Followers

Thursday, March 21, 2013

Revelation 12: The Woman, the Child, and the Dragon



Alice C. Linsley


My Protestant friends wonder about my veneration of the Virgin Mary, the Mother of God. They assume that I must be Roman Catholic since they know next to nothing about historic Anglicanism or Eastern Orthodoxy. I explain that from the earliest days, the followers of Jesus Christ have shown great reverence to our Lord's mother. To show reverence is to venerate, not worship. Protestants seem to have a difficult time making this distinction.

It is ironic that the persons who claim the Bible alone as their authority know so little about what the Bible says about Mary. She is the blessed "Woman" of Genesis 3:15 who is foretold as the one who would bring forth the "Seed" of God. This verse does not pertain to Eve since Eve is not named until Genesis 3:20.

Further, Luke's Gospel tells us that Mary is to be regarded as blessed through all generations. "For he hath regarded the low estate of his handmaiden: for, behold, from henceforth all generations shall call me blessed." (Luke 1:48)

In my experience, pointing out what the Bible teaches about Mary makes little difference. My Protestant friends merely shrug their shoulders as if this must be some foreign imposition on the Bible. Such bias against Mary has lead to strange interpretations of Revelation 12, including associating her with the whore of Babylon (Rev. 17:4-18). Here we have an example of ignorance, prejudice and very poor Bible interpretation.

A careful reading of Revelation 12 makes it clear that the Woman brings for the expected Messiah, the "Seed" of God, whose kingdom is eternal because he is eternal God. This means that Mary is the God-bearer, called Theotokos in Greek.


The Placement of the Vision

The vision of Revelation 12 comes after the proclamation of the Kingdom in Revelation 11:15 made famous by Handel’s Alleluia Chorus:  “The kingdoms of this world have become the kingdoms of our Lord and of His Christ, and He shall reign forever and ever!”  This sign serves to punctuate the rise and fall of kingdoms much as the following Messianic Psalm is used in Daniel to punctuate the rise and fall of kingdoms: “Your kingdom is an everlasting kingdom, and your dominion endures through all generations. The Lord is faithful to all his promises and loving toward all he has made.” (Ps. 145:13)

This vision comes between the proclamation about the eternal Kingdom of Christ and the vision of the blasphemous Beast who makes war on the Saints. This recapitulates Genesis 3:15, the first promise of Scripture concerning the Woman and her Seed. Her Seed is to crush the Serpent’s head. This was accomplished at Christ’s birth, death, resurrection and ascension (“The Christ Event”) and in the vision is a timeless event described in these words: “The woman was delivered of a boy, the son who was to rule all the nations with an iron rod, and the child was taken straight up to God and to his throne.” (Rev. 12:5)

The Church has understood Genesis 3:15 to be about the Theotokos and her Son, the only begotten of God. It is not about Eve. Eve is not named until Genesis 3:20. Further, John’s Gospel connects Jesus with the Seed on Genesis 3:15.  In John 12:24, we read that Jesus told his disciples that he was going to Jerusalem to die.  John’s vision connects the death of the Woman’s Seed with the new life or abundant fruit of the Kingdom.


Sign and Signs

St. John describes this vision as a sign or mark (Greek: σημεον - sēmeion). There are two signs actually. The first is the sun-clothed woman in labor and the second is the fiery red dragon. Signs are distinct from symbols in that they point to realities beyond them. The woman points to the Theotokos and the dragon points to her adversary, the devil. The dragon seeks to devour her Son (Rev. 12:4). We recall how Herod sought to slay the Child. By angelic intervention Joseph was led to take Mary and the Child into the desert and on to Egypt where they were safe.

“The woman fled to the wilderness, where she has a place prepared by God, that they should feed her there for one thousand two hundred and sixty days.” (Rev. 12:6)

One thousand two hundred and sixty days is three and a half years, a period of time used elsewhere in John’s Apocalypse. Compare to the period of time that the holy city was trampled in Revelation 11:2.  Here the wording is “forty-two months” which is also three and a half years and the period of desolation of the temple described in Daniel. Daniel 8:11-14 reads:

“He even exalted himself as high as the Prince of the host; and by him the daily sacrifices were taken away, and the place of His sanctuary was cast down. Because of transgression, an army was given over to the horn to oppose the daily sacrifices; and he cast truth down to the ground. He did all this and prospered. Then I heard a holy one speaking; and another holy one said to that certain one who was speaking, “How long will the vision be, concerning the daily sacrifices and the transgression of desolation, the giving of both the sanctuary and the host to be trampled underfoot?” And he said to me, “For two thousand three hundred days; then the sanctuary shall be cleansed.”


The Woman

The Woman is the Mother of Christ our God. In Christian iconography she is sometimes shown standing on the earth with the serpent beneath her foot. She brings forth the “Son who was to rule all the nations” (Rev. 12:5).
Mary and the Christ
subdue the serpent

She is also the Mother of the Church and all who through Christ subdue the serpent. The Eastern Orthodox hold that the miraculous birth of Jesus left Mary's virginity intact as a sign; therefore she did not travail in bringing forth her Son. However, as the Mother of the Church she travails in intercession for all the saints. This is evident from John’s vision. Revelation 12:17 says that when the dragon could not get to the Mother or her Child, it “went away to make war on the rest of her children who obey God’s commandments and have in themselves the witness of Jesus.”

Many believe that when Jesus gave his mother into John’s care, he was giving Mary to be “mother” to the whole community of early believers. The title “Mother of the Church” was first used by St. Ambrose, the Bishop Milan (A.D. 330 – 397).

Historically Mary was regarded as first among the Apostles and was greatly honored in the Christian community. Such honor had the effect of stirring great animosity against her among the Jews.


The New Israel

In Revelation 12:1 we read: “And there appeared a great wonder in heaven; a woman clothed with the sun, and the moon under her feet, and upon her head a crown of twelve stars…”

The woman clothed with the sun recalls Joseph’s dream (Gen. 37:9-11).  In that dream, Joseph’s father (Israel) is represented by the sun and Joseph’s mother is represented by the moon. Joseph’s eleven brothers are represented by the eleven stars that bow down to him.  In this sign, the woman wears a crown with twelve stars. Joseph, who was sold into slavery, is restored to his rightful place. The New Israel must mean restoration through the Theotokos and her Seed, the Son of God. The New Israel is then the Church into which the faithful ones of the Old Covenant have been brought to safety. Even so, God makes a place of protection for the Woman of Revelation 12.

The Woman represents the New Israel. She is given strength to rise above the Devil’s attacks. She flies with wings of an eagle. This is reminiscent of the promise in Isaiah 40:31: “But they that hope in the Lord shall renew their strength, they shall take wings as eagles, they shall run and not be weary, they shall walk and not faint.”


The Child

In Revelation 12:5 we read that the Woman brings forth “a man child, who was to rule all nations with a rod of iron: and her child was caught up unto God, and to his throne.” The Woman is the Woman of Genesis 3:15 whose conception of the Divine Seed was foretold and anticipated by John’s faithful ancestors going back before the time of Abraham.

This sign speaks of the Christ event in relationship to Satan's unsuccessful attempt to thwart God's plan. God has exalted the glorified Jesus to a position of universal authority (Philippians 2:9-11). He is destined to "rule all the nations with an iron scepter" (12:5). He will shepherd the nations with loving, but absolute authority. These words identify the Child as God's anointed Messiah, destined to reign in God's kingdom over all the earth (Psalm 2:9; Revelation 19:15).

Abraham’s Horite ancestors expected a virgin from among their people to bring forth the Divine Seed. They were familiar with this text: “My wrath will be turned against the enemy of my father Osiris and I will put him beneath my feet in my name of Red Cloak." (Myth and Symbol in Ancient Egypt by R.T. Rundle Clark, p. 216)

Here we find the words of Psalm 110:1, a messianic reference: The Lord says to my Lord: "Sit at My right hand until I make your enemies a footstool for your feet."
Daniel 2:44 says, "In the time of those kings, the God of heaven will set up a kingdom that will never be destroyed, nor will it be left to another people. It will crush all those kingdoms and bring them to an end, but it will itself endure forever.”

The Woman’s Seed, as foretold in Genesis 3:15, was to crush the serpent’s head and restore ParadiseJesus alludes to this first promise of Scripture when describing his passion and resurrection. “Truly, truly, I say to you, unless a grain of wheat falls into the earth and dies, it remains alone; but if it dies, it bears much fruit" (John 12:24). He identifies himself as the "Seed" of Genesis 3:15 and the fulfillment of Messianic expectation.

Horite Hebrew belief in a deified son who would embody kindness and unite the peoples found fulfillment in Jesus Christ, a descendant of the Horite ruler-priests, the divine son of the Virgin Mary, daughter of the priest Joachim of the line of Nathan. Jesus Christ is the fulfillment of the promise made to Abraham's ancestors in Eden that a woman of their people would bring forth the Divine Seed. This is why Frank Moore Cross cannot avoid the conclusion that the God of Israel is the God of the Horites.


The Dragon

Revelation clearly identifies the dragon or monster. He is "that ancient serpent called the devil, or Satan, who leads the whole world astray" (Rev. 12:9, 20:2). Since ancient mythology had many references to antagonistic dragons and sea monsters, John's readers would have recognized the dragon as a cosmic enemy.

In Christian iconography the serpent is often shown as a dragon. Many famous paintings depict the serpent's defeat by St. George or St. Michael, the Archangel.
In John's vision the serpent is associated with the serpent of Eden. However, the association goes beyond Eden to the creation narrative of Genesis 1 where the serpent is associated with chaos and the dark abyss. 

In Genesis 1 we read that the primal substance covering the earth was water and it was disordered, that is, it had no boundaries. God’s breath (Ruach/Logos) created order from the chaos, separating the waters above from the waters below, and the dry land from the seas.  The chaotic waters are called Tehom and the ordering word of God is called Tehut.  In the cosmic struggle, Tehut is victorious over Tehom. The oldest known law code is the Law of Tehut (c. 3500 B.C.) and it was said to express the wisdom of God by which boundaries were established. Among Abraham’s Nilo-Saharan ancestors boundaries were not to be violated. Such transgression carried serious consequences.

The ancient Egyptians believed the great serpent that created chaos lived south of Elephantine Island and therefore never wanted to sail that far south. There was a very ancient temple on Elephantine Island at which priests offered sacrifice and prayers daily. Their presence was seen as a restraint against the serpent. Further, Elephantine Island was known as a seat of wisdom and justice whereby divinely established boundaries were honored and enforced.

Elephantine Island was the center of Nubia's international power. Pepinakht-Heqaib (third millenium BC) rendered judgment from Elephantine and waged wars. He claimed that when judging between two brothers, presumably first-born sons, he never deprived a rightful heir of his inheritance. Since he lived before the time of Joseph's rule in Egypt, it appears that he was honoring a long-standing custom among his Nubian/Kushite people.

The practice of Kushite rulers having two first born sons by two wives, as was customary among Abraham’s people, clearly predates the domination of Egypt by the Asiatic Hyksos.

Revelation 12:17 we are told that “the dragon was angry with the Woman and with her Seed, those who keep the commandments of God and have the witness of Jesus.” Here the Woman’s Seed is not only the Son of God but also all who are “in Christ”, the Church.

When the dragon failed to destroy the Woman and her Seed, it called forth an assistant from the deep. “And he [the dragon] stood upon the sand of the sea. And I saw a beast coming up from the sea, having ten horns and seven heads…and upon its heads were the names of blasphemy… And the dragon gave it his power and his throne and great authority.” (Rev. 12:18-13:2)

The Beast is the Dragon’s first assistant. Others are mentioned in Revelation 16:12-14: “The sixth angel poured out his bowl on the great river Euphrates, and its water was dried up to prepare the way for the kings from the East. Then I saw three impure spirits that looked like frogs; they came out of the mouth of the dragon, out of the mouth of the beast and out of the mouth of the false prophet. They are demonic spirits that perform signs, and they go out to the kings of the whole world, to gather them for the battle on the great day of God Almighty.”


The Serpent and the Tree of Life

There are two trees in Garden, and the serpent led Eve from the right choice - to eat of the Tree of Life - to the wrong choice - to eat of the Tree by which she hoped to become like God. This has been the Devil's approach throughout history. He attempts to lead us away from life by promising what he cannot give - divinity and immortality.

The Church Fathers understood the Tree of Life in Eden as representing the Cross. Satan employs many methods to distract us from the Cross, and today there are more distractions than ever. The Kaiser Family Foundation found that young Americans on average spend over seven and one-half hours a day on entertainment media. This translates into more than 53 hours a week as compared to 30 hours a week in school. Cell phones are used to listen to music, play games, text friends, take photos, and watch TV, even in schools where cell phone use is prohibited during the school day.


Conclusion

The imagery of the Woman, her Son and the Beast, draws on very ancient symbolism that can be traced back to Abraham’s Nilo-Saharan ancestors. The Son’s victory over the beast was foretold from the beginning (Gen. 3:15) and John’s apocalyptic vision makes it clear how things will end. “And the beast was captured, and with him the false prophet, who in his presence performed signs (sēmeia) by which he deceived those who had received the mark of the beast and those who worshiped his image. These two were thrown alive into the lake of fire burning with sulfur” (Rev. 21:8).

“The Son of God appeared to destroy the works of the devil” (1 John 3:8). Thanks be to God!

Friday, March 15, 2013

Jerusalem Under the Jebusites


Stepped structure of the ancient Jebusite wall

Alice C. Linsley

Under Jebusite rule and earlier, Jerusalem was divided into two cities, the western part called Jeru (Yiru) and the eastern part called Salem (Shalem). Genesis speaks of Melchizedek, the righteous ruler-priest of Jerusalem (Jebu/Yebu). He was likely of the royal house/lineage of Sheba and a kinsmen of Abraham, the Horite Hebrew.

The Jebusites are listed as a people of Canaan in Exodus 3:8, Joshua 12:8, Deuteronomy 7:1, II Chronicles and I Kings 9:20. Genesis 15:19-21 provides this list: "the Kenites, the Kenizzites, Kadmonites, the Hittites, the Perizzites, the Raphaim, the Amorites, the Girgashites and the Jebusites."

David purchased a threshing floor from the Jebusite chief Araunah and offered sacrifice there. This would have been located at a high elevation where the wind could carry away the chaff. Threshing floors were sacred places for the Jebusites, the Horite Hebrew, and other peoples in the R1b Haplogroup. It may be that Judah's intercourse with a shrine qadesh took place at Timnah, which had a temple dedicated to Hathor, the overshadowed one. Timnah was directly north of Abdullum in Jebusite territory. Judah went to Timnah to visit with his friend from Abdullum and to help with the harvest. The harvest was a time for the hieros gamos, or sacred marriage. Naomi told her daughter-in-law Ruth to approach Boaz at the threshing floor. 




The hieros gamos may have been a ritual in which it was hoped that the Messiah would be conceived. Among the Horite Hebrew devotees of Hathor this ritual likely did not involve sexual intercourse, but the expectation of solar overshadowing. The threshing floors often had the shape of a sun and the "woman" of Genesis 3:15 (not Eve) was excepted to conceive the Seed by divine overshadowing (cf. Gabriel's explanation to Mary in Luke 1). It appears that the stories of Judah-Tamar and the Boaz-Ruth share narrative elements that should be considered in greater depth.
Prince Rotimi Obadofin believes that the biblical Jebusites were Africans. He has written, “perhaps the Jebusites, that is the original of Jerusalem were Ijebu people of today, since Oke-Eri is owned and inhabited by Ijebu people.”

Eri is related to the huge archaeological monument of Eredo. Eridu is also the name of an ancient Sumerian city. In Akkadian Eridu means "home away from home."

Obadofin supports his position by suggesting that “since Queen of Sheba was said to be visiting home when she met king Solomon, I feel strongly that she must have been one of the descendants of those Ijebu (Jebusites) driven away from Jerusalem by king David." Read more here.


The Jebusites are an extant people

Today the Jebu are classified as Yoruba, but the term "Yoruba" applied only after the 18th century. The Jebu identify themselves as distinct from other Yoruba sub-groups by calling themselves Nago-Jebu. The Jebu are also called Ijebu, and in the Bible they are called "Jebusites."

According to African legend, the Yoruba migrated to the Atlantic coast of Nigeria from the east. Some stopped in the region of Lake Chad where they had kin in Bor'no (land of Noah). Their kin were likely the Kanuri tribe, which may explain why some Yoruba have tribal marks similar to those of the Kanuri.

In 1892, the New York Times reported on the Jebu tribe, which controlled the water systems of the Port of Lagos. The king of the Jebu levied taxes on all products carried through his territory. This is consistent with the biblical information concerning Abraham’s cattle-herding Proto-Saharan ancestors who controlled water systems in Central Africa, the Nile, Canaan, and Mesopotamia.

The Jebusites may be related to the Ijebu, an extant people of Nigeria and Benin. The biblical Jebusites were also related to the Edomites who are called "Edo." The Jebusites had close connections with the Horites of Edom whose rulers are listed in Genesis 36. Abraham's territory was entirely in ancient Edom. It extended between the settlements of his two wives. Sarah resided in Hebron and Keturah resided in Beersheba.

Related reading: Kushite Diversity and Unity; The Jebusites Unveiled; History Channel's Bible Series Scores a C; History Channel's Bible Series: Episode 2; Hazor's Destruction: Another Theory

Saturday, March 2, 2013

Hazor's Destruction: Another Theory



Tel Hazor


Alice C. Linsley

Known in Joshua’s day as “the head of all those kingdoms,” Hazor is the largest tell in Israel at 200 acres. It was the main urban center for the large city-state that was culturally influenced by the Egyptians. 

The Horite Hebrew priests there were devotees of the High God, his son HR, and HR's mother Hathor. The conflict between the Israelite warriors who attacked Hazor may have been a conflict between native Hebrew people and the invading Hebrew under Joshua. 

There are two accounts of the conquest of Canaan in the Bible. One would have us believe that the Israelites came out of Egypt and conquered the cities of Canaan under divine guidance. Those who want archaeology to validate the Biblical account will be content with this interpretation, but is it the most accurate interpretation?

Hershel Shanks has written that archaeology "sometimes provides evidence that seems to refute the Biblical account. That is the case, for example, with the Israelite conquest of the land as described in the Book of Joshua. The various cities that the Israelites supposedly conquered simply cannot be lined up with the archaeological evidence." (BAR, July-August 2013, p. 6)

Another version requires a deeper look at the Hebrew who were living dispersed among the Canaanites before the time of the Exodus. They were the priests, warriors, and metalworkers who enjoyed relatively high status in the Canaanite shrine settlements. Hazor was one of those shrine cities as evidenced by the discovery of the royal upper level with a chapel and offering table. The few preserved Egyptian hieroglyphs indicate that this shrine was dedicated by a Horite priest called Ra-hotep some time before 1250 BC.

The idea of dual origins appears to be true until one investigates the genealogical information and finds that the kinship pattern of Abraham and Moses is the pattern identified with and unique to the Horites. This should not surprise us since the Bible claims that Moses is a descendant of Abraham and Abraham's people were Horites whose cultural context was Nilo-Saharan.

The shrine cities in which the early Hebrew lived included Hazor, Ramah, Bethel, Jerusalem, Hebron and Beersheba. They were built on high ground and were mound settlements, as was Shechem, another Horite shrine, where there was an ombligo stone symbolizing the navel of the earth, or the sacred center. They had permanent water sources and were organized with separate neighborhoods for the ruling class, the elite tradesmen, and the commoners. Extended families lived in close proximity, usually with a common courtyard. The ruler's complex was on higher ground and included quarters for residential staff such as cooks, craftsmen, warriors and priests. The most holy shrine or small temple was often within the royal complex.


Northern Shrine Cities

Ramah, about 4 or 5 miles north-west of Jerusalem, is an important northern shrine as it was the home of the prophet Samuel whose father's two-wife pattern (1 Sam. 1) suggests that Samuel's family was Horite Hebrew. Ramah is also named in connection with the prophetess Deborah who judged from her date nut palm between Ramah and Bethel (note the south-north axis versus the west-east axis indicated by Abraham's tent being pitched between Bethel and Ai). This suggests that for some of Abraham's descendants the sacred center was not always identified with shrine cities. People seeking divine guidance had to make the effort to go out to the wilderness (cf. pilgrims going to John the Forerunner).

North of both Ramah and Bethel was the shrine city of Hazor. Tel Hazor was located north of the Sea of Galilee, between Ramah and Kadesh. It was set on a hill overlooking Lake Merom. Hazor had Middle and Late Bronze Age (2000-1200 B.C.) temples, palaces, and fortifications. It was a significant early city with an upper tell of 30 acres and a lower city of more than 175 acres. Besides Lake Merom, Hazor had a water supply system typical of other large settlements such as Jerusalem, Petra and Beersheba.

Hazor was the administrative center of an ancient territory. This is attested in Joshua 11:10: "Hazor in olden days was the capital of all these kingdoms." Grain and other commodities were brought as tribute to Hazor and were stored there. Excavations have uncovered huge storage facilities there. These and tunnels to the subterranean water pits testify to the importance of the city.


Amulet of Hathor found at Hazor


Hazor is mentioned in 14th century BC diplomatic correspondence between the Egyptian administration and its representatives in Canaan and Amurru (Amorites) during the New Kingdom. These are called the Amarna Letters. Hazor is also mentioned in earlier Execration texts, and in 18th century BC documents found in Mari on the Euphrates River.

From the Upper Egyptian Amarna letters come evidence that the king of Hazor was under the rule of the Egyptian Pharaoh. Other rulers mentioned in the Letters include Lib'ayu of the shrine city of Shechem and Abdi-Heba who ruled in the shrine city of Jerusalem in the mid-1330s BC. Abdi-Heba hired some Apiru/Habiru (Hebrew) to serve as mercenaries. Among the Habiru were clans known for their skill in spying and combat. Others were known for their skill in metal work some of which was done at the shrine cities since these had sufficient water, and metal articles such as jewelry, mirrors, tools, weapons and sacred vessels were crafted for the rulers.

Hazor was destroyed by a large fire between 1400 and 1100 BC. Fourteen massive jars of scorched 3,400 year-old wheat have been found in a Late Bronze Age palace at Hazor. Scholars do not agree on the cause of the fire. Israeli Archaeologist Amnon Tor-Ben believes that the Israelites conquered the city of Hazor and burned it as described in Joshua 11:11- "None of the cities that stood on mounds did Israel burn, except Hazor only; that Joshua burned." However, Joshua 6:24-28 credits the Israelites with burning Jericho and Ai, but does not mention Hazor.

It is also possible that Hazor was burned by the Egyptians with the help of Nilotic Hebrew warriors. Seti I claimed to have destroyed Hazor in a military campaign around 1300 BC. It is possible that Hebrew warriors were among Seti's destroyers of Hazor and memory of the event came into the Hebrew Bible from them.

It seems doubtful that the Hebrew would have burned Hazor on their own initiative since the king of Hazor was friendly to the Hebrew (Habiru/Hapiru) as evidenced by Amarna document EA 148 (Cairo Museum Cat. Number 4765, ca. 1400-1100 BC).

Perhaps the fire that destroyed parts of Hazor broke out due to granary explosions. This was one of the risks of storing large amounts of grain offered as tribute. 


Southern Shrine Cities

The most important of the southern shrines was Beersheba, inhabited from at least 4000 BC. The shrine is named after the well of Sheba, a huge cistern carved out of the rock beneath the town. There were numerous wells in the area due to the abundance of underground water. Beersheba had separate areas for the ruler and his soldiers, a commercial center, and housing for the average citizens. Sophisticated metal work was being done in the area and the patron of the metal workers was Hathor-Meri, the virgin mother of Horus.
Replica of the horned altar found at Beersheba.

Beersheba is mentioned as a holy place in the patriarchal narratives. Archaeologists have found Edomite and Midianite pottery here which indicates that these related peoples lived here together at different times throughout the Iron Age. A four-horned brazen altar identical in structure to the altar used later by the Israelites was uncovered in 1973.This discovery was made by a team under the direction of Yohanan Aharoni and Ze'ev Herzog of Tel Aviv University.

The horned altar and the mercy seat of the Ark are apophatic representations of the presence of the Creator whose emblem was the Sun. The ancient Horites never worshiped the sun. The Creator and the sun were viewed as distinct since the Lord created a tent for the sun. The negative orb-shaped space is evidence that Israel repudiated earthly representations of the Creator. This likely emerged as the devotees of Horus (Horite Hebrew) sought to separate themselves from the syncretistic developments of the Egyptian and Babylonian empires.

Beersheba was a sacred water shrine in the time of Abraham (2000 BC). Abraham's second wife Keturah lived at Beersheba. Their firstborn son was Joktan (Yaqtan). Beersheba is where Abraham spent the last years of his life

Beersheba had strategic importance because it was the largest settlement in the Negev. It guarded the trade routes between Mesopotamia and Egypt and between the Nile Delta and Southern Arabia. Its fortifications in the late Iron Age were impressive and included a moat that encircled the city and a steeply-sloped earthen rampart. Beyond the rampart the city was surrounded by thick stone walls. The gate was a chambered type, and inside the gate archaeologists found an incense altar at the high place, just as described in II Kings 23:8.

Archaeological discoveries indicate that Beersheba was from the earliest time associated with a ruler class. This explains the discovery of crowns, specters, and objects of ivory and copper of exquisite craftsmanship. It also may explain why Sheba defied David's rule, hoping to make himself king (2 Samuel 20:1–22).

Josephus calls the descendants of Abraham and Keturah "Horites" and, quoting an ancient historian, speaks of them as "conquerors of Egypt and founders of the Assyrian Empire." However, the Horite and Sethite Hebrew maintained temples and shrines along the Nile River long before Egypt and Assyria appeared as political entities. The oldest Horite Hebrew shrine city is Nekhen (Hierakonpolis) on the Nile. Nekhen is marked by a star on the map.