Herod’s rise, Jesus’ birth and ministry, and Jerusalem’s fall in 70 C.E.—the Roman stage on which Jehovah’s prophetic plan unfolded with precision.
The Persian Empire And The Building Of The Second Temple
From Babylon’s fall to Darius’s decree, Jehovah rebuilt His House in Zion through Cyrus’s edict, prophetic preaching, and faithful leaders in Yehud.
The Second Temple Period: From Zerubbabel to the Maccabees
From Zerubbabel’s altar to the Hasmonean state, Scripture and archaeology unite to show Jehovah preserving worship and people through Persian and Greek dominion.
Babylonian Captivity And The Return To Zion
Judah fell for covenant disloyalty, yet Jehovah restored a remnant to rebuild His house, proving His sovereignty over kings and His faithfulness to His Word.
The Divided Kingdom: From Rehoboam to the Assyrian Conquest
From Rehoboam’s folly to Samaria’s fall, Scripture and archaeology converge to show that covenant disloyalty brings judgment while Jehovah’s Word stands unbroken.
The Battle of Jericho — c. 1406 B.C.E.
Collapsed mudbrick, a citywide burn layer, and jars full of grain confirm Jericho’s fall c. 1406 B.C.E., exactly as Joshua records.
From the Dawn of Civilization to Abraham
Shinar’s brick-and-bitumen cities and Ur’s royal cemetery anchor Genesis in the excavated world c. 2300–2100 B.C.E., framing Abraham’s departure from a true urban powerhouse.
Did Our Languages Come From the Tower of Babel? Genesis 11:8–9 in Historical, Archaeological, and Linguistic Context
Archaeology and linguistics affirm the Bible’s account of Babel. Languages began suddenly, not gradually, as Jehovah scattered mankind.
The Tower of Babel and the Rise of Human Rebellion: Genesis 11:4 in Historical and Theological Context
The Tower of Babel was mankind’s first organized rebellion against Jehovah, halted by His judgment through the confusion of languages.
The Presence of the Israelites in Canaan, the Land West of the Jordan River: A Text-Critical, Historical, and Archaeological Assessment that Affirms the Biblical Record
srael crossed the Jordan in 1406 B.C.E. and settled Canaan; Scripture, Egyptian texts, and archaeology together verify Israel’s early presence west of the Jordan.

