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Friday November 7 7:30 PM
Willie Dye www.nciba.us/
Dr. Dye has taught archaeology for more than 25 years, traveled to more than 30 countries around the world doing field work, leads travel study groups, and is a popular lecturer. He will speak on “The Recent Excavations of the Pool of Siloam” and also share information about the Stones of Israel and the recent excavation at the King David’s Palace in Jerusalem.


http://www.leaderu.com/theology/palacedavid.html
Friday, October 3, 2008, 7:30 P.M. Dr. Robert Mullins
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Dr. Robert Mullins is Assistant Professor of Hebrew Bible and Ancient Near Eastern History at Azusa Pacific University. In addition to nearly two decades of excavation experience, Dr. Mullins has traveled widely in the Lands of the Bible, including Lebanon. At present, Dr. Mullins is involved in a long-term archaeological project with the Oriental Institute, University of Chicago at the Iron Age city of Zincirli (ancient Samal) in southeastern Turkey.
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Archaeologist Bob Mullins takes you on a tour of ancient Lebanon, homeland of the Phoenicians, whose principal cities of Byblos, Tyre and Sidon were made famous from the Bible and other ancient sources. As early explorers of the Mediterranean, the Phoenicians engaged in political and commercial relations with the surrounding nations. It was the Phoenicians who spread the alphabet, which was later adopted by the Greeks to become the basis of our own alphabet. The Bible mentions commercial and political ties between Hiram, king of Tyre, and the Israelite rulers David and Solomon. In this lecture, Dr. Mullins will introduce you to the geography, history, people, and places of ancient Lebanon.
Dr. Bob Mullins was student of Amihai Mazar's
at
the Hebrew University of Jerusalem where he did a second M.A. and his
Ph.D. in Archaeology from 1985-2002. He excavated 7 years at Beth Shean (Late
Bronze Age Egyptian Garrison) and 4 years at Tel Rehov (Iron Age).
He will come well equipped with slides to talk about Beth
Shean as an Egyptian garrison in the Land of Canaan during the Amarna
period.
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Friday, September 5, 2008, 7:30 P.M. Dr. John Wilson
Dr. Wilson is professor at Seaver College, in the Religion division of Pepperdine College. He is also Director of ISAR (Institute for the Study of Archaeology and Religion), an educational and research institute that oversees excavation at Banias. Their ISAR coin database is presently going through a complete renovation designed by Dr. Wilson. He will speak to us about “The Coins of Caesarea Philippi (Banias) - Paganism in Action”.
Friday, August 1, 2008, 7:30 P.M.
Dr. Pat DePew
Pat DePew, a long time member and lecturer of BAS, will be doing a presentation on “The Ancient Civilization of the Hittites”. She describes her lecture as follows:
“The Hittites are without doubt one of the most significant and powerful people who ruled an empire, centered in Anatolia (Turkey). Their empire stretched from Mesopotamia to Syria and Israel. The Hebrew Bible refers to "Hittites" in several passages, from Genesis to the post-Exilic Ezra-Nehemiah period. Their skills in war, cleverness in commerce, and intelligence were felt by almost all of the ancient Near-Eastern civilizations. The archaeological discoveries that tell the story are some of the most incredible and exciting ever revealed to the world. In this program we will look at the spectacular discoveries of the Hittite cities of Bogazkoy (Hattusa), Yazilikaya, and Kultepe. We will review the history of this mighty civilization that existed from 2200-1160 BC!”
Friday, June 6, 2008, 6:00 P.M.
Pot Luck Party/Pastor Garry Mohr
***Note the time change!
6:00 P.M. - Tailgate Party at 1st Presbyterian Church, Foothill & Myrtle, Monrovia.
· Bring your own cooked meat/main dish
· Those with last names beginning with A-M bring a salad to share.
· Those with last names beginning with N-Z bring a dessert to share.
· Bring your own drinks, plates, cups, and silverware.
· Bring chairs to sit on or a blanket for the grass.
7:30 P.M. – Program
Pastor Garry Mohr encourages those who have been to Israel to bring their pictures to share at the meeting. If there are questions about some of the sites documented in the pictures, we will spend time identifying the sites.
**Saturday, July 12, 2008, 1:00 P.M.
Field Trip To the Getty Villa
Note date change!
We will meet at 1 PM at The Getty Villa, located just east of Malibu in Pacific Palisades on Route 1 between Topanga Canyon Boulevard and Sunset Boulevard. Pastor Garry has 30 tickets that will be distributed at the June 6th BAS meeting. Since parking is $8, carpooling is highly recommended. Questions? Call Diane Branson, 626-447-1951.
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May 2nd at 7:30 p.m.
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Bonnie Mohr will present a program entitled:
The Harp in Scripture
She is an accomplished and internationally known harpist and heads the harp program at Azuza Pacific University.
She will bring a wealth of information about the development of harp music from ancient time to the present.
Come and enjoy an evening of music on the harp |
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May 3, 2008 - Writing's from the Ancient World |
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April 4th 7:30 PM
Jeff Cate, Ph.D.
Professor of Christian Studies
California Baptist University
Will speak on Codex Bezae Cantabrigiensis is a 5-century Greek-Latin manuscript of the Gospels and Acts. In the 16 century, the manuscript was given to Cambridge University by the French Calvinist, Theodore Beza (hence the name). NT specialists hold the codex in high regard because it is the main Greek representative of the Western type of text, a stream of textual transmission that originates from the second century. Codex Bezae is famous for its peculiar and often unique readings which different from the NT manuscript tradition. Dr. Cate will be describing the manuscript itself and its history as well as Codex Bezae's distinct readings and their significance for the wording of the NT.
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March 7
COINS OF THE BIBLICAL PERIOD c 450BC-500AD
Dr. Richard Fales returns to BAR to review coinage that was circulated in the Biblical period. In this session, we will explore the importance of ancient coinage. Prior to newspapers, magazines, books and T.V., coinage was a form of mass media. It updated the public in the area of politics, mythology, past and present rulers, athletics, wars, monuments, drama, horse races, gladiatorial competition, births, deaths, military victories, etc. Our overview will take us from the time of the pre-Greek empire to the non-Jewish Palestine, Aelia Capitolina (the land of the Jews, controlled and occupied by Rome). |
February 1 Dr. Doug Clark will present "Over Jordan's Stormy Banks: early Iron Age perspectives from the time of the Judges."
December 7th Dr. George Giacumakis Director California State University, Fullerton Irvine Campus, & Professor of History will speak on "How have the Dead Sea Scrolls affected Bible translation? As scholars work on various translations of the Hebrew Bible into other languages, they have to decide which ancient text has preeminence as far as variant readings are concerned. We will analyze various readings in the Dead Sea Scrolls Bible that differ from the Masoretic Text and how they affect modern translations.
January 11 Kyle Keimer will present "UCLA Jaffa Cultural Heritage Project". Following the establishment of The Jaffa Cultural Heritage Project in January 2007, a pilot season of joint research was conducted during the summer of 2007 by the Israel Antiquities Authority and UCLA. Excavations focused on the Ganor comound on the eastern slopes of the site, while publicaion work began on a large corpus of unpublished excavations by Jacob Kaplan who excavated in Jaffa from 1955 to 1982. The historical setting of Jaffa will be discussed in light of the results of this inaugural season.
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November 9th, 2007 not on the first Friday of November. We look forward to having David Sielaff Director of Associates for Scriptural Knowlege speak on "The Location of the Tombs of David and Solomon." In June of 2006 he gave a presentation on research regarding the correct site of the Jerusalem Temples. he ended his lecture with a statement to the effect: "Once you know the correct location of the Temple, locating the Tombs of David and Solomon is easy."
He will present biblical and historical evidence from Jewish and secular sources that show the location of the Tombs of David and Solomon to within a small area in the city of Jerusalem. The Tombs are down in bedrock just above and west of the Gihon Springs, about 1/3 of a mile south of the southern wall of the Haram esh-Sharif. The Tombs are unopened, the bodies are untouched, and there are "wonderful things" inside (quoting Howard Carter, referring to King Tut's Tomb
You will be surprised at how much evidence is available to locate the Tombs of David and Solomon, once the correct site of the Temple is understood.
October 5, 7:30 pm The True Story About the Sign of Jonah. Our own active member Everett W. Purcell, has recently published a book of the same title! He will speak about the "sign of Jonah" mentioned in Matthew 12:38-40, and it's connection with the resurrection of Jesus. Everett, an accomplished Aerospace Engineer, attended Talbot Theological Seminary after his retirement. He Studied Theology and biblical languages in order to read the Scriptures in the original languages. His book is a result of that work. Copies of his book will be available that evening.
| September 7, 730 pm Internationally respected expert on Near East Culture, Dr. Bruce Zuckerman, Professor of Religion, University of Southern California, will present : Job the Silent: A Study in Historical Counterpoint. Dr. Zuckerman will show how biblical texts evolve in the process of transmission. He will show how the book of Job was intended as a parody protesting the stereotype of the traditional righteous suffer as patient and silent , and how it took on quite different meaning for a specific community of readers. Click here to purchase from Amazon.com.
August 3, 7:30 pm Dr. James M. Robinson, editor of the Nag Hammadi Library, and America's leading expert on ancient religious texts will present: The Secrets of Judas: The Story of the Misunderstood Disciple and His Lost Gospel. National Geographic produced a documentary earlier this year which left may questions unanswered, and was in some ways misleading. Dr. Robinson will describe the secretive maneuvers in the U.S., Switzerland, Greece and elsewhere over two decades to sell the "Judas Manuscript". He will also be able to help us understand the historical and theological importance of this document. If you wish to purchase his book in advance, please go to www.amazon.com, or there will be a limited number of copies available that evening.
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July 13, 7:30 pm David Depew, founding president of BAS, L.A. chapter will present the program entitled New Discoveries at Petra. This illustrated presentation will include information about 13 skeletons discovered at the base of "The Treasury", including that of a king. He will also give a summary of recent discoveries in Israel from his trip in April of this year. |
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| Friday, June 1, 2007, 7:30 P.M. |
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Dr. Kristin De Troyer is Professor of Hebrew Bible at Claremont School of Theology and Professor of Religion at Claremont Graduate University and was a visiting lecturer on Old Testament Theology in Germany and Switzerland in 2005. She will speak on "Temple Worship in Jerusalem."
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Friday, April 13, 2007 Trip to UCLA Visualization Portal.
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Click here to view photo's from the event.
Dr. Robert Cargill will give us a private tour of the Visualization Portal at UCLA and show us his new project entitled "Community at Qumran." This presentation will then travel to Israel and become a permanent attraction in the Qumran Visitor Center. In the Visualization Portal, "UCLA archaeologists build models of archaeological sites (virtual worlds) as they appeared in earlier times" and then "these virtual worlds are navigated, or flown, as a tour of the data." We will try to arrange carpools. Please call Diane Branson (626-447-1951) in late March for time, meeting place, and travel arrangements.
***Note that this is the Second Friday because of Easter. |
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March Meeting - Postponed One Week to 3/9/2007 as Dr. Reed is out of town
Friday, February 2, 2007, 7:30 P.M. |
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Election of Officers |
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Dr. Richard Fales, Ph.D.
Dr. Fales will speak about the book he is publishing on Ancient Manuscripts. He is a familiar speaker to many of us and has a brilliant knowledge of many topics. He will enlighten us with information on some of the ancient manuscripts that have been found.
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Friday January 12, 2007 7:30 P.M. |
 Bio on Walla Walla College Website |
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Doug Clark, Co-Director of the Madaba Plains Project in Jordan will talk to us about:
Religious and Domestic Life at Tel al-`Umayri, East of the Jordan River 1400-1200 BC
What can one archaeological site tell us about ancient domestic and religious life? A lot, it turns out! Given the remarkably well preserved remains of a Late Bronze Age palace/temple (ca. 1350 BC) and early Iron Age four-room house (ca. 1200 BC) at the site of Tall al-`Umayri, Jordan, we are in the enviable position of being able to understand well and appreciate the everyday life of `Umayris inhabitants. This illustrated lecture will not only present the excavation results through the 2006 dig season, but will explore sacred and household dimensions of survival in central Jordan over several centuries, the home of ancient Amorites and Ammonites. |
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Friday December 1st, 2006 7:30 PM
George Giacumakis, Ph.D., Director California State University, Fullerton Irvine Campus, & Professor of History will speak on
"Political Issues in Analyzing Biblical Archaeological Finds." When analyzing Biblical Archaeology, does one focus on Israel's history or on Palestinian history. The presentation will present the sometimes conflicting views.
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Friday November 3, 2006 7:30 PM
Dr Patricia Depew will present an Archaeology lecture on:
The Mysterious Etruscans and Some Important Historic Biblical events that occurred during the Persian, Hellenistic and early Roman periods when they were ruling in Italy. Dr. Pat Depew
The Mysterious Etruscans were a cultural group in the Etruria region of Italy , from the 11th through the first century BC (Iron Age into Roman times). They greatly influenced the culture of the Romans! They were particularly strong between the 6th and 5th centuries. Archaeology has given us tremendous information about these people t h rough finds of their art. This lecture will be presenting some of the highlights of the Etruscans through a participating study of their art and a short video followed by discussion. There will also be a short presentation on the comparison of some important biblical events that took place during the Persian, Hellenistic and early Roman periods when the Etruscans ruled.
Click here for Patricia Depew's Biblical archaeology dissertation
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September 8th at 7:30 PM |
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Dr John Wilson, (retired) Dean of Seaver College, Pepperdine University will present a lecture entitled the Coins of "Caesarea Phillippi" also known as Banyas. Excavations at this site have produced the largest collection of coins from this ancient province |
August 4 - Presentation of Group's Trip May trip to the Holy Land
Galilee at NOF Ginosar or Maagan. Caesarea, Carmel, Megiddo, Nazareth, Tiberias, Caesarea Phillipi, Capernaum, Old City of Jerusalem, Dead Sea, Masada, Jericho, and much more.
June 2, 2006 7:30 PM

Click graphic for Temple articles...
Enlarged Temple View
David Sielaff's Director of Associates for Scriptural Knowlege "The Jewish Temple at the Gihon Springs" alternate site for the Jerusalem Jewish Temples based on the research of Dr. Ernest L. Martin
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Friday July 7, 2006 7:30 PM
Dr. Richard Fales is speaking on the Gospel of Judas and the Nag Hammadi community
Archaeology Uncovers: The DaVinci Code Hoax (View Chart)
Is there any truth to the best selling novel and film---"The DaVinci Code"? Was Jesus married and did He father a child? To support their claims, author Dan Brown and best selling author, Michael Baigent, have turned to reviving the myth and a 1700 year old cult from Egypt. Jumping into the controversy, Hollywood and international television broadcasters are also cashing in on the possibility of big box office earnings and high T.V. ratings!
Since the New Testament gives no support to the DaVinci Code, the psudopigrapha (false writings) were called on as an anti-biblical support to a preposterous hypothetical story. As of late, the National Geographic’s Society (and cable T.V. program) has provided another anti-Christian text—"The Gospel of Judas." Who were the authors of the Gnostic documents, the Gospel of Thomas, Philip, Mary Magdalene, and most recently recovered, The Gospel of Judas. How old are they and why weren’t they added to the Canon of the New Testament?
Once again, secular agnosticism and atheism rush to join forces in a media propaganda effort to attack the person and work of Jesus, the Christ (Acts 4:12; John 14:6; I John 4:1-3)
IN THE FOOTSTEPS OF JESUS: AN ARCHAEOLOGICAL TOUR OF ISREAL - MAY 17-26, 2006.
This tour will be led by Rev. Garry F. Mohr, who has been actively involved in the Archaeology of Israel for the past 30 years. This tour includes 7 nights hotel accommodations (with breakfast and dinner daily) – 4 nights in Jerusalem at the Grand Court Hotel and 3 nights in the Galilee at NOF Ginosar or Maagan. Itinerary will include: Caesarea, Carmel, Megiddo, Nazareth, Tiberias, Caesarea Phillipi, Capernaum, Old City of Jerusalem (including a personal tour of the Western Wall by Chief Archaeologist Dan Behat), Dead Sea, Masada, Jericho, and much more.
For prices and due dates, please contact Rev. Garry F. Mohr at gMOHR@ALTRIONET.COM or call (626)676-0067.
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Friday May 5, 2006 7:30 PM

Garry F Mohr, Master of Divinity, Marriage & Family Counselor. "How the geography of the Holyland can inform us about the cultures of the Bible" This visual tour of both ancient Israel and Judah will identify the key sites of the Old and New Testament.
April 7, 2006, 7:30 P.M.
Dr. Jim E. Lancaster

Dr. Lancaster has traveled extensively throughout the Holy Land and has a particular interest in the City of Jerusalem and its fascinating history. He plans to do a presentation on the Church of the Holy Sepulchre
March 3, 2006, 7:30 P.M.
Dr. Patricia DePew
In August 2004 Dr. DePew completed her dissertation on the Iron Age of Israel during the time of David. Pat plans to speak to us on the topic of "Religion and Religious Practices of the Ancient Israelites and their neighbors from the time of David through the Babylonian Captivity."
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Friday October 6, 2006 7:30 PM |
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Aaron A. Burke, Ph.D. Asst. Prof., Archaeology of the Levant @ UCLA will talk on:
The Pre-Philistine Kingdom of Ashkelon: The Archaeology of a Middle Bronze Age Canaanite Kingdom (ca. 1925-1550 BC)
This talk will examine how a study of the archaeology of warfare during the Bronze Age in Canaan reveals significant information about the political organization of the land before the emergence of the Israelites. I will demonstrate that the political organization of the Philistines, Israel's greatest enemy, predated the arrival of the Philistines by as much as 500 years! Similarly, I will show how most of the political sub-divisions of ancient Israel recorded in the biblical texts can very likely be traced back to the divisions of Bronze Age Canaan.
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February 3, 2006, 7:30 P.M.
Dr. Kristin De Troyer
Dr. De Troyer, Professor of Hebrew Bible at Claremont School of Theology and Professor of Religion at Claremont Graduate University, has just returned from Switzerland and Germany where she had been lecturing on Old Testament Theology. She will speak on the Old Testament development of the afterlife and the burial practices which reflect that theology.
January 6, 2006, 7:30 P.M.
Dr. Robert Eisenman
Annual Election of Officers
Dr. Eisenman, Professor of History at Cal State Long Beach, co-authored with Michael Wise the book Dead Sea Scrolls Uncovered: the First Complete Translation and Interpretation of 50 Key Documents Withheld for Over 35 Years. This book "casts startling light on events in Palestine at the dawn of Christianity." Dr. Eisenman will speak about the history of making these Dead Sea Scrolls accessible to the public. He is also the author of the book James the Brother of Jesus.
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December 2, 2005 |
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J. Paul Getty Museum - Field Trip Painted Prayers Docent Linda Ann Nolan |
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November 4, 2005 7:30 PM
Anne Porter USC Bio |
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Anne Porter, who has a joint appointment in the departments of Religion, Classics and Art History at USC will speak on her excavations at Tell Banat, on the left bank of the Euphrates river, Syria. Among the many important discoveries from the site are a series of mortuary structures that give access to the social world and ideological views of the third millennium BCE in Northern Mesopotamia
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October 7, 2005 7:30 PM |
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Robert Cargill Adjunct Professor of Religion at Pepperdine
Will present - Part 2'Dual-Messianism in the Second Temple Period": This lecture will examine the concept of Messianism at the time of Christ. It will be argued that there is textual and archaeological evidence (Bible, DSS, coins, etc.) that most sects of Judaism expected two Messiahs in the Second Temple Period. The presentation will include Powerpoint and visual evidence of the the data.
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Friday September 2, 2005 7:30 P.M. |
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Linda Ann Nolan, PhD candidate in the Department of Art History at the University of Southern California, will give a talk entitled "Discovering Saints and Sinners: Early Modern Archaeology in Rome." The speaker will look at the discovery of bodies (both real and represented) in the 16th and 17th century in Rome and the impact the bodies of saints and ancient sculptures had on the painters, draftsmen and sculptors of the early modern period.
In Spring 2005, Linda Ann Nolan advanced to candidacy in the Art History PhD program at USC with a primary specialization in Early Modern Italian art and a secondary specialization in Classical Roman art. Her research interests include the history of restoration of sculpture, the history of archaeology in Rome, the history of collections, sculpture techniques and early modern Italian prints and antiquarian books. She has presented at a number of graduate symposia and professional conferences, including those held at Bryn Mawr College, Harvard University and by the Archaeological Institute of America. Linda participated in the American Academy in Rome’s Summer Archaeology program excavating in the Roman Forum, and prior to that excavated at Pompeii with the University of Rome. Currently, Linda is an educator in the Museum Education Department at the J. Paul Getty Museum where she teaches youth and adult programs. Linda will spend the 2005-06 academic year in Italy on a dissertation research fellowship. The title of her dissertation is "Can You Handle It: the Tactile Reception of Sculpture in Early Modern Rome."
She wrote an article in the March/April issue of Archaeology Odyssey entitled " Emulating Augustus-The Fascist-Era Excavation of the Emperor’s Peace Altar in Rome."
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| Friday August 5, 2005 |
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George Giacumakis, Ph.D., Director California State University, Fullerton El Toro Campus, & Professor of History
Click here for Biography
Will talk about the "Dead Sea Scrolls Bible Versions and Translations" |
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July 9 & 10
Old Fort MacArthur Days 2005
legionsix.org

legio-ix-hispana.org/

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Friday, July 1, 2005
NO MEETING DUE TO HOLIDAY WEEKEND |
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Friday June 3, 2005 7:30 P.M. |
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Robert Cargill Adjunct Professor of Religion at Pepperdine
Will present -
'Dual-Messianism in the Second Temple Period": This lecture will examine the concept of Messianism at the time of Christ. It will be argued that there is textual and archaeological evidence (Bible, DSS, coins, etc.) that most sects of Judaism expected two Messiahs in the Second Temple Period. The presentation will include Powerpoint and visual evidence of the the data.
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Friday May 6, 2005 7:30 P.M. |
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Dr. Richard Fales
Physicians in the Army of Pontius Pilate.
Perhaps the finest Physicians of the ancient roman world, Pontius Pilate's doctors left behind a legacy that was unrivaled until the modern civil war, so postulates Dr.Fales. He will illustrate his lecture with graphics and authentic artifacts.
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| April 1, 2004, 7:30 P.M. |
| Bonnie Mohr, Harpist |
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Bonnie Mohr, who has played harp internationally throughout the U.S., Europe, and Japan, began her studies at the age of 10. In addition to being active in the L.A. Chapter of the American Harp Society, she has made recordings, written books, and been a featured artist on “Traditional Music Showcase” as well as TV specials and commercials. In Bonnie’s presentation, “Harp in the Bible,” she will share insights into the use of the harp in the Old Testament. Come see and hear this special multi-media presentation.
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| March 4, 2005 7:30 P.M |
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Dr. Monica Bontty, Ph.D. speaking on "Egypt, Mesopotamia, and the Bible." Dr. Bontty received her Ph.D. in Egyptology at UCLA in 1997, specializing in ancient Egyptian law, literature and language. When not teaching at Cal State Fullerton or lecturing at UCLA in their Classics and Archaeology department, she is on excavations in Egypt. She indicates that "before the mid nineteenth century, the Old Testament and a few classical authors were the only source of material for the history of the ancient Near East. The discovery of Egyptian and Mesopotamian creation myths led some to question the authenticity and authority of the Bible." Her lecture will discuss "the effect and consequences of this circumstance."
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Survey Projects in Egypt |
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UCLA Egyptology |
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| February 4, 2005, 7:30 P.M.
Dr. Sema’an I. Salem
Dr. Salem, Professor Emeritus at Cal State U. Long Beach, will further elaborate on his presentation first given April 2, 2004, entitled “The Near East, the Cradle of Western Civilization.” He will continue to examine the development of the great ancient civilizations of the Near East and how the knowledge of the people of the Orient spread over surrounding regions. The author will provide clear analysis of how the ancient Near East provided the West with the foundations of civilization including writing systems, domestication of animals, and governmental system.
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Preview his book |
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