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Archaeologists Discover Unique Inscription of Psalm 86 in Judean Desert

Updated: November 10, 2023 at 2:03 am EST  See Comments

Archeologists from Hebrew University running an excavation at the Hyrcania Fortress in the Judean Desert have discovered a rare inscription of Psalm 86 on the side of a building stone.

“Jesus Christ, guard me, for I am poor and needy. Guard my life, for I am faithful to you.” The adapted words of King David’s original Hebrew Psalm are painted in red letters on the side of a large building stone underneath a cross. The inscription of Psalm 86 is one of the only Koine Greek Psalm inscriptions ever found on rock as opposed to parchment paper. It is inscribed in the same Greek the New Testament of the Bible was recorded in.

According to The Times of Israel, a 5th-century CE community of Byzantine Christian monks is suspected to have left the inscription behind.

“The priest was not a native Greek speaker,” Dr. Avner Ecker of Bar-Ilan University noted, “but likely someone from the region who was raised speaking a Semitic language.”

A small gold ring with a turquoise stone-like hailing from Persia was discovered alongside the stone marking of the Psalm. “Mashallah,” God has willed it, was inscribed on the ring, which dates back to the 7th-8th century.

According to The Times of Israel,

The remainder of this article is available in its entirety at Christian Headlines - Archeology

The views expressed in this news alert by the author do not directly represent that of The Official Street Preachers or its editors

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