul."

Ribak says its not just Jewish people who blow the shofar.

"A lot of Christians, a lot of Messianic people, evangelicals, they use the shofar, too," he said. "We sell 
the shofar all over the world. We sell it to Jewish, to Christian, messianic people, evangelicals.

Rosh Hashanah is the feast of the seventh month, but in Jewish tradition, it represents the New Year.

"At the coronation of the kings of Israel, the shofars would blow," Michael continued. "They would 
announce the new king or they would announce the coming of the king. So, too, at Rosh HaShanah."

Michael says that's a foreshadow for those who believe in Yeshua (Jesus).

"I know that often times in the Christian world, shofars are blown throughout the entire year but in 
Judaism and in Jewish practice the shofars are only blown for a very limited time throughout the year, 
during this time, the month of Elul, at Rosh Hashanah," he explained. "And they tell us something; 
they're speaking to us; they're reminding us of something and one of the things they're reminding us 
of the creation of the world, the coming of the king, King Messiah one day at this time, the coronation
 of his Kingdom here on earth. This is what the shofar is to remind us of and it speaks to us every day 
when we hear that sound.

Watch here: Sounding the Shofar

Tuesday, August 28, 2018

Dead Sea Dying: Can Israel's Jewel Be Preserved for Future Generations? - CBN News Julie Stahl, Chris Mitchell

Dead Sea Dying: Can Israel's Jewel Be Preserved for Future Generations?

08-28-2018 CBN News
Julie Stahl,
Chris Mitchell

DEAD SEA, Israel – Sunrise over the Dead Sea is a magnificent sight. A soothing atmosphere surrounds this biblical landmark and mineral treasure. The Dead Sea is a natural wonder that is actually giving life, but this unique jewel is in danger of drying up.

It sits on the Great Rift Valley between Israel and Jordan.

Fed by freshwater from the Jordan River and mineral springs, it's one of the saltiest lakes in the world – so salty no fish can survive in it.


Related




Israeli Archaeologists: Scroll Cave Most Exciting Discovery in 60 Years



Archaeologists Excavate Near Dead Sea Scrolls Cave



Oldest Bible Text since Dead Sea Scrolls Unveiled




Nominated as one of the Seven Wonders of the World, the water, mud and atmosphere have healing properties, but all this could disappear.

The Dead Sea is dropping by five to eight feet a year. That means the lowest point on earth is getting even lower.

Hebrew University Professor Avner Adin explained what's taking place and why there's only one way to restore the sea.

"The reason is very, very simple," Adin explained. "On one hand …there is all the time evaporation of water, the surface is very large. On the other hand … the good water[s] from the upper Jordan were taken for irrigation to develop agriculture, to develop food for the people and [therefore] stopped reaching the Dead Sea. So the balance has changed."

"What could save the Dead Sea is pouring water into the Dead Sea," he explained.

Adin told CBN News a combination of solutions is the only way to help.

"One way, which is the natural one, meaning let the rivers flow into it: don't take the water from the Jordan, from the other rivers…let it come back to its natural way," he said. "The other way is artificial, meaning making the Red-Dead Sea project, making it come true."



Israel, Jordan and the Palestinian Authority signed a Red-Dead Sea agreement to build a 140-mile canal from the Red Sea to the Dead Sea.

The billion dollar project begins with a desalination plant to provide much needed water and power to Jordan and then drop the remainder of the water into the Dead Sea.

"Another way that in parallel could be done would be … to take water from the Mediterranean and desalinate this water and give this water for drinking and for agriculture instead of taking water from the Lake of Galilee and from the streams," he said.

But Adin knows it's not easy to get governments invested in saving the Dead Sea. That's why activists like Jacob Ben Zaken and Noam Bedein are sounding the alarm.

"I want to see the Dead Sea restored," said Ben Zaken, who lives in a nearby kibbutz and gives the only boat ride available on the Dead Sea.



"The purpose is to bring awareness to the Dead Sea – to the beauty, to everything that's going on, including the disappearing of the Dead Sea and the way to save it," he explained.

And it's working.

Over a year ago, photojournalist Noam Bedein took the boat tour.

"That touched me as an Israeli to speak up for this enchanted, prehistoric, biblical place – to stand up for it," said Bedein, who works as a Dead Sea sailing excursion guide.

These salty pillars or chimneys may be stunning, but their appearance signals trouble. Bedein's photos show the drop in the water level in just one year.



"I've been documenting this one-of-a-kind place like never before, going on this boat ride over a period of time and documenting the beauty, the magic of this place with the purpose to educate the next generation of this one-of-a-kind place, but also showing the dramatic changes of this place has been taking," Bedein said.

The drop has also caused huge sink holes to open up along the shore, forcing beaches to close and a nearby road to collapse.



The Dead Sea is a favorite tourist destination. It's so salty you can't sink – only float.

But there's much more. In the Bible, a young David hid in the nearby caves of Ein Gedi. The Dead Sea Scrolls were found in the Qumran Caves, giving us the oldest manuscripts of the Bible.

And the Dead Sea is actually giving life. The waters and air at the Dead Sea have special healing properties for skin and other ailments.

Besides that, mineral mining yields potash and magnesium – key elements for fertilizer used in agriculture to feed the world.

"So it's a very special diamond that we should keep it," Adin said.

Biblical prophets also said that the Dead Sea would go through a change when the Messiah returns. Ezekiel prophesied that one day the waters of the Great Salt Sea would be healed and teaming with fish.

Photos, CBN News, Jonathan Goff

Photo of One-Year Drop, Noam Bedein @deadseastory

Saturday, June 30, 2018

King Hezekiah, Prophet Isaiah Debut in Oklahoma - CBN News Julie Stahl,Chris Mitchell

Ophel Excavation, Photo, CBN News, Jonathan Goff
Ophel Excavation, Photo, CBN News, Jonathan Goff
King Hezekiah, Prophet Isaiah Debut in Oklahoma
06-28-2018
CBN News Julie Stahl,
JERUSALEM, Israel – King Hezekiah and the Prophet Isaiah worked together in biblical times and 
now thanks to archaeology, they're together again…in Oklahoma of all places!

Personal seal impressions that likely belonged to the two men are on display together for the first time. 
A simulcast linking Jerusalem with Oklahoma's Armstrong Auditorium marked the debut.

"This is a celebration day for all our friends and especially for the lovers of Israel and the Bible," 
Archaeologist Dr. Eilat Mazar told participants in both Jerusalem and Oklahoma during the opening 
of the exhibit.

 

Dr. Eilat Mazar, Photo, CBN News, Jonathan Goff
Mazar helped uncover the artifacts in 2009.

"This is one of the bullae that we found," Mazar said pointing to a large poster of the artifact. "It's a 
seal impression, very tiny, as large as you can see it now but this is all of one centimeter [less than 
half an inch] in diameter, even not the nail on my finger."

Workers uncovered both items just a few feet apart at the foot of the Temple Mount, just outside the 
present-day walls of Jerusalem's Old City. Historically that area has been called the "Ophel" meaning 
"a high place to climb to."

King Hezekiah, considered one of Judea's greatest leaders, and the Prophet Isaiah lived some 2,700 
years ago.

"When people wanted at that time, biblical times, to seal a document, they tied the document with 
a string and then they took a little tiny mud and pushed their private seal to the soft mud and made 
[a] seal impression. You could read their names," Mazar told CBN News.

Hezekiah's reads, "Belonging to Hezekiah, [son of] Ahaz, King of Judah."

"To find such a private item, that relates to one of the Judean kings, I believe we've reached kind of 
a peak in that matter. We came so close to that kind of figure," Mazar said.

Isaiah's isn't as clear. It reads: "Belonging to Isaiah"… but the second word is missing a letter that 
could complete the Hebrew word for "prophet."


 
Exhibit Curator Brad McDonald, from the Armstrong International Foundation, said it sends a message 
when artifacts back up the Bible.

Curator Brad McDonald, Photo, CBN News, Jonathan Goff
"Whenever you find discoveries like this, actual physical items that people can touch and they have 
inscribed on them the names of biblical figures, it's always powerful. This is science proving the 
Bible," McDonald told CBN News.

Mazar's grandfather Benjamin Mazar, led the first excavation after the 1967 Six-Day War that 

Prof. Benjamin Mazar, Photo, GPO archive
 
"My grandfather excavated 10 continuous years without stopping," Mazar said. "This was a fantastic
project – almost no parallel in dimensions. Hundreds of people worked. They revealed fantastic remains 
of ancient Jerusalem from all periods."

Prof. Ben Mazar in 1936, Photo, GPO archive, Kluger Zoltan
Stephen Flurry, vice president of the Armstrong International Foundation and president of the 
Herbert W. Armstrong College in Edmond, Oklahoma, where the exhibit opened, said the foundation 
has been working with the Mazar family for decades.

"We've had a partnership with Dr. Eilat Mazar since 2006, but our relationship with the Mazar family 
actually goes back to 1968 when her grandfather worked with the name sake of our college, Herbert 
W. Armstrong," Flurry told CBN News.

"Since that time we've sent students to volunteer on the excavations, and we've also provided funding 
for some of her work," Flurry said.

Dr. Michael Oren, Israel's minister of diplomacy calls Eilat Mazar "a hero."


Dr. Michael Oren, Photo, CBN News, Jonathan Goff

"She's fought for Israel's future by fighting for its past in the face of a lot of naysayers and particularly 
people in the world today who deny a historical connection between Israel and the city of Jerusalem, 
people who deny there ever was a King David or King Hezekiah or a Prophet Isaiah," Oren told 
CBN News.

"Eilat digs down and she finds it and she proves them all wrong," Oren said.

Ten years ago, while digging in the City of David, Mazar believed she discovered King David's palace.

"It's monumentality is obvious. Everybody can see," Mazar said at the time.

"Also its date - [it has] been constructed sometime around 1,000 BC, the time of King David in 
general based on the pottery that we found underneath and within. These facts brought us to 
understand that we have got [a] fantastic monumental construction," she said.

While many archaeologists dismiss the Bible, Mazar maintains it to be an "important historical source."

"The biblical stories and the New Testament stories by the way, it goes together because [it] just 
prove[s] quite accurately the development of Jerusalem and the way Jerusalem is described is quite 
accurate," Mazar said.

The Oklahoma exhibit provides other artifacts, including a life-size replica of Hezekiah's underground 
water tunnel. It's open to the public through mid-August.

Oren believes the significance of these pieces go way beyond science.

"Archaeology is not just about revealing the past. Archaeology is about securing our present. 
Archaeology is about ensuring our future. Archaeology is about richness; it's about rootedness; and 
as Eilat Mazar will tell you, it's about truth," Oren told participants at the exhibit's opening.