Bible Archaeology Resources

BRYAN WINDLE 2017 When I was a teenager, I received a beautiful, leather-bound Thompson Chain Reference Bible as a prize at church.  One of the resources it had at the end, just before the concordance and maps, was an “Archaeological Supplement,” written by Dr. G. Frederick Owens.  It was a fascinating, faith-boosting experience to read about the excavation of the very sites I was reading about in the Bible. Thus began my fascination with the archaeology of the Holy Land.  The Indiana Jones movies only fueled this interest. Now that I’m writing regular updates on current events in the world of biblical archaeology for the Associates For Biblical Research (shameless plug: ), I’m sometimes asked where I find my information.  Others have asked if there are any good resources that describe discoveries in archaeology which demonstrate the historical reliability of the Bible.  In answer to those questions, I share this blog with some of the resources I’ve found helpful. I should add a disclaimer before I begin.  I’ve limited my recommendations to authors and websites that I believe hold to a high view of Scripture (as I do).  By that I mean, they believe that the Bible is inspired by God, inerrant in it’s original autographs, and authoritative.  Because so much of archaeology is interpretation (some have estimated that only 10% of archaeology is digging and 90% is interpretation), one is never free of their biases.  This is why two archaeologists can look at the same data from the same site and come to very different [...x]