Article • May 13, 2022
The upcoming excavation at Shiloh may reveal the resting place of the biblical tabernacle, says dig director Dr. Scott Stripling.
Feature • November 1, 2025
Eastern axis versus western entente: the striking evidence for the Bible’s first world war
Feature • October 1, 2025
A message on what makes archaeology great from our friend, Prof. Uzi Leibner
Feature • January 1, 2022
Are we using the right metrics to judge the United Monarchy?
Article • February 1, 2024
Article • October 21, 2020
Is the conventional wisdom correct, that we (via Greece) received it from the neighboring Phoenicians—or was it the Israelites? (Part 2)
Feature • February 28, 2022
Did Moses really write the Torah? Or was it written by Jewish authors centuries, if not a millennium, later?
Article • July 1, 2024
The ancient Persians are recognized as one of the greatest peoples on Earth—and for good reason.
Feature • December 1, 2024
Archaeology corroborates the invasion of the earliest pharaoh named in the biblical account.
Article • June 8, 2023
An interview with excavation director Dr. Scott Stripling
Feature • February 28, 2022
We should. It’s the most accurately copied ancient document in human history.
Article • August 27, 2020
A small clay tablet, history’s ‘earliest signature,’ beer, and a fierce auction fight
Article • October 5, 2013
The connection between Jerusalem archaeology and a tiny college in America’s heartland
Article • May 1, 2024
An interview with Prof. Michael Langlois
Article • January 3, 2019
A little tablet parallels Jeremiah’s account of a Babylonian general and his presence at the fall of Jerusalem.
Article • June 26, 2019
Assyrian inscriptions prove Israel’s deliverance from the Syrians through King Jehoash.
Article • November 8, 2022
The remarkable new discovery of a Middle Bronze Age ivory comb inscription from Lachish
Feature • September 12, 2025
Strongman of legend—and actual history?
Article • July 3, 2021
How the late Dr. Eilat Mazar’s last-released discovery matches a first-century gift recorded in the Book of Matthew
Article • October 31, 2019
It can change your view of the Bible.
Feature • September 1, 2024
Uncovered a decade ago, this exquisite gold object is perhaps the best evidence yet for a Phoenician presence in Jerusalem at the time of Solomon.
Article • July 6, 2020
Who were the ‘sons of God,’ ‘daughters of men’ and ‘Nephilim’ of Genesis 6?
Let the Stones Speak Radio Episode • May 5, 2025
After three weeks of excavation, our work at Jerusalem’s royal quarter has ended. We had a successful and productive season in an area of the Ophel that has not been touched since Dr. Eilat Mazar’s 2009-2010 excavations. In today’s episode, Let the Stones Speak co-host Christopher Eames interviews excavation director Prof. Yosef Garfinkel about his perspective on the season and the future of the site.