Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
Pages: 352
Trim: 6½ x 9½
978-0-7425-4644-8 • Hardback • October 2008 • $81.00 • (£62.00)
978-0-7425-6349-0 • eBook • October 2008 • $76.50 • (£59.00)
Richard A. Freund is Maurice Greenberg Professor of Jewish History and director of the Maurice Greenberg Center for Judaic Studies at the University of Hartford. He is the author of several books on biblical archaeology and has been featured on NOVA, CNN, and the History and Discovery Channels.
Chronology of Events
Introduction
Chapter 1 The Search for Sinai: Archaeological Reflections on Moses, the Exodus, and the Revelation at Mount Sinai
Chapter 2 Searching for Kings David and Solomon and the Ancient City of Jerusalem
Chapter 3 Searching for Jesus in Galilee and Babylonia
Chapter 4 Searching Her-Stories: Women in Ancient Israel
Chapter 5 Searching for Synagogues: A Lost Synagogue Ritual Recovered by Archaeology
Chapter 6 Searching for the Mysterious Teacher of Righteousness at Qumran and in the Dead Sea Scrolls
Chapter 7 Seeking Mary: The Mother of Jesus and the Well and Bathhouse of Nazareth
Chapter 8 The Search for Bar Kokhba: One Biblical Character Who Was Found
Appendix: Exploring an Archeological Site
Acknowledgements
Bibliography
Richard Freund's Digging Through the Bible is a personal account of excavating the most important sites of the Bible, and it is spellbinding. A provocative and fascinating account of the major controversies of the Bible, Judaism, and Christianity.....
— Rabbi Jeffrey L. Rubenstein
Digging through the Bible does something that no other book on archaeology and the Bible does. It brings the reader in a pedagogical as well as in a very updated and well-learned way from the Hebrew Bible through the New Testament, touching on mostof the major contemporary controversies about Jerusalem, the Exodus, Jesus, and Qumran....
— Adolf Roitman, curator, The Shrine of the Book, The Dead Sea Scrolls, The Israel Museum, Jerusalem
Richard Freund?s extensive knowledge of the literary and archaeological sources, as well as his insights and ability to make connections, make this a must-read for any student of the Bible. His work at numerous excavations in Israel and his experience asa professor and Rabbi make him uniquely qualified to write this lively book, which is comprehensible to both lay reader and scholar alike....
— Elizabeth McNamer
A fascinating, riveting excavation through layers of history (and quite literally, earth and humankind) that will be of tremendous interest to both scholars and a general readers. Richard Freund is remarkable at casting a fresh eye on texts and artifactsthat seem to be well known, but deserve more careful scrutiny....
— Michael Berkowitz
Richard Freund has produced a very readable and stimulating book that addresses a number of vexing biblical issues. Thanks to his direct involvement in excavations in Israel, he is able to offer new firsthand data to bolster the case he makes.....
— James K. Hoffmeier
After providing a 46-page 'crash course' in biblical archaeology, Freund, professor of Jewish history at the University of Hartford and author of Secrets of the Cave of Letters: A Dead Sea Mystery (2004), uses archaeological finding to draw conclusions about key biblical characters and events.
— New Testament Abstracts
• Winner, ForeWord Book of the Year Finalist 2009