Astronomy reveals Jehovah’s glory in creation, while astrology is condemned as divination and idolatry in Scripture.
The Abomination of Ashtoreth: Astarte, Queen of Heaven, and the Corruption of Covenant Worship
Ashtoreth was a Canaanite fertility goddess whose immoral worship repeatedly led Israel into covenant-breaking idolatry and divine judgment.
What Is Asphalt or Bitumen in the Bible, and Why Does It Matter?
Bitumen in Scripture appears as tar, pitch, and asphalt—used for waterproofing, mortar, and vivid judgment imagery grounded in real history.
When Sennacherib Put Judah on Stone: The Lost Nineveh Relief and the Case for Jerusalem’s Oldest City Image
A lost Assyrian relief may have shown Jerusalem under siege—an intact city that fits Scripture’s account of Jehovah’s deliverance in Hezekiah’s day.
Rediscovering Lost Texts: The Role of Archaeology in Old Testament Textual Criticism
Archaeology strengthens Old Testament textual criticism by recovering manuscripts and inscriptions that illuminate scribal habits and confirm textual stability.
Archaeology and the Old Testament
Archaeology anchors the Old Testament in real places and records—inscriptions, archives, burn layers, and manuscripts that fit the Bible’s history.
Revealing the Sacred: How Biblical Archaeology Validates Historical Faith
Biblical archaeology shows that the dust of history does not compete with Scripture—it defends it, confirming the Bible’s historical, cultural, and textual accuracy.
Biblical Archaeology: Tracing the Historical Path of the Scriptures
Biblical archaeology follows Scripture’s own chronology, uncovering artifacts, cities, and inscriptions that trace and confirm the Bible’s historical path.
What Technologies and Tools Are Used Today in Archaeology
An overview of modern archaeological technologies, showing how each tool supports and illuminates the historical world described in Scripture.
How Have Archaeologists Dated Artifacts and Places in the Past up unto the Present?
A detailed study of how archaeologists have dated artifacts and sites, showing how each method aligns with Scripture when interpreted within a biblical framework.

