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[air whooshing]
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Downloaded from
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[camera shutters]
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Official YIFY movies site:
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[ethereal music]
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[vocalist harmonizing]
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[eerie music tenses]
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- [Bear Grylls] The history of humanity
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is a history of humans seeking.
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You can go to theology,
you can go to philosophy.
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But if you want to understand
the actual journey,
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you have to see things in
their geographical settings.
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You have to look at where they fall
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in the chronology of time.
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You have to explore archeology,
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the remains, the historical clues
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because it's all connected.
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[vocalist harmonizing]
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[ethereal music intensifies]
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[ethereal music slows]
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Understanding history is
understanding ourselves.
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And every now and then, a
groundbreaking discovery comes
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and shakes that understanding's
very foundation.
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This story starts in a little region
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in Northern Israel, Megiddo.
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[intercom speaking indistinctly]
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[Commander Lavy speaking
in foreign language]
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[Commander Lavy speaking in
foreign language continues]
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- [Bear Grylls] The Megiddo Prison
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is the largest in northern Israel
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and holds the country's
most dangerous inmates.
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In the early 2000s,
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the prison was running
out of space so rapidly,
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the prisoners were placed in tents.
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Looking for a long-term solution,
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the prison made plans
to expand the facility.
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Everywhere you step in Israel,
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you're treading on the
pages of ancient history.
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Beneath your feet, layers of
time whisper stories of faith,
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conflict, and resilience.
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Every rock, every ruin
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carries the weight of civilizations
that shaped our world.
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Because of the vast number
of archeological sites,
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anytime construction begins,
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archeologists are required
to survey the site
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to assure no historical ruins
will be disturbed or impacted
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under new construction.
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In the Megiddo prison courtyard,
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some ruins of a Jewish village
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dating back to early Roman times
had already been discovered
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back in the 1940s.
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So in 2004, a routine
excavation was conducted
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to ensure there was nothing else.
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[Yotam Tepper speaking
in foreign language]
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[Yotam Tepper speaking in
foreign language continues]
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[mysterious lilting music]
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[Yotam Tepper speaking
in foreign language]
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[rousing string music]
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[Mark Avrahami speaking
in foreign language]
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[Mark Avrahami speaking in
foreign language continues]
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- [Bear Grylls] Experts date
the Megiddo Mosaic Prayer Hall
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to 230 CE.
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This structure played a key
role in the Roman village
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as a public Christian
prayer and worship space
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during a pivotal time period
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when Christianity was not recognized
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as a sanctioned religion.
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It's the first of its
kind to be found ever
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in recorded history.
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Since its discovery in 2004,
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the mosaic has been
locked inside the center
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of the Megiddo prison.
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In early 2024, it was
decided that the mosaic
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would finally be
re-excavated and preserved.
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[dog barking]
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[sirens blaring]
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In April 2024, the
Israeli prison authority
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gave our film crew unprecedented access
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to document the re-excavation process.
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[gentle folk music]
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[Mark Avrahami speaking
in foreign language]
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[Mark Avrahami speaking in
foreign language continues]
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[Yotam Tepper speaking
in foreign language]
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[Mark Avrahami speaking
in foreign language]
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[Mark Avrahami speaking in
foreign language continues]
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[Mark Avrahami speaking in
foreign language continues]
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[Yotam Tepper speaking
in foreign language]
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[Yotam Tepper speaking in
foreign language continues]
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[Yotam Tepper speaking in
foreign language continues]
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[Mark Avrahami speaking
in foreign language]
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[Mark Avrahami speaking in
foreign language continues]
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- [Scientist] So this is a aerial scan,
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this is actually a point cloud data.
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- [Jonathan Henry] Wow. Oh my gosh.
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- Yeah. So this is kind of
that new tech that's really-
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- That is incredible.
- Really helping shape
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how you can experience these things.
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- I am Jonathan Henry.
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I'm currently a lecturer
at Princeton University.
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I teach ancient religion.
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- My name is Tom Wright or
N.T. Wright in the long form.
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- Yisca Harani.
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I'm an independent scholar, educator,
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and an interface activist.
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- So many people think that a
mosaic floor, it's just rocks.
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It's not very interesting. Who cares?
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But this, when you get under
the skin of what it means
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is absolutely fascinating.
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- We know from historic documents
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the Christian community
living under persecution
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looked for places where it could gather,
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whether it's in the catacombs,
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the burial chambers of the martyrs,
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whether it was in the homes of believers.
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But this is important
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because it describes a
uniquely established place
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that was designed for
the Christian assembly
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to come and worship.
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- So this is extremely huge.
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It's the most significant
biblical discovery
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of the 21st century.
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And there is hunger.
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Millions of people hunger
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for these historical discoveries
in these ancient writings.
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- This church in in Legio,
I think what's cool about it
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is it comes at this transitional moment.
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Before Constantine,
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you still have large potential
for this ethos of Jesus
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and these memories of Jesus
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to be just unfettered in many places.
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- [Yisca Harani] The fact
that this is a meeting point
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between Judea and the Galilee.
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Now, these are two regions
that are world known
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because of the New Testament.
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And here in between these
two very dramatic regions,
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we find the transition of a society
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and the transition is
from the Roman pagan world
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to Christianity.
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Something begins to grow
and that is the story
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00:15:22,006 --> 00:15:25,884
of the Roman world accepting Christianity.
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00:15:26,009 --> 00:15:29,387
And from there on, it's
gonna go all over the world.
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- With the Megiddo Mosaic,
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you have geography that
is coming into play,
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you have politics and political regions
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and political divisions
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that have a lot to contribute
to what's going on.
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We have international politics,
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language that's important.
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It all comes clashing
in and blending together
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in its own beautiful mosaic form
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in the valley that Megiddo is located in.
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- For me as a historian,
I wanna say let's go back
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and see what we actually
know about the Greek world,
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00:16:08,386 --> 00:16:10,846
about the Roman world,
about the Jewish world,
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and how they converged.
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00:16:15,351 --> 00:16:17,686
- [Jonathan Henry] Megiddo
was an ancient city,
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00:16:17,811 --> 00:16:20,731
it's just a really
important defensive position
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00:16:20,856 --> 00:16:25,277
over top of this very fertile
valley, the Jezreel Valley,
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which is really what
you're trying to protect.
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00:16:30,282 --> 00:16:32,409
There was a lot of
agricultural significance to it
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and it was very necessary for
the prosperity of the people.
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And so this was a great position
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for defending all of your people
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and all of their
agriculture up in that area.
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We're talking formative human
history with old Megiddo,
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the beginnings of civilization.
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- [Dr. Parker] Because of the mountains,
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you have very few places that
people can cross east to west.
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And so when you find one of those places,
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which is the Jezreel Valley
connecting to the Harod Valley,
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and you have a place that is wide and open
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and a place that has a lot of water
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and has plenty of agriculture and food
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and it is almost a flat
terrain, you're just begging
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for people to go east
west through that valley.
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So a place like Megiddo
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is on this really crucial
crossing point of the roads.
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So it is a powerhouse city.
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And the geography tells us that,
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but then we can look at
the archeological record.
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In Tel Megiddo we have 26
layers of civilizations
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living all on the same spot
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because the same spot was
always the crucial spot
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to try to hold onto throughout time.
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- [Bear Grylls] Infamous
for its bloody past,
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Tel Megiddo lies less than
a mile north of the mosaic.
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From the beginning of recorded history,
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this site has seen more warfare
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00:18:00,914 --> 00:18:02,957
than any other in the region.
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Many have translated
Megiddo as Armageddon,
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00:18:07,462 --> 00:18:10,466
a word steeped in both ancient literature
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and enduring mystery.
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Some believe this is a literal
place foretold as the setting
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for the ultimate battle of the apocalypse.
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00:18:21,726 --> 00:18:23,186
- There are many differing opinions
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00:18:23,311 --> 00:18:25,481
about what it means and what will be.
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00:18:25,606 --> 00:18:28,149
There were many battles
that took place right there.
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00:18:28,274 --> 00:18:30,944
You see Joshua and you see
the children of Israel,
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00:18:31,069 --> 00:18:33,822
they come after the Megiddo
king in the Book of Joshua.
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00:18:33,947 --> 00:18:35,114
But many do believe
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00:18:35,241 --> 00:18:37,576
that there will be one final battle there.
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00:18:38,827 --> 00:18:41,621
You go to Revelation Chapter 16,
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00:18:41,746 --> 00:18:46,001
Armageddon, the battle
where good defeats evil
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00:18:46,126 --> 00:18:47,544
at the end of the age.
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00:18:48,461 --> 00:18:50,797
- [Jonathan Henry] Even if
a person has no interest
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00:18:50,922 --> 00:18:52,507
in discussing that aspect of it,
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00:18:52,632 --> 00:18:55,009
there's still that strong
historical background
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00:18:55,134 --> 00:18:56,636
in which this place was just known
209
00:18:56,761 --> 00:19:00,974
as a battlefield throughout
history up to the Roman Empire.
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00:19:01,099 --> 00:19:02,351
So when the Romans get there,
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00:19:02,476 --> 00:19:05,812
they didn't wanna set up shop
up on the top of the mountain
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00:19:05,937 --> 00:19:07,897
where the other fortifications had been,
213
00:19:08,022 --> 00:19:09,274
they just looked at it and said,
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00:19:09,399 --> 00:19:11,026
"Look at those big long fields
215
00:19:11,151 --> 00:19:13,946
and look at these mountains here
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00:19:14,071 --> 00:19:15,656
and we could put a big camp right there."
217
00:19:15,781 --> 00:19:17,782
And the camp they put down was huge.
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00:19:18,992 --> 00:19:22,079
[otherworldly music]
219
00:19:23,162 --> 00:19:26,707
The remarkable work of Yotam
Tepper back in the early 200s
220
00:19:26,832 --> 00:19:28,961
led to the discovery of
this site that before,
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00:19:29,086 --> 00:19:31,212
nobody had any idea was there.
222
00:19:31,337 --> 00:19:33,339
Legio is a fantastic discovery.
223
00:19:33,464 --> 00:19:36,634
Legio VI Ferrata was there.
224
00:19:36,759 --> 00:19:38,136
Legio just means legion.
225
00:19:38,261 --> 00:19:40,639
It's what the Romans called
their different legions.
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00:19:40,764 --> 00:19:45,727
[Yotam Tepper speaking
in foreign language]
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00:19:48,564 --> 00:19:50,106
- [Bear Grylls] Legio can be found
228
00:19:50,232 --> 00:19:52,901
half a mile north of the mosaic.
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00:19:53,026 --> 00:19:55,487
Of the entire Eastern Roman Empire,
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it is the very first military headquarters
231
00:19:58,574 --> 00:20:00,074
found from that time.
232
00:20:01,159 --> 00:20:04,954
It is yet another once in
a generation discovery.
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00:20:25,309 --> 00:20:26,851
- [Jonathan Henry] Everybody
wants to talk about Armageddon
234
00:20:26,977 --> 00:20:28,771
as a word, as a theology problem
235
00:20:28,896 --> 00:20:30,856
or something to figure out and crack.
236
00:20:30,981 --> 00:20:32,816
And then the archeologist
goes in there and goes, "Wow,
237
00:20:32,941 --> 00:20:36,236
actually what we're finding is
also historical significance
238
00:20:36,361 --> 00:20:39,114
that was completely
overlooked, completely lost."
239
00:20:39,239 --> 00:20:40,407
We lost an entire legion
240
00:20:40,532 --> 00:20:45,412
and Yotam Tepper managed to
get enough literary clues
241
00:20:45,537 --> 00:20:48,957
and then also doggedly pursued this.
242
00:20:50,959 --> 00:20:53,629
Yotam did something that like, you know,
243
00:20:53,754 --> 00:20:55,756
the legendary archeologists
of the past were doing.
244
00:20:55,881 --> 00:20:59,634
If you admire any archeologist,
he's right there with them.
245
00:21:29,956 --> 00:21:32,376
- [Bear Grylls] In the spring of 2024,
246
00:21:32,501 --> 00:21:35,044
the Israel Antiquities Authority
247
00:21:35,169 --> 00:21:38,047
developed a plan to exhibit the mosaic
248
00:21:38,172 --> 00:21:41,717
at the Museum of the
Bible In Washington D.C.
249
00:21:42,802 --> 00:21:45,347
An unveiling ceremony of the mosaic
250
00:21:45,472 --> 00:21:48,141
was held for the museum delegates.
251
00:23:10,932 --> 00:23:12,976
- [Bear Grylls] With the
plan now set in place,
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00:23:13,101 --> 00:23:16,271
the greatest challenge still lies ahead,
253
00:23:17,231 --> 00:23:20,776
to safely and securely cut the mosaic
254
00:23:20,901 --> 00:23:22,569
out of the prison grounds
255
00:23:22,694 --> 00:23:25,906
to bring the experience of the Holy Lands
256
00:23:26,031 --> 00:23:27,282
to the rest of the world.
257
00:23:29,367 --> 00:23:31,952
[dogs barking]
258
00:23:33,412 --> 00:23:37,501
[intercom speaking indistinctly]
259
00:23:39,169 --> 00:23:43,089
[dogs barking in the distance]
260
00:23:46,717 --> 00:23:49,554
[workers praying]
261
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[workers praying continues]
262
00:24:02,901 --> 00:24:06,029
[vocalist harmonizing]
263
00:24:06,154 --> 00:24:08,614
[discordant music]
264
00:24:24,381 --> 00:24:27,467
[rousing folk music]
265
00:24:53,034 --> 00:24:55,704
[air whooshing]
266
00:24:58,831 --> 00:25:02,167
[vocalists harmonizing]
267
00:25:29,321 --> 00:25:30,404
- [Bear Grylls] Here in the heart
268
00:25:30,529 --> 00:25:32,532
of the old city of Jerusalem,
269
00:25:32,657 --> 00:25:35,242
arguably the most sacred
city on the planet,
270
00:25:37,036 --> 00:25:40,372
you'll find the origins of
humanity's deepest beliefs
271
00:25:42,124 --> 00:25:44,502
and fiercest conflicts.
272
00:25:44,627 --> 00:25:47,464
[voices chanting]
273
00:25:50,174 --> 00:25:52,927
[haunting music]
274
00:25:55,512 --> 00:25:57,849
Inside these walls lie the roots
275
00:25:57,974 --> 00:26:00,017
that shaped our civilizations,
276
00:26:01,644 --> 00:26:04,439
a legacy that is echoed throughout time.
277
00:26:34,094 --> 00:26:37,431
[rousing lilting music]
278
00:27:03,456 --> 00:27:07,126
[rousing music intensifies]
279
00:27:29,024 --> 00:27:33,027
[tense rousing music continues]
280
00:27:50,044 --> 00:27:53,297
[rousing music swells]
281
00:27:56,217 --> 00:27:59,346
[rousing music slows]
282
00:28:17,822 --> 00:28:20,826
[gentle ethereal music]
283
00:28:20,951 --> 00:28:23,744
- [Bear Grylls] While
Israel is an ancient place,
284
00:28:23,869 --> 00:28:26,206
it is also developing rapidly.
285
00:28:27,624 --> 00:28:30,919
Located in Jerusalem, the
heart of the Holy Land,
286
00:28:31,836 --> 00:28:34,131
the Israel Antiquities Authority
287
00:28:34,256 --> 00:28:38,134
presides over all of Israel's
archeological discoveries.
288
00:28:41,096 --> 00:28:44,349
[gentle lilting music]
289
00:28:45,934 --> 00:28:49,521
They steward some of
history's greatest treasures
290
00:28:49,646 --> 00:28:51,731
and use cutting edge technology
291
00:28:51,856 --> 00:28:54,651
to understand and preserve them.
292
00:28:56,111 --> 00:29:00,364
[Eli speaking in foreign language]
293
00:29:05,411 --> 00:29:10,416
[Eli speaking in foreign
language continues]
294
00:29:15,046 --> 00:29:18,716
[lilting music intensifies]
295
00:29:25,222 --> 00:29:28,142
[lilting music slows]
296
00:29:28,267 --> 00:29:29,727
- [Visitor] Shalom, shalom
297
00:29:29,852 --> 00:29:30,937
Hello, hello.
298
00:29:32,187 --> 00:29:34,191
- Okay, so hi. Welcome to the Metals Lab.
299
00:29:34,316 --> 00:29:37,986
This is really where all metal
artifacts, including coins,
300
00:29:38,111 --> 00:29:40,822
end up after excavations.
301
00:29:40,947 --> 00:29:44,742
We treat about a thousand
and or more objects a year
302
00:29:44,867 --> 00:29:48,121
and between 3,000 to 5,000 coins a year
303
00:29:48,246 --> 00:29:50,289
that archeologists and researchers
304
00:29:50,414 --> 00:29:53,334
can study and discover
as much as they can.
305
00:29:56,004 --> 00:29:58,047
- [Visitor] And the objects from-
306
00:29:58,172 --> 00:29:59,341
- Is that from-
307
00:29:59,466 --> 00:30:00,716
- Megiddo-
- It is from Megiddo,
308
00:30:00,842 --> 00:30:01,717
that is it?
- That's it.
309
00:30:01,842 --> 00:30:02,969
- Can I take a photo?
310
00:30:13,604 --> 00:30:14,772
- [Joe Uziel] I think one
of the important things
311
00:30:14,897 --> 00:30:19,902
to take away from this
find, the Megiddo church is,
312
00:30:20,027 --> 00:30:21,904
archeology is gonna continue
313
00:30:22,029 --> 00:30:25,574
to make very, very, very
significant discoveries
314
00:30:25,699 --> 00:30:29,077
which are going to
affect the greater world.
315
00:30:29,204 --> 00:30:31,956
And this can be the Megiddo Mosaic,
316
00:30:32,081 --> 00:30:35,584
this can be the street in Jerusalem,
317
00:30:35,709 --> 00:30:37,629
which is currently being uncovered
318
00:30:37,754 --> 00:30:39,672
by the Israel Antiquities Authority,
319
00:30:39,797 --> 00:30:43,092
or this can be more fragments
of the Dead Sea Scrolls.
320
00:30:45,427 --> 00:30:49,097
[low enigmatic music]
321
00:30:49,224 --> 00:30:51,601
- This is the most important laboratory.
322
00:30:51,726 --> 00:30:55,104
This is what "Times Magazine"
323
00:30:55,229 --> 00:30:57,816
defined as the most important
archeological finding
324
00:30:57,941 --> 00:31:01,069
of modern era, and we are the guardians,
325
00:31:02,946 --> 00:31:04,071
the Dead Sea Scroll.
326
00:31:07,241 --> 00:31:08,826
- [Bear Grylls] The Dead Sea Scrolls
327
00:31:08,951 --> 00:31:11,037
are the most significant discovery
328
00:31:11,162 --> 00:31:15,041
of ancient biblical and
historical texts ever found.
329
00:31:16,001 --> 00:31:19,296
Widely regarded as the
single greatest artifact
330
00:31:19,421 --> 00:31:21,756
for understanding the ancient world,
331
00:31:21,881 --> 00:31:24,384
they stand as a powerful confirmation
332
00:31:24,509 --> 00:31:27,261
of the accuracy of biblical literature.
333
00:31:28,096 --> 00:31:29,931
What's even more fascinating,
334
00:31:30,056 --> 00:31:33,601
the bulk of these discoveries
occurred between 1947
335
00:31:33,726 --> 00:31:36,312
and the 1950s.
336
00:31:36,437 --> 00:31:39,941
A reminder that so much
of our past remains buried
337
00:31:40,066 --> 00:31:42,026
and is waiting to be uncovered.
338
00:31:44,362 --> 00:31:48,032
- The Dead Sea Scrolls
are a group of documents
339
00:31:48,157 --> 00:31:50,284
discovered in the Judean Desert,
340
00:31:50,409 --> 00:31:54,747
which span 1,800 years of human activity.
341
00:31:57,876 --> 00:31:59,752
Most definitely the most prominent group
342
00:31:59,877 --> 00:32:02,756
are the documents which
were found in the caves
343
00:32:02,881 --> 00:32:05,382
surrounding the site of Qumran.
344
00:32:08,469 --> 00:32:11,556
The Qumran Caves yielded scrolls
345
00:32:11,681 --> 00:32:15,101
dating from roughly the third century BCE
346
00:32:16,102 --> 00:32:19,229
all the way up into the first century CE.
347
00:32:19,356 --> 00:32:21,399
Within this collection of scrolls,
348
00:32:21,524 --> 00:32:24,234
we also have the earliest copies
349
00:32:24,361 --> 00:32:27,989
of the biblical text known to date.
350
00:32:28,114 --> 00:32:32,117
[enigmatic music tenses]
351
00:32:32,242 --> 00:32:36,414
Just on this one table
with about eight examples
352
00:32:36,539 --> 00:32:39,917
of a huge collection of
over 1,000 manuscripts,
353
00:32:40,042 --> 00:32:43,337
we have the oldest document that we have
354
00:32:43,462 --> 00:32:44,922
written in Paleo-Hebrew,
355
00:32:45,047 --> 00:32:48,384
we have one of the later
documents written in Arabic.
356
00:32:48,509 --> 00:32:53,514
We have the biblical books
of Psalms and Genesis,
357
00:32:53,681 --> 00:32:57,017
the first book in the
Hebrew Bible, Isaiah,
358
00:32:57,142 --> 00:33:00,979
and then shift into this
additional biblical book
359
00:33:01,106 --> 00:33:06,111
that is also found within this
entire corpus of literature.
360
00:33:08,196 --> 00:33:11,074
We can only display a
scroll for three months
361
00:33:11,199 --> 00:33:14,827
because we're minimizing
its exposure to light.
362
00:33:14,952 --> 00:33:18,456
It will then be put into
our vault for five years
363
00:33:18,581 --> 00:33:21,876
because although the
very, very dry climate
364
00:33:22,001 --> 00:33:26,922
allowed these organic materials
to survive to this day,
365
00:33:27,047 --> 00:33:30,134
they still underwent
several types of damage
366
00:33:30,259 --> 00:33:34,764
including exposure to humidity,
salt from the Dead Sea,
367
00:33:34,889 --> 00:33:37,976
worm holes which ate through
pieces of the fragments,
368
00:33:38,101 --> 00:33:40,061
and an even bigger challenge I would say,
369
00:33:40,186 --> 00:33:43,272
is making sure that documents and scrolls,
370
00:33:43,397 --> 00:33:46,776
which survived for hundreds
and thousands of years,
371
00:33:46,901 --> 00:33:48,486
continue to survive
372
00:33:48,611 --> 00:33:51,364
for hundreds and thousands
of years forward.
373
00:33:52,656 --> 00:33:54,324
This area at the bottom,
374
00:33:54,451 --> 00:33:58,204
which is darkened due to the
exposure of the parchment
375
00:33:58,329 --> 00:34:01,999
to moisture and the text
is hidden beneath it,
376
00:34:02,124 --> 00:34:05,377
that text is brought
out and you'll see that
377
00:34:05,502 --> 00:34:09,632
in the multi-spectral imaging
system that we have next door
378
00:34:09,757 --> 00:34:12,426
in which using the infrared light,
379
00:34:12,551 --> 00:34:15,221
the dark parchment disappears
380
00:34:15,346 --> 00:34:18,224
and the carbon ink is brought out
381
00:34:18,349 --> 00:34:20,642
and can be read very clearly.
382
00:34:22,227 --> 00:34:23,646
This is basically taking us
383
00:34:23,771 --> 00:34:28,359
into the next stage of
research on the scrolls.
384
00:34:28,484 --> 00:34:31,237
Through consultation
with different experts
385
00:34:31,362 --> 00:34:34,574
of different fields, a
technology that was developed
386
00:34:34,699 --> 00:34:37,659
for NASA was implemented
387
00:34:37,786 --> 00:34:41,037
and a multi-spectral
imaging unit was built.
388
00:34:41,164 --> 00:34:44,834
[exhilarating music]
389
00:34:44,959 --> 00:34:47,044
The purpose of the
multi-spectral imaging unit
390
00:34:47,169 --> 00:34:51,924
was to provide objective,
steady images of the scrolls
391
00:34:52,049 --> 00:34:54,844
under different wavelengths
and different exposures,
392
00:34:54,969 --> 00:34:57,304
which each wavelength and exposure
393
00:34:57,429 --> 00:34:59,389
brings out a different feature
394
00:34:59,516 --> 00:35:02,392
in the fragment being documented.
395
00:35:03,561 --> 00:35:07,064
- It's not only documenting
color image of the collection,
396
00:35:07,189 --> 00:35:10,484
it also gives us an analysis
of the chemical and mineral
397
00:35:10,609 --> 00:35:13,612
the substances that are
involved in the artifact.
398
00:35:15,031 --> 00:35:16,241
For me it's fascinating.
399
00:35:16,366 --> 00:35:18,451
So the camera gives us a
lot of links to history
400
00:35:18,576 --> 00:35:20,494
that we cannot see with our eyes.
401
00:35:20,619 --> 00:35:22,121
We can see things
402
00:35:22,246 --> 00:35:24,499
that are not supposed
to be legible anymore.
403
00:35:24,624 --> 00:35:27,334
It teaches us a lot about the
context of the text itself,
404
00:35:27,459 --> 00:35:30,671
but it also can teach us
thinking in a wider spectrum
405
00:35:30,796 --> 00:35:34,091
that everything has place somewhere.
406
00:35:34,216 --> 00:35:36,302
Even things that we
cannot see with our eyes,
407
00:35:36,427 --> 00:35:40,556
it's still worth to experiment,
to try to understand,
408
00:35:40,681 --> 00:35:43,976
and see what is missing
in our links with history.
409
00:35:46,687 --> 00:35:50,107
- We are now involved in numerous projects
410
00:35:50,232 --> 00:35:53,444
which use these images as the data set
411
00:35:53,569 --> 00:35:57,072
for we call projects within
the digital humanities,
412
00:35:57,197 --> 00:36:00,701
using computer tools to
take us to the next level
413
00:36:00,826 --> 00:36:04,872
of research in the world
of the Dead Sea Scrolls.
414
00:36:04,997 --> 00:36:08,501
Each of these things is another
piece, sort of another block
415
00:36:08,626 --> 00:36:12,504
to reconstructing our
connection with the past
416
00:36:12,629 --> 00:36:15,424
and how relevant that past is to us today.
417
00:36:15,549 --> 00:36:18,552
And in that sense,
advances in the sciences
418
00:36:18,677 --> 00:36:21,681
and the digital world will
continue to tell a story
419
00:36:21,806 --> 00:36:23,432
because it's not just about
420
00:36:23,557 --> 00:36:25,226
the new things that you're finding,
421
00:36:25,351 --> 00:36:28,437
but things that were
found several years ago
422
00:36:29,564 --> 00:36:32,649
and that we can now apply
new avenues of research
423
00:36:32,774 --> 00:36:34,652
which could teach us more about them.
424
00:36:35,861 --> 00:36:38,614
[poignant music]
425
00:36:45,871 --> 00:36:47,957
- [Daniel Master] Tel Shimron
is a site on the northern side
426
00:36:48,082 --> 00:36:49,499
of the Jezreel Valley.
427
00:36:49,626 --> 00:36:51,836
When we look south, we look
right across the valley
428
00:36:51,961 --> 00:36:54,672
and we see the site of Legio
and the site of Megiddo
429
00:36:54,797 --> 00:36:56,382
every day as we come to work.
430
00:36:57,299 --> 00:37:00,136
So one of the things that
we're doing at Tel Shimron
431
00:37:00,261 --> 00:37:03,806
and you're doing with the
excavations at Megiddo
432
00:37:03,931 --> 00:37:05,599
is that we're using technology
433
00:37:05,724 --> 00:37:08,102
in order to reconstruct the
things that we're digging.
434
00:37:08,227 --> 00:37:11,272
- Okay, level.
435
00:37:11,397 --> 00:37:13,149
- [Daniel Master] One of
the first things we're using
436
00:37:13,274 --> 00:37:14,942
that most archeologists in this region
437
00:37:15,067 --> 00:37:18,487
are using all the time is photogrammetry.
438
00:37:18,612 --> 00:37:21,491
We're using different
photographs from different angles
439
00:37:21,616 --> 00:37:24,284
and using some off the
shelf computer programs,
440
00:37:24,409 --> 00:37:27,662
we can reconstruct very accurate 3D models
441
00:37:27,787 --> 00:37:29,164
using these different photographs
442
00:37:29,289 --> 00:37:30,541
that we've taken from different angles.
443
00:37:30,666 --> 00:37:33,211
And then using some of
our surveying equipment,
444
00:37:33,336 --> 00:37:34,629
we can place those models
445
00:37:34,754 --> 00:37:37,006
exactly where they appear on the globe
446
00:37:37,131 --> 00:37:40,509
and have a wonderful record
of exactly what was there
447
00:37:40,634 --> 00:37:43,846
before we started excavating
or before we remove anything.
448
00:37:46,641 --> 00:37:47,599
The second thing we're doing
449
00:37:47,724 --> 00:37:50,894
in order to record the
things that we're excavating
450
00:37:51,019 --> 00:37:53,231
is to use something like LiDAR.
451
00:37:53,356 --> 00:37:55,816
LiDAR, or laser line scanning,
452
00:37:55,941 --> 00:37:58,236
use a laser that is
sent out from a machine
453
00:37:58,361 --> 00:38:01,406
and we measure how long it takes
for the laser to come back.
454
00:38:01,531 --> 00:38:04,951
And by measuring this, you
can figure out how far away
455
00:38:05,076 --> 00:38:06,744
the thing is that it bounced off of.
456
00:38:06,869 --> 00:38:09,997
And so using this, you
can get a full 3D picture
457
00:38:10,122 --> 00:38:11,289
of the world around you.
458
00:38:12,749 --> 00:38:16,587
[gentle enigmatic music]
459
00:38:16,712 --> 00:38:20,966
- Once we combine and
use both technologies,
460
00:38:21,091 --> 00:38:24,552
we can use a very accurate
data from the laser
461
00:38:24,679 --> 00:38:28,766
with the high photorealism
from the photos.
462
00:38:28,891 --> 00:38:33,896
So we get both accuracy and
visualization for this 3D model.
463
00:38:35,856 --> 00:38:40,611
In the mosaic, we used
around 60 laser scans.
464
00:38:40,736 --> 00:38:44,239
We took about 3,000 images.
465
00:38:48,827 --> 00:38:52,789
In this project, the resolution
was the most important.
466
00:38:52,914 --> 00:38:55,084
This is a visualization project.
467
00:38:55,209 --> 00:38:58,462
They want to see each
and every detail in stone
468
00:38:58,587 --> 00:39:00,839
and really small details
469
00:39:00,964 --> 00:39:03,676
that you can't even see with your eyes.
470
00:39:06,637 --> 00:39:10,266
A lot of insights come
from this kind of data.
471
00:39:12,267 --> 00:39:13,852
In 100 years from now,
472
00:39:13,977 --> 00:39:17,314
people can go back and
look at this mosaic.
473
00:39:17,439 --> 00:39:20,317
It's an eternal documentation for it.
474
00:39:21,317 --> 00:39:23,196
It will be like being there.
475
00:39:23,321 --> 00:39:25,656
And we can share it globally,
476
00:39:25,781 --> 00:39:28,076
not just for the people who live here.
477
00:39:29,117 --> 00:39:31,829
[majestic music]
478
00:39:37,459 --> 00:39:39,879
- [Bear Grylls] This
technology opens a door
479
00:39:40,004 --> 00:39:42,006
to new research opportunities,
480
00:39:43,091 --> 00:39:45,759
by giving archeologists around the world
481
00:39:45,884 --> 00:39:49,972
a working of real-time
scaled model of the site.
482
00:39:51,139 --> 00:39:54,017
And based on other evidence
from that time period,
483
00:39:54,142 --> 00:39:56,854
the digital model becomes a foundation
484
00:39:56,979 --> 00:40:00,441
for reconstructing a much
more accurate picture
485
00:40:00,566 --> 00:40:05,571
of who these people were and
how they existed in the space.
486
00:40:05,737 --> 00:40:08,991
[rousing string music]
487
00:40:13,912 --> 00:40:15,956
- [Daniel Master] And this
is just one of the tools
488
00:40:16,081 --> 00:40:19,209
in our toolkit in order to
carefully record the things
489
00:40:19,334 --> 00:40:22,754
that are being excavated
and moved by archeologists.
490
00:40:24,422 --> 00:40:26,132
One of the things that you know
491
00:40:26,257 --> 00:40:28,092
from trying to understand the world today
492
00:40:28,219 --> 00:40:30,762
is how hard it is to get good information,
493
00:40:32,389 --> 00:40:35,351
how hard it is to know
what's true and what's false.
494
00:40:35,476 --> 00:40:39,062
And on the excavation, we
face that problem even more.
495
00:40:41,439 --> 00:40:46,277
Excavating is a way to fill
in missing pieces of the past.
496
00:40:47,321 --> 00:40:49,656
And why that past is
important to each one of us
497
00:40:49,781 --> 00:40:52,951
is less relevant than
filling in the missing pieces
498
00:40:53,076 --> 00:40:55,746
for all of us together so
that we can all see the past
499
00:40:55,871 --> 00:40:57,497
in as rich a way as possible.
500
00:41:48,131 --> 00:41:50,384
- We're dealing with
little pieces of the past,
501
00:41:50,509 --> 00:41:53,887
little broken shards
that tell us this story
502
00:41:54,012 --> 00:41:56,682
that we're trying to figure out together.
503
00:41:56,807 --> 00:41:59,517
When you see the conclusion
of the archeologist,
504
00:41:59,642 --> 00:42:02,229
it looks to you simple
because it's been done.
505
00:42:02,354 --> 00:42:05,982
The details of the chronology,
what year exactly is this.
506
00:42:06,107 --> 00:42:07,567
It's all hard, but they're really trying
507
00:42:07,692 --> 00:42:09,861
to honestly show something about the past
508
00:42:10,696 --> 00:42:12,697
and it takes all of our perspectives
509
00:42:12,822 --> 00:42:14,324
and all of our hard work
510
00:42:14,449 --> 00:42:17,077
to try to tell that story of the past
511
00:42:17,202 --> 00:42:20,956
as carefully and honestly
and reliably as possible
512
00:42:21,081 --> 00:42:24,792
to understand the history
of this land as it happens.
513
00:42:28,129 --> 00:42:30,466
[birds chirping]
514
00:42:30,591 --> 00:42:32,634
- [Bear Grylls] In addition
to using technology
515
00:42:32,759 --> 00:42:34,802
to understand these sites,
516
00:42:34,929 --> 00:42:37,014
experts go back to the remains
517
00:42:37,139 --> 00:42:40,434
and search for relics that
give historical clues.
518
00:42:41,476 --> 00:42:43,937
In the case of the Megiddo Mosaic,
519
00:42:44,062 --> 00:42:46,564
coins were found that revealed more
520
00:42:46,691 --> 00:42:48,442
about the people who built it.
521
00:42:51,027 --> 00:42:53,864
- This is the IAA Coin Department.
522
00:42:53,989 --> 00:42:58,952
About 600,000 coins, 200,000
excavation coins, 340 hoards.
523
00:43:00,871 --> 00:43:04,832
Coins come from a certain
context. They give a story.
524
00:43:04,959 --> 00:43:08,127
The earliest coin found in
the Tel Megiddo excavations
525
00:43:08,252 --> 00:43:12,799
is a coin that was minted
in the city of Ashkelon.
526
00:43:12,924 --> 00:43:17,929
And what I see is a stamp of
the legion that was in Legio.
527
00:43:20,682 --> 00:43:22,392
So what happened many times
528
00:43:22,517 --> 00:43:23,977
is that there wasn't enough money.
529
00:43:24,102 --> 00:43:26,604
When there weren't enough
coins, what people used to do,
530
00:43:26,731 --> 00:43:29,399
especially when these Roman legions came,
531
00:43:29,524 --> 00:43:32,694
is to re-stamp, to reissue
the coin, an old coin.
532
00:43:33,987 --> 00:43:36,657
The coin sort of symbolized the transition
533
00:43:36,782 --> 00:43:40,577
of the settlement from a pagan settlement
534
00:43:40,702 --> 00:43:42,371
into the Christian period,
535
00:43:42,496 --> 00:43:46,291
how the populations changed
also their religion.
536
00:43:48,292 --> 00:43:50,796
Coins are historical
documents, they tell a story,
537
00:43:50,921 --> 00:43:52,047
especially when they're found
538
00:43:52,172 --> 00:43:55,259
in a historical, archeological context.
539
00:43:55,384 --> 00:43:58,637
I think that's the most
powerful part of the coin.
540
00:43:58,762 --> 00:44:00,597
You can really feel the Roman camp,
541
00:44:00,722 --> 00:44:02,391
the soldiers, you know, using money.
542
00:44:02,516 --> 00:44:05,561
And you know, 50% of the coins
that basically circulated
543
00:44:05,686 --> 00:44:07,729
were used by soldiers.
544
00:44:07,854 --> 00:44:09,606
That's an interesting fact.
545
00:44:09,731 --> 00:44:14,736
We found this early
Christian place of worship
546
00:44:14,986 --> 00:44:18,072
near a Roman camp and
that's not by coincidence
547
00:44:18,197 --> 00:44:20,742
because there were two
populations in the Roman empire
548
00:44:20,867 --> 00:44:23,954
that really were
attracted to Christianity.
549
00:44:24,079 --> 00:44:27,416
One was women and the
other one was soldiers.
550
00:44:28,876 --> 00:44:31,586
So I think that's sort of a connection.
551
00:44:31,712 --> 00:44:33,129
There's a organic connection
552
00:44:33,254 --> 00:44:36,884
between soldiers and the
start of Christianity.
553
00:44:38,927 --> 00:44:41,512
And of course, this important venue.
554
00:46:05,306 --> 00:46:08,349
- [Yisca Harani] The
fact that a military man,
555
00:46:08,476 --> 00:46:09,934
which we usually associate
556
00:46:10,059 --> 00:46:11,979
with being very practical, pragmatic,
557
00:46:12,104 --> 00:46:14,147
people who are less than spiritual
558
00:46:15,022 --> 00:46:17,442
and there is somebody who cares so much
559
00:46:17,567 --> 00:46:20,946
to take from his own salary
560
00:46:21,071 --> 00:46:23,907
and to say, "For God, I do that."
561
00:46:24,991 --> 00:46:27,994
- [Dr. Parker] Gaianus,
centurion, our brother,
562
00:46:28,119 --> 00:46:32,291
gave the payment of his own
expense as an act of generosity.
563
00:46:33,834 --> 00:46:35,961
When we look at the physical context,
564
00:46:36,086 --> 00:46:40,716
this is a very large
collection of Roman soldiers
565
00:46:40,841 --> 00:46:43,594
who are put in the Jezreel Valley
566
00:46:43,719 --> 00:46:46,429
to be guarding the interests of Rome.
567
00:46:46,554 --> 00:46:48,974
And so someone of such status
568
00:46:49,099 --> 00:46:52,602
gives money for not
just a little structure,
569
00:46:52,727 --> 00:46:56,564
not just a dedication,
but to an entire building
570
00:46:56,689 --> 00:47:00,486
and to the building of
this incredibly detailed
571
00:47:00,611 --> 00:47:03,822
mosaic floor, this is no small thing.
572
00:47:03,947 --> 00:47:08,911
He is tying his name, his
reputation, and his status
573
00:47:09,369 --> 00:47:11,956
to this building that is very public
574
00:47:12,081 --> 00:47:13,791
and in the middle of the community.
575
00:47:17,002 --> 00:47:18,294
- [N.T. Wright] We know
in the New Testament
576
00:47:18,419 --> 00:47:20,004
there were centurions in the Middle East
577
00:47:20,129 --> 00:47:22,716
who built synagogues for the
local Jewish communities.
578
00:47:22,841 --> 00:47:25,761
This wasn't a totally unusual thing to do.
579
00:47:25,886 --> 00:47:27,512
Somebody who's stationed there,
580
00:47:27,637 --> 00:47:30,014
who has learned to like these people
581
00:47:30,139 --> 00:47:32,559
and actually wants to do his bit
582
00:47:32,684 --> 00:47:36,646
and wants to keep the Roman
peace, such as it was,
583
00:47:36,771 --> 00:47:39,649
it's not an unusual thing to
do from that point of view,
584
00:47:39,774 --> 00:47:42,402
but it says that here is a Roman official
585
00:47:42,527 --> 00:47:45,656
who is not frightened to
be known, to be associated
586
00:47:45,781 --> 00:47:48,407
with this extraordinary
subversive movement.
587
00:47:49,492 --> 00:47:51,786
And then the fact that
there are high ranking
588
00:47:51,912 --> 00:47:54,414
or well off women who are contributing.
589
00:47:58,042 --> 00:48:00,421
- [Dr. Parker] The inscription
that is on the western side
590
00:48:00,546 --> 00:48:04,716
says, "The God-loving
Akeptous has offered the table
591
00:48:04,841 --> 00:48:08,094
to God Jesus Christ as a memorial."
592
00:48:10,639 --> 00:48:13,684
- [Bear Grylls] The centerpiece
of the mosaic is the table,
593
00:48:13,809 --> 00:48:15,561
also known as an altar,
594
00:48:17,187 --> 00:48:20,357
dedicated by a woman named Akeptous.
595
00:48:34,121 --> 00:48:36,331
- And one of the earliest
rituals ever developed
596
00:48:36,456 --> 00:48:38,207
by people who believed in Jesus
597
00:48:38,332 --> 00:48:41,586
was commemoration of
Jesus' life and death.
598
00:48:41,711 --> 00:48:43,296
Basically, his instruction to remember
599
00:48:43,421 --> 00:48:47,342
and you see the word "remember"
even in these mosaics.
600
00:48:47,467 --> 00:48:49,094
- [Dr. Parker] The eastern side says,
601
00:48:49,219 --> 00:48:53,264
"Remember Primilla, Cyriaca, Dorothea,
602
00:48:53,389 --> 00:48:56,392
and moreover also Chreste."
603
00:48:56,517 --> 00:48:59,771
- [Yisca Harani] In the Roman
world, women were marginalized
604
00:48:59,896 --> 00:49:04,526
and their role was pretty
much to make the men eat,
605
00:49:04,651 --> 00:49:09,364
enjoy, and have security
in their family life.
606
00:49:28,049 --> 00:49:29,801
- [Dr. Parker] The way
that this inscription ends
607
00:49:29,926 --> 00:49:32,221
with the "and moreover also Chreste"
608
00:49:32,346 --> 00:49:33,764
seems to set her apart
609
00:49:33,889 --> 00:49:36,557
from the previous list
and the previous women.
610
00:49:36,682 --> 00:49:40,937
This particular name Chreste
might be a slave name
611
00:49:41,062 --> 00:49:45,734
and potentially could refer
to Chreste being a woman
612
00:49:45,859 --> 00:49:48,402
who was once a slave but
is now a freed woman.
613
00:49:48,527 --> 00:49:53,491
For one of them to have a name
that could be a slave name,
614
00:49:53,742 --> 00:49:57,496
possibly suggesting that
she's been a freed slave,
615
00:49:57,621 --> 00:50:01,791
means that there is some
equalizing of status
616
00:50:01,916 --> 00:50:05,044
that is going on in this community.
617
00:50:05,169 --> 00:50:07,672
And this is one of the
things I'm so fascinated by.
618
00:50:07,797 --> 00:50:10,759
Why on earth are there so
many women who are listed,
619
00:50:10,884 --> 00:50:14,096
especially when you have a
centurion who is also there,
620
00:50:14,221 --> 00:50:18,516
and what role do these women play?
621
00:50:18,641 --> 00:50:21,852
One of them is giving money for the table,
622
00:50:21,977 --> 00:50:23,479
which is probably the place
623
00:50:23,604 --> 00:50:25,774
where they're having the Lord's supper,
624
00:50:25,899 --> 00:50:29,527
but why is she the one who
is given this designation
625
00:50:29,652 --> 00:50:32,156
of contributing the money for that
626
00:50:32,281 --> 00:50:35,409
and providing the blessing for the table?
627
00:50:36,534 --> 00:50:38,871
- It reminds me of Mary
Magdalene of course,
628
00:50:38,996 --> 00:50:41,831
and the other women that are
mentioned in the Gospel of Luke
629
00:50:41,956 --> 00:50:44,834
that pay for Jesus' ministry.
630
00:50:44,959 --> 00:50:48,046
- Interestingly, Christianity
was much more favorable
631
00:50:48,171 --> 00:50:51,424
to women in the ancient
world than Paganism was.
632
00:50:51,549 --> 00:50:55,721
And so some of the earlier
converts among upper class Romans
633
00:50:55,846 --> 00:50:57,639
were among upper class women.
634
00:50:57,764 --> 00:51:01,226
In the ancient world, women
were somebody's property.
635
00:51:01,351 --> 00:51:03,937
They didn't have independence.
636
00:51:04,062 --> 00:51:07,649
Ancient Roman men, if they'd
had enough children already,
637
00:51:07,774 --> 00:51:10,986
if another girl was born, they
would just throw them away,
638
00:51:11,111 --> 00:51:12,946
quite literally leave
them out for the wolves
639
00:51:13,071 --> 00:51:15,156
or the gypsies or whoever to take.
640
00:51:15,281 --> 00:51:17,032
We now shudder at that,
641
00:51:17,159 --> 00:51:19,536
but we shudder because
we have been influenced
642
00:51:19,661 --> 00:51:22,037
by the valuation of human life
643
00:51:22,164 --> 00:51:24,749
that the early Christians modeled.
644
00:51:24,874 --> 00:51:26,001
By the end of the second century,
645
00:51:26,126 --> 00:51:28,962
there was an increase in Christian women
646
00:51:29,087 --> 00:51:31,131
and quite often the Christian women
647
00:51:31,256 --> 00:51:33,884
would then marry Pagans and convert them
648
00:51:34,009 --> 00:51:36,052
or at least bring up their
children as Christians.
649
00:51:36,177 --> 00:51:38,596
So it's a quite extraordinary story
650
00:51:38,721 --> 00:51:41,516
which goes against what
we might have thought
651
00:51:41,641 --> 00:51:43,767
if we come with the
assumption, as many do,
652
00:51:43,894 --> 00:51:45,937
that Christianity is bad for women.
653
00:51:46,062 --> 00:51:48,189
It certainly wasn't in
the early centuries.
654
00:51:49,232 --> 00:51:53,904
- So women in general
were marginalized and yet,
655
00:51:54,029 --> 00:51:56,406
we can tell from so
many other inscriptions
656
00:51:56,531 --> 00:51:58,157
in churches around the country,
657
00:51:58,282 --> 00:52:03,121
they were pushing I would say
the carriage of spirituality.
658
00:52:03,997 --> 00:52:06,332
- Right from the start in Paul's letters,
659
00:52:06,457 --> 00:52:09,669
we can see women taking
leading roles in the church.
660
00:52:09,794 --> 00:52:13,422
In John Chapter 20,
Jesus is first recognized
661
00:52:13,547 --> 00:52:15,257
by Mary Magdalene of all people.
662
00:52:16,134 --> 00:52:20,806
And Jesus says to Mary,
"Go and tell my brothers
663
00:52:20,931 --> 00:52:24,184
I'm ascending to my Father
and your Father to my God."
664
00:52:24,309 --> 00:52:25,476
That is the beginning
665
00:52:25,602 --> 00:52:27,521
of the proclamation of
the Christian gospel.
666
00:52:27,646 --> 00:52:31,149
Paul's greatest letter
written to the Roman church,
667
00:52:31,274 --> 00:52:33,817
he entrusts to a
businesswoman from Corinth
668
00:52:33,944 --> 00:52:36,112
who's on her way on a
business trip to Rome.
669
00:52:37,029 --> 00:52:40,157
The valuation of women was much higher,
670
00:52:40,282 --> 00:52:42,619
which this is not what feminist rhetoric
671
00:52:42,744 --> 00:52:44,121
has been trying to tell us.
672
00:52:44,954 --> 00:52:47,081
- [Yisca Harani] This is a new message,
673
00:52:47,207 --> 00:52:51,294
where women are so much
involved in the prayer,
674
00:52:51,419 --> 00:52:54,089
they're involved in discussing theology.
675
00:52:54,214 --> 00:52:55,172
I think it's very natural
676
00:52:55,297 --> 00:52:59,219
that women are more drawn to
spirituality, but at that age,
677
00:52:59,344 --> 00:53:02,137
they get the green light to be there
678
00:53:02,264 --> 00:53:05,057
instead of ousting them out and
saying, "Go and fix the food
679
00:53:05,182 --> 00:53:08,019
because we're coming out of
the prayer house in one hour,"
680
00:53:08,144 --> 00:53:09,062
they are there.
681
00:53:11,314 --> 00:53:12,732
- [Jonathan Henry] There's
a human dimension of this
682
00:53:12,857 --> 00:53:16,402
and so every one of us at the
higher level of scholarship,
683
00:53:16,527 --> 00:53:19,531
this is really ultimately
what we're trying to do,
684
00:53:19,656 --> 00:53:22,326
is gain sympathy with people in the past
685
00:53:22,451 --> 00:53:26,204
and understand in an empathetic way
686
00:53:26,329 --> 00:53:27,581
what were they going through
687
00:53:27,706 --> 00:53:30,709
that made them make that bad
decision or that good decision.
688
00:53:31,667 --> 00:53:35,171
- [Yisca Harani] For me, the
three inscriptions are amazing
689
00:53:35,296 --> 00:53:40,217
for specifically the people
that are mentioned there.
690
00:53:41,386 --> 00:53:45,181
- So the idea of a building
like this turning up,
691
00:53:45,306 --> 00:53:49,311
it's very exciting as a sign
of what archeology can produce,
692
00:53:49,436 --> 00:53:54,149
but also as a sign of this
is this diverse community
693
00:53:54,274 --> 00:53:56,234
which is establishing itself
694
00:53:56,359 --> 00:53:59,862
to the point of making a very
attractive worship space.
695
00:54:02,616 --> 00:54:06,119
And presumably it isn't the only one.
696
00:54:06,244 --> 00:54:09,164
Who knows what the archeologists
have yet to discover.
697
00:54:11,249 --> 00:54:12,751
- [Bear Grylls] While the mosaic describes
698
00:54:12,876 --> 00:54:14,461
a unique group of people,
699
00:54:15,712 --> 00:54:19,799
it also depicts a symbol
of a cultural revolution.
700
00:54:21,009 --> 00:54:23,219
- In the ancient world,
names were important,
701
00:54:23,344 --> 00:54:24,887
but symbols were also important.
702
00:54:25,012 --> 00:54:28,057
And as far as we can tell
for the early Christians,
703
00:54:28,182 --> 00:54:30,936
something about having a
symbol rather than a name
704
00:54:31,061 --> 00:54:33,771
meant it could be cross-cultural.
705
00:54:33,896 --> 00:54:38,901
[Yotam Tepper speaking
in foreign language]
706
00:54:43,822 --> 00:54:48,827
[Yotam Tepper speaking in
foreign language continues]
707
00:54:51,789 --> 00:54:55,459
- [N.T. Wright] Of course, the
Greek word for fish, ichthys,
708
00:54:55,584 --> 00:54:59,964
the letters spell out "Jesus
Christ son of God savior."
709
00:55:00,089 --> 00:55:02,467
So it was a wonderful secret sign
710
00:55:02,592 --> 00:55:06,762
but which also hooked up
with the stories about Jesus
711
00:55:06,887 --> 00:55:08,806
multiplying the loaves and the fishes.
712
00:55:10,391 --> 00:55:11,476
- [Jonathan Henry] By the
time you get to Legio,
713
00:55:11,601 --> 00:55:14,354
the fish would be probably
the most recognizable symbol.
714
00:55:14,479 --> 00:55:18,607
Very simple symbol, but just
not common for anything else.
715
00:55:19,859 --> 00:55:24,489
- From early on, the fish became
a very easy to draw symbol,
716
00:55:24,614 --> 00:55:27,241
but which actually had a power,
717
00:55:27,367 --> 00:55:29,286
the power of the name of Jesus,
718
00:55:29,411 --> 00:55:31,329
but then the power of the belief
719
00:55:31,454 --> 00:55:33,622
that he is the son of
God, he is the savior,
720
00:55:33,747 --> 00:55:37,544
which then was able to
translate, as symbols can,
721
00:55:37,669 --> 00:55:39,129
into other cultures.
722
00:55:40,421 --> 00:55:41,964
- [Jonathan Henry] This
one abbreviated phrase
723
00:55:42,089 --> 00:55:45,176
in the mosaics, it has a
line running across it,
724
00:55:45,301 --> 00:55:48,637
that's an early example of
what they call nomina sacra.
725
00:55:48,762 --> 00:55:50,139
And those nomina sacra
726
00:55:50,264 --> 00:55:52,099
are used to abbreviate not just any word,
727
00:55:52,224 --> 00:55:54,144
they're used to abbreviate
important words.
728
00:55:54,269 --> 00:55:57,312
Words like God, words like
Jesus, and words like Christ.
729
00:55:58,356 --> 00:56:00,734
The abbreviation itself, God Jesus Christ,
730
00:56:00,859 --> 00:56:03,277
that's in this mosaic, those are not words
731
00:56:03,402 --> 00:56:06,531
that we're accustomed to
seeing together in that order.
732
00:56:06,656 --> 00:56:08,741
You don't even see it
in the New Testament.
733
00:56:10,911 --> 00:56:12,829
Now obviously, Christians today
734
00:56:12,954 --> 00:56:14,914
confess ever since the Nicene Creed,
735
00:56:15,039 --> 00:56:17,626
Jesus Christ is not just Lord but he's God
736
00:56:17,751 --> 00:56:19,794
and all kinds of language
to go around that,
737
00:56:19,919 --> 00:56:23,089
that was not necessarily how
people talked before that.
738
00:56:24,047 --> 00:56:25,132
- Was Jesus God?
739
00:56:25,967 --> 00:56:29,929
People have been arguing
about this for 2,024 years,
740
00:56:30,054 --> 00:56:31,181
so it's nothing new.
741
00:56:31,306 --> 00:56:34,057
You have people that believe that Jesus
742
00:56:34,184 --> 00:56:36,477
is an offshoot from the Egyptian gods.
743
00:56:36,602 --> 00:56:39,647
You have people that say
there's no historical findings
744
00:56:39,772 --> 00:56:41,732
that promote Jesus is God.
745
00:56:41,857 --> 00:56:44,236
- And this is sort of the early picture
746
00:56:44,361 --> 00:56:45,862
of what you see for the
rest of church history.
747
00:56:45,987 --> 00:56:48,364
They went to town on working
out these kinds of problems.
748
00:56:48,489 --> 00:56:51,159
Said Jesus Christ is God
or Jesus Christ is divine.
749
00:56:51,284 --> 00:56:54,204
Not the God, but maybe in some way, yeah.
750
00:56:54,329 --> 00:56:56,497
And this is where heretics
and Orthodox people
751
00:56:56,622 --> 00:56:58,916
are fighting for it for time immemorial.
752
00:56:59,041 --> 00:57:02,921
- Most groups at the time were
separated from each other.
753
00:57:03,046 --> 00:57:06,757
They could take all options
and views about Jesus.
754
00:57:06,882 --> 00:57:10,386
Here is just the first example to show us
755
00:57:10,511 --> 00:57:14,224
that a mixed community with
Romans is choosing this path.
756
00:57:14,349 --> 00:57:15,682
It's a huge deal.
757
00:57:16,559 --> 00:57:19,102
- It starts in a lot of
ways with this desire
758
00:57:19,229 --> 00:57:23,566
to tell your people what is the
significance of all of this.
759
00:57:24,734 --> 00:57:26,652
The terms are significant
760
00:57:26,777 --> 00:57:28,571
because now looking back through time,
761
00:57:28,696 --> 00:57:32,199
we go, we don't have words in this order,
762
00:57:32,324 --> 00:57:35,369
in this kind of a statement
that's a slam dunk,
763
00:57:35,494 --> 00:57:37,454
Nicene Creed kind of a statement
764
00:57:37,581 --> 00:57:39,457
a hundred years before the Nicene Creed
765
00:57:39,582 --> 00:57:41,417
had come to that conclusion.
766
00:57:43,086 --> 00:57:45,004
- I believe it was a strong
proclamation from them,
767
00:57:45,129 --> 00:57:47,882
to say that the God Jesus Christ.
768
00:57:48,007 --> 00:57:50,217
But what does that mean for us today?
769
00:57:50,342 --> 00:57:54,137
You have people still
asking the same question:
770
00:57:54,972 --> 00:57:55,806
Who is he?
771
00:57:57,307 --> 00:58:00,686
Who would've ever thought a Jewish rabbi
772
00:58:00,811 --> 00:58:04,316
from 2,000 years ago would
get this much reaction?
773
00:58:05,482 --> 00:58:08,736
[gentle elusive music]
774
00:58:10,947 --> 00:58:13,949
- The early church I
think does reflect Jesus
775
00:58:14,074 --> 00:58:16,327
to a very large degree
776
00:58:16,452 --> 00:58:19,456
in ways that are better than
we find anywhere in writing,
777
00:58:19,581 --> 00:58:20,916
by the way that they died
778
00:58:21,041 --> 00:58:23,959
and the way that they
lived with their neighbors
779
00:58:24,084 --> 00:58:27,672
and the way that they
just made up their mind
780
00:58:27,797 --> 00:58:29,466
they were gonna socially cohere
781
00:58:29,591 --> 00:58:32,509
and get together and
make something new work.
782
00:58:34,429 --> 00:58:37,724
- Though we today look back
and we call it a religion,
783
00:58:37,849 --> 00:58:40,059
it certainly wouldn't have
been seen as a religion
784
00:58:40,184 --> 00:58:41,019
in its own time.
785
00:58:41,144 --> 00:58:44,356
Ancient religions had temples,
they offered sacrifices,
786
00:58:44,481 --> 00:58:46,482
people went and consulted oracles.
787
00:58:46,607 --> 00:58:48,984
The early Christians did
none of those things.
788
00:58:49,109 --> 00:58:52,029
It's hard to say why
people became Christians
789
00:58:52,154 --> 00:58:54,282
in the second and third
centuries particularly
790
00:58:54,407 --> 00:58:57,492
when the Romans were doing
their best to stamp it out.
791
00:58:57,619 --> 00:58:59,496
But one of the crucial things
792
00:58:59,621 --> 00:59:02,331
is that in the world of Greece
and Rome, they had many gods
793
00:59:02,456 --> 00:59:07,461
and these were all powerful
rulers in the heavenly places.
794
00:59:07,796 --> 00:59:09,589
But nobody ever said
795
00:59:09,714 --> 00:59:13,092
that Zeus or Aphrodite
or Neptune loved you.
796
00:59:14,511 --> 00:59:17,471
Now the early Christians went
around talking about a god
797
00:59:17,597 --> 00:59:20,891
who made the world and who loves you.
798
00:59:21,017 --> 00:59:23,269
This is a totally new conception.
799
00:59:23,394 --> 00:59:25,896
And the early Christians backed that up
800
00:59:26,022 --> 00:59:28,482
by establishing communities
801
00:59:28,607 --> 00:59:32,612
which were communities of
what we can only call love.
802
00:59:34,029 --> 00:59:37,366
- It was a different kind of movement.
803
00:59:37,491 --> 00:59:39,327
It had a completely different way
804
00:59:39,452 --> 00:59:43,956
of understanding your
neighbor, your community,
805
00:59:44,081 --> 00:59:46,459
than anything Rome had to offer.
806
00:59:47,501 --> 00:59:51,464
- In our heritage with our
Jewish brothers and sisters,
807
00:59:51,589 --> 00:59:55,342
that religious obligation
of caring for the poor
808
00:59:55,467 --> 00:59:56,802
was also present.
809
00:59:56,927 --> 00:59:58,721
In the books of the Old Testament,
810
00:59:58,846 --> 01:00:02,976
there are many admonitions
that they too had an obligation
811
01:00:03,101 --> 01:00:07,521
to care for the stranger,
for the immigrant,
812
01:00:07,647 --> 01:00:12,276
this obligation for social
justice and social outreach.
813
01:00:13,944 --> 01:00:18,282
- The early Christians said
things like Jesus is Lord
814
01:00:18,407 --> 01:00:22,829
in a world where the person
who was called Lord was Caesar.
815
01:00:24,747 --> 01:00:26,874
- People who rise to the
top and become so powerful
816
01:00:26,999 --> 01:00:28,292
that they seem superhuman.
817
01:00:28,417 --> 01:00:31,004
It's easy to build up a politician
818
01:00:31,129 --> 01:00:32,462
or a leader to that extent
819
01:00:32,587 --> 01:00:34,256
where when they reach
the top of that pinnacle
820
01:00:34,382 --> 01:00:37,384
and they can tell a legion to
go and another legion to go,
821
01:00:37,509 --> 01:00:39,429
they seem like a God.
822
01:00:39,554 --> 01:00:42,724
- But when Jesus is called Lord and God,
823
01:00:42,849 --> 01:00:44,266
this is in your face to Caesar.
824
01:00:44,392 --> 01:00:47,394
It looks as if this is a
politically subversive group.
825
01:00:48,437 --> 01:00:49,772
It was an entire movement,
826
01:00:49,897 --> 01:00:52,482
which you might as well
call a political movement
827
01:00:52,607 --> 01:00:53,984
or a philosophical movement.
828
01:00:55,569 --> 01:00:56,654
- [Jonathan Henry] The Roman Empire
829
01:00:56,779 --> 01:00:59,197
was very concerned about stability.
830
01:00:59,322 --> 01:01:03,036
They did not like new religious
movements of any sort.
831
01:01:03,161 --> 01:01:04,202
You look at some of the letters
832
01:01:04,327 --> 01:01:06,039
that the leaders were
writing to each other
833
01:01:06,164 --> 01:01:07,539
and they were first asking,
834
01:01:07,664 --> 01:01:10,834
"Is this going to be a problem
or not, this new movement?"
835
01:01:10,959 --> 01:01:14,004
- Pliny writes to Trajan in the
early second century to say,
836
01:01:14,129 --> 01:01:15,839
"What do I do about these Christians?"
837
01:01:15,964 --> 01:01:18,592
Had there been a law on the statute books
838
01:01:18,717 --> 01:01:20,219
saying this is what you
do, Pliny would've known it
839
01:01:20,344 --> 01:01:22,387
'cause he was a good bureaucrat.
840
01:01:22,512 --> 01:01:25,599
So it looks as though
persecution was sporadic
841
01:01:25,724 --> 01:01:27,309
and it tends to be the case
842
01:01:27,434 --> 01:01:29,979
that the Roman authorities
go after the leadership.
843
01:01:30,104 --> 01:01:32,481
There's a sense, we can't
go and kill them all.
844
01:01:32,606 --> 01:01:35,192
From time to time, we
will round some of them up
845
01:01:35,317 --> 01:01:36,694
and make an example of them
846
01:01:36,819 --> 01:01:39,071
and maybe that will discourage the rest.
847
01:01:39,196 --> 01:01:41,699
But it has the exact opposite effect
848
01:01:41,824 --> 01:01:44,494
because they see these people unafraid
849
01:01:44,619 --> 01:01:46,621
to face suffering and death.
850
01:01:46,746 --> 01:01:49,707
So that is actually part of the reason
851
01:01:49,832 --> 01:01:51,334
why this movement spreads.
852
01:01:52,334 --> 01:01:55,546
In a world of violence
and cynical brutality,
853
01:01:56,506 --> 01:01:58,882
Christianity is showing
that there is a way through
854
01:01:59,007 --> 01:02:00,759
and out the other side.
855
01:02:00,884 --> 01:02:03,887
[low rousing music]
856
01:02:06,014 --> 01:02:08,601
- [Jonathan Henry] As Christianity
spread around the world,
857
01:02:08,726 --> 01:02:10,186
early Christians stressed
858
01:02:10,311 --> 01:02:12,396
the importance of Christian set of values
859
01:02:12,521 --> 01:02:14,314
that's uniform across the world,
860
01:02:14,441 --> 01:02:17,442
a Christian sense of ethics and behaviors.
861
01:02:17,567 --> 01:02:20,362
That view was really unique in comparison
862
01:02:20,487 --> 01:02:22,322
with the other conflicting value system
863
01:02:22,447 --> 01:02:25,159
found within the broad
reach of the Roman Empire.
864
01:02:26,202 --> 01:02:27,996
The book of 1 Peter says things like,
865
01:02:28,121 --> 01:02:29,872
"Make sure that if you're persecuted,
866
01:02:29,997 --> 01:02:32,249
it's not because you're doing bad things."
867
01:02:32,374 --> 01:02:34,334
When you're living under governance,
868
01:02:34,461 --> 01:02:37,212
it's not gonna persecute you
just 'cause you say Jesus,
869
01:02:37,337 --> 01:02:38,172
they're gonna persecute you
870
01:02:38,297 --> 01:02:42,844
because you say Jesus and
you stole, don't steal.
871
01:02:42,969 --> 01:02:45,012
And it seems like a no
brainer to people now
872
01:02:45,137 --> 01:02:46,681
because character training
and virtues training
873
01:02:46,806 --> 01:02:49,099
is everywhere now, but
back then it wasn't.
874
01:02:50,267 --> 01:02:52,061
And so that really
changed people's behaviors
875
01:02:52,186 --> 01:02:55,439
to get a sense of it
was cultural critique,
876
01:02:55,564 --> 01:02:58,776
it was incisive and it was
sort of socially adept.
877
01:02:58,901 --> 01:03:00,194
I don't think that was the be all end all
878
01:03:00,319 --> 01:03:01,237
of Christian faith.
879
01:03:01,362 --> 01:03:03,114
He wants people to stay safe.
880
01:03:03,239 --> 01:03:06,159
And in that culture, this is
how you structure households.
881
01:03:07,242 --> 01:03:10,662
But for our Christian
living in the third century,
882
01:03:10,787 --> 01:03:12,456
I don't think our centurion
883
01:03:12,581 --> 01:03:15,876
was putting himself in
a huge line of fire,
884
01:03:16,001 --> 01:03:18,129
at least not when he put the mosaic in.
885
01:03:18,254 --> 01:03:20,922
Because he could point
to a contemporary emperor
886
01:03:21,047 --> 01:03:22,842
ruling at this time who had devotion
887
01:03:22,967 --> 01:03:26,052
towards various kinds of
figures, including Jesus.
888
01:03:26,179 --> 01:03:29,766
Emperor Severus and his
family was very amenable
889
01:03:29,891 --> 01:03:32,809
and fond of many Christian aspects.
890
01:03:47,741 --> 01:03:51,036
- They are actually in this
place, in the Jezreel Valley,
891
01:03:51,161 --> 01:03:54,874
taking advantage of this tolerance
892
01:03:54,999 --> 01:03:57,126
from the Roman Empire itself.
893
01:03:59,502 --> 01:04:01,547
- [Jonathan Henry] Now,
was it always favorable?
894
01:04:01,672 --> 01:04:02,714
I'm not so sure.
895
01:04:04,216 --> 01:04:07,511
The same area, you have
another emperor down the line,
896
01:04:07,636 --> 01:04:11,349
Diocletian, famous for
being the worst persecutor,
897
01:04:11,474 --> 01:04:13,184
the most systematic persecutor.
898
01:04:14,686 --> 01:04:17,354
- This structure where these Christians
899
01:04:17,479 --> 01:04:21,526
are gathering together
in Megiddo dates to 230
900
01:04:21,651 --> 01:04:24,486
and it is only 50 years later
901
01:04:24,612 --> 01:04:26,864
when Diocletian becomes the Caesar
902
01:04:26,989 --> 01:04:29,449
where we have the worst persecution
903
01:04:29,576 --> 01:04:31,702
of the Christian community.
904
01:04:31,827 --> 01:04:35,039
- Diocletian had become
actually afraid of the movement
905
01:04:35,164 --> 01:04:38,084
and said we need to do something about it.
906
01:04:38,209 --> 01:04:40,211
He was also having financial issues,
907
01:04:40,336 --> 01:04:42,046
inflation was breaking out.
908
01:04:42,171 --> 01:04:46,426
He was looking to shore up
any kind of loss anywhere.
909
01:04:46,551 --> 01:04:48,219
- I mean, Diocletian, he was a genius
910
01:04:48,344 --> 01:04:51,431
from a financial and
military reform perspective.
911
01:04:51,556 --> 01:04:54,307
He really rebuilt the
structure of the empire.
912
01:04:54,432 --> 01:04:58,062
But he made a wide attempt
to bring forth a revival
913
01:04:58,187 --> 01:04:59,521
of the old gods.
914
01:04:59,647 --> 01:05:02,107
And whenever people
didn't want to comply,
915
01:05:02,232 --> 01:05:04,484
he started to persecute Christians
916
01:05:04,611 --> 01:05:06,904
and it got extremely bloody.
917
01:05:07,029 --> 01:05:11,617
Diocletian kills 17,000
Christians in 30 days,
918
01:05:11,742 --> 01:05:14,954
the highest amount in recorded history.
919
01:05:15,079 --> 01:05:17,664
More than Nero.
920
01:05:17,789 --> 01:05:20,209
- So for this community in Megiddo,
921
01:05:20,334 --> 01:05:23,171
we have such a small window of time,
922
01:05:23,296 --> 01:05:26,089
they can make these loud
and dramatic statements
923
01:05:26,214 --> 01:05:29,677
about the lordship of who Jesus is.
924
01:05:29,802 --> 01:05:33,139
But as soon as Diocletian comes
and that persecution comes,
925
01:05:33,264 --> 01:05:35,599
they cover their floor.
926
01:05:37,642 --> 01:05:39,646
- So let's just imagine the centurion,
927
01:05:39,771 --> 01:05:41,814
he lives a long and peaceful life
928
01:05:41,939 --> 01:05:44,316
and maybe the next person
who inherited this room
929
01:05:44,441 --> 01:05:46,902
is the one who had to cover
it over and abandon it
930
01:05:47,027 --> 01:05:49,237
because of the Diocletian persecution.
931
01:05:50,447 --> 01:05:51,782
- It's a possibility
932
01:05:51,907 --> 01:05:55,911
this is the reason the mosaic
floor is so well preserved
933
01:05:56,036 --> 01:05:59,999
is because the original
community valued it enough
934
01:06:00,124 --> 01:06:02,292
to preserve it, to cover it.
935
01:06:02,417 --> 01:06:05,171
Maybe thinking at some point
they'll be able to come back
936
01:06:05,296 --> 01:06:07,339
and worship in this space again.
937
01:06:10,217 --> 01:06:11,844
- This room probably was not in function
938
01:06:11,969 --> 01:06:13,596
for a very long time,
939
01:06:13,721 --> 01:06:16,516
but it does speak to the
persecutions that broke out.
940
01:06:19,101 --> 01:06:21,937
And within another 15, 20, 25 years,
941
01:06:22,062 --> 01:06:24,189
things had changed yet again,
942
01:06:24,314 --> 01:06:27,109
because you go from
Diocletian not too many years
943
01:06:27,234 --> 01:06:30,362
to Constantine, who was famous
944
01:06:30,487 --> 01:06:32,739
for doing the exact
opposite of Diocletian,
945
01:06:32,864 --> 01:06:34,742
he Christianizes.
946
01:06:34,867 --> 01:06:36,619
He raises Christian bishops up
947
01:06:36,744 --> 01:06:40,039
to places of importance in his own court.
948
01:06:40,164 --> 01:06:43,876
- The empire was too big
for its boots at that time
949
01:06:44,001 --> 01:06:47,171
and was about to split in two
really, the east and the west.
950
01:06:47,296 --> 01:06:48,672
Constantine and his successors
951
01:06:48,797 --> 01:06:51,551
tried to use formal Christianity
952
01:06:51,676 --> 01:06:54,887
as a way of holding things together.
953
01:06:55,012 --> 01:06:58,014
- He had an incalculable influence
954
01:06:58,141 --> 01:07:01,394
on the evolution of the
church subsequent to him.
955
01:07:01,519 --> 01:07:03,312
The whole royal organism
956
01:07:03,437 --> 01:07:05,856
started to be all about building churches
957
01:07:05,981 --> 01:07:09,902
and supporting this new
way of doing things,
958
01:07:10,027 --> 01:07:12,112
new way of being a royal court.
959
01:07:13,531 --> 01:07:16,199
[cryptic music]
960
01:07:23,499 --> 01:07:27,127
[cryptic music continues]
961
01:07:27,252 --> 01:07:29,756
So Constantine is building
gigantic buildings,
962
01:07:29,881 --> 01:07:33,134
the like which churches are
still looking at and going,
963
01:07:33,259 --> 01:07:34,927
"How did they do that?"
964
01:07:35,052 --> 01:07:37,012
All these building and
construction projects
965
01:07:37,137 --> 01:07:38,889
were done with great intent,
966
01:07:39,014 --> 01:07:41,934
you know, the placement of
them was often political.
967
01:07:42,059 --> 01:07:43,644
The money was never an issue.
968
01:07:44,644 --> 01:07:47,939
Things that date back to
connect an elite person
969
01:07:48,064 --> 01:07:50,859
of such magnitude with a humble fisherman
970
01:07:50,984 --> 01:07:52,736
from a couple hundred years before.
971
01:07:53,779 --> 01:07:56,699
- When it becomes the state religion,
972
01:07:56,824 --> 01:07:59,534
the state of Christianity
becomes something different
973
01:07:59,659 --> 01:08:03,664
than what we see on this
mosaic floor in Megiddo.
974
01:08:04,874 --> 01:08:07,667
- [Bear Grylls] The Roman
Empire eventually fell
975
01:08:07,792 --> 01:08:11,964
after being the dominant world
power for over 400 years.
976
01:08:13,047 --> 01:08:16,301
The most powerful empire
in history was outlasted
977
01:08:16,426 --> 01:08:19,346
by the humble movement of a Jewish rabbi.
978
01:08:21,014 --> 01:08:24,601
That movement's lineage can
be traced all the way back
979
01:08:24,726 --> 01:08:26,979
to this mosaic floor,
980
01:08:27,104 --> 01:08:31,107
when a small window of tolerance
some 20 years was given
981
01:08:32,359 --> 01:08:34,946
and a pivotal piece of history was built
982
01:08:37,531 --> 01:08:40,159
and now exists to tell the story.
983
01:08:47,457 --> 01:08:50,127
[air whooshing]
984
01:08:57,301 --> 01:09:00,262
[gentle soaring music]
985
01:09:00,387 --> 01:09:03,349
- There is so much about
looking at the history
986
01:09:03,474 --> 01:09:07,144
of who this historical
figure of Jesus was,
987
01:09:07,269 --> 01:09:10,606
this Jewish rabbi who taught people
988
01:09:10,731 --> 01:09:12,941
in this very little part of the world
989
01:09:13,066 --> 01:09:16,529
for a very short amount of
time, three years maybe.
990
01:09:17,529 --> 01:09:20,241
And yet, those teachings really took hold
991
01:09:20,366 --> 01:09:22,492
and humans really responded.
992
01:09:23,786 --> 01:09:24,702
- [N.T. Wright] If we believe
993
01:09:24,827 --> 01:09:26,412
as Christians have taught for a long time
994
01:09:26,539 --> 01:09:28,916
that Jesus is both fully
divine and fully human,
995
01:09:29,041 --> 01:09:33,254
then the history and the
theology ought to work together.
996
01:09:33,379 --> 01:09:36,256
Getting that to happen is much
harder than you might imagine
997
01:09:36,381 --> 01:09:38,551
because often historians feel as if
998
01:09:38,676 --> 01:09:40,302
they're pulling the whole thing apart
999
01:09:40,427 --> 01:09:42,096
and reducing it to little fragments,
1000
01:09:42,221 --> 01:09:43,722
and the theologians often feel as though
1001
01:09:43,847 --> 01:09:45,599
they're floating in a hot air balloon
1002
01:09:45,724 --> 01:09:47,601
way above the subject somewhere
1003
01:09:47,726 --> 01:09:49,394
and never the twain shall meet.
1004
01:09:49,519 --> 01:09:52,564
- I mean, that's the journey
of people seeking history
1005
01:09:52,689 --> 01:09:55,734
and that journey is taking
place in a geographical context,
1006
01:09:55,859 --> 01:09:57,986
it's taking place in a
chronological context,
1007
01:09:58,111 --> 01:10:00,406
it's taking place in historical context.
1008
01:10:01,741 --> 01:10:05,869
Megiddo just exemplifies
how history and spirituality
1009
01:10:05,994 --> 01:10:08,331
or history and theology meet.
1010
01:10:25,056 --> 01:10:28,726
[bright exhilarating music]
1011
01:11:01,341 --> 01:11:04,302
- When we look at the
inscriptions on the floor,
1012
01:11:04,427 --> 01:11:09,016
we are seeing this element
of Christianity play out
1013
01:11:09,141 --> 01:11:11,769
just in the words that are written.
1014
01:11:11,894 --> 01:11:15,314
This Christian community that
worshiped in this building
1015
01:11:15,439 --> 01:11:19,026
was embodying the very teachings of Jesus.
1016
01:11:19,151 --> 01:11:23,029
- Material remains, buildings,
floors, inscriptions.
1017
01:11:23,154 --> 01:11:25,199
These are the ways in
1018
01:11:25,324 --> 01:11:29,244
and even the way the letters
are formed in the writing,
1019
01:11:29,369 --> 01:11:31,621
there is far more to discover.
1020
01:11:33,499 --> 01:11:35,709
And the more we discover,
1021
01:11:35,834 --> 01:11:37,961
the more coherent sense it will make.
1022
01:11:45,636 --> 01:11:48,722
[indistinct chatter]
1023
01:11:55,271 --> 01:11:57,356
- [Cardinal Gregory] There
are untold numbers of people
1024
01:11:57,481 --> 01:11:59,899
who have disassociated themselves
1025
01:12:00,026 --> 01:12:02,027
from their religious history.
1026
01:12:03,737 --> 01:12:06,406
No matter what faith they
may have belonged to,
1027
01:12:08,451 --> 01:12:12,371
to lose contact with your history,
1028
01:12:12,496 --> 01:12:16,666
in some respects, is to
lose contact with yourself.
1029
01:12:18,167 --> 01:12:22,964
How do we pursue the truth that is God
1030
01:12:23,089 --> 01:12:24,382
and how do we attain it?
1031
01:12:26,217 --> 01:12:28,929
Obviously there is a
great deal of disagreement
1032
01:12:29,054 --> 01:12:31,932
on how do you attain truth.
1033
01:12:32,057 --> 01:12:34,184
- In general the world is confused
1034
01:12:34,309 --> 01:12:37,229
because there are confusing claims
1035
01:12:37,354 --> 01:12:40,607
and bits and pieces of information
1036
01:12:40,732 --> 01:12:44,236
that are being construed in
a way that is oversimplified.
1037
01:12:47,364 --> 01:12:49,449
- When we are reading history,
1038
01:12:49,574 --> 01:12:52,994
we bring so many assumptions to the table.
1039
01:12:53,119 --> 01:12:55,456
We bring stories we heard as a kid,
1040
01:12:55,581 --> 01:12:59,001
maybe a story we learned in
school as we were growing up,
1041
01:13:00,377 --> 01:13:02,421
but history is complex
1042
01:13:03,589 --> 01:13:07,009
and the people of history are complex.
1043
01:13:08,594 --> 01:13:10,096
- When you're looking
at something ancient,
1044
01:13:10,221 --> 01:13:12,556
patience is required for this.
1045
01:13:12,681 --> 01:13:14,974
Look at the whole person
as much as you can.
1046
01:13:15,101 --> 01:13:16,977
Be empathetic with the whole person.
1047
01:13:17,102 --> 01:13:20,356
You might not have much more
of a person than their name,
1048
01:13:20,481 --> 01:13:21,647
but sort of the challenge is saying,
1049
01:13:21,774 --> 01:13:23,316
"I know there's a human there."
1050
01:13:23,442 --> 01:13:26,527
Human empathy and sort of
the passion and patience
1051
01:13:26,652 --> 01:13:28,614
to get into that will get you everywhere
1052
01:13:28,739 --> 01:13:31,657
in learning that we're not so
different from those people.
1053
01:13:32,742 --> 01:13:36,121
- Which is why it's
important to be self-critical
1054
01:13:36,246 --> 01:13:39,166
just as much as we are being
critical of whatever text
1055
01:13:39,291 --> 01:13:42,586
or material goods that we are looking at,
1056
01:13:42,711 --> 01:13:45,381
and this is why we have
to study in community
1057
01:13:45,506 --> 01:13:48,132
so we can have lots of
different perspectives.
1058
01:13:48,967 --> 01:13:52,721
- I have to acknowledge that
there is an objective truth.
1059
01:13:53,597 --> 01:13:55,766
Truth is not merely what I think,
1060
01:13:55,891 --> 01:14:00,812
it is a truth that is beyond
more than just my perceptions.
1061
01:14:01,729 --> 01:14:03,397
The way God fashioned us
1062
01:14:03,524 --> 01:14:07,736
is to give us the capacity to reach out
1063
01:14:07,861 --> 01:14:10,614
and search for Him and discover Him.
1064
01:14:12,074 --> 01:14:15,327
[bright rousing music]
1065
01:14:22,084 --> 01:14:25,337
[rousing music swells]
1066
01:14:27,464 --> 01:14:28,966
- [Dr. Campo] This is an exciting day
1067
01:14:29,091 --> 01:14:30,676
at the Museum of the Bible.
1068
01:14:31,551 --> 01:14:33,427
Today marks a remarkable day
1069
01:14:33,554 --> 01:14:37,141
because we are about to
unveil and cut a ribbon,
1070
01:14:37,266 --> 01:14:39,184
unveil a remarkable mosaic.
1071
01:14:40,894 --> 01:14:44,231
This object really is a way
for us to come together,
1072
01:14:44,356 --> 01:14:46,901
a way for us to see that
these tiny little tessera,
1073
01:14:47,026 --> 01:14:48,401
these tiny little chips,
1074
01:14:48,527 --> 01:14:50,946
these beautiful pieces
when placed together,
1075
01:14:51,071 --> 01:14:53,741
they tell a remarkable story of unity,
1076
01:14:53,866 --> 01:14:56,659
a remarkable story of a
place that brought people in
1077
01:14:56,784 --> 01:14:59,079
from many different areas
1078
01:14:59,204 --> 01:15:01,539
and yet they shared enough
in common to understand
1079
01:15:01,664 --> 01:15:05,544
that they were a people
who could celebrate,
1080
01:15:05,669 --> 01:15:08,756
who could worship, who
could come together in peace
1081
01:15:08,881 --> 01:15:11,466
and is what we come
together to celebrate today.
1082
01:15:11,591 --> 01:15:16,012
[woman speaking in foreign language]
1083
01:15:18,641 --> 01:15:20,099
- [Audience] Amen.
1084
01:15:20,226 --> 01:15:23,896
- Blessed are You, Adonai
our God, sovereign of all,
1085
01:15:24,021 --> 01:15:26,314
who has kept us alive, sustained us,
1086
01:15:26,439 --> 01:15:28,107
and brought us to this season.
1087
01:15:28,232 --> 01:15:29,067
Amen.
1088
01:15:30,026 --> 01:15:32,737
- [Audience] Three, two, one!
1089
01:15:32,862 --> 01:15:36,866
[audience cheering, applauding]
1090
01:15:39,911 --> 01:15:43,874
- [Dr. Campo] When people ask
you what is the earliest place
1091
01:15:43,999 --> 01:15:46,751
that has been found, that
was a place of worship
1092
01:15:46,876 --> 01:15:49,712
for Christian people
ever found in history?
1093
01:15:49,837 --> 01:15:51,547
You can now boldly say to them,
1094
01:15:51,672 --> 01:15:54,342
it's often called Legio or Megiddo,
1095
01:15:54,467 --> 01:15:57,387
and I saw it at the Museum of the Bible.
1096
01:15:59,514 --> 01:16:02,476
If someone asks you, what's
the earliest written form
1097
01:16:02,601 --> 01:16:05,562
that declares Jesus as God?
1098
01:16:05,687 --> 01:16:08,189
You can confidently say
that up till now in 230,
1099
01:16:08,314 --> 01:16:11,317
this mosaic that was
formed has an inscription
1100
01:16:11,442 --> 01:16:15,281
that refers to Jesus in that
fashion, and you saw it.
1101
01:16:18,157 --> 01:16:20,911
- When you go and you see the places
1102
01:16:21,036 --> 01:16:22,454
where the text happened,
1103
01:16:22,579 --> 01:16:25,541
you now realize the things
that you've assumed.
1104
01:16:25,666 --> 01:16:27,709
You start to gather more data points,
1105
01:16:27,834 --> 01:16:30,086
you start to understand the context,
1106
01:16:30,211 --> 01:16:33,214
and people become real people.
1107
01:16:33,339 --> 01:16:36,884
They become people who had
to grapple with daily life
1108
01:16:37,011 --> 01:16:39,971
in a way that we often don't think of,
1109
01:16:40,096 --> 01:16:44,267
feeding their families, doing
their jobs, living life.
1110
01:16:45,352 --> 01:16:47,354
- If I can be that
empathetic towards people
1111
01:16:47,479 --> 01:16:49,147
I will never meet in a text,
1112
01:16:49,272 --> 01:16:52,026
I'm rubbing shoulders with
people just like that every day.
1113
01:16:53,109 --> 01:16:56,279
You may not think of yourself
as a historical figure,
1114
01:16:56,404 --> 01:16:57,614
but you are.
1115
01:16:57,739 --> 01:17:00,282
We all are. We all inhabit history.
1116
01:17:00,409 --> 01:17:02,036
- [Dr. Parker] So the
context changes everything
1117
01:17:02,161 --> 01:17:04,496
about how we understand
these historical people.
1118
01:17:04,621 --> 01:17:05,331
- [Jonathan Henry] History is absolutely
1119
01:17:05,456 --> 01:17:07,332
still speaking to us and we should support
1120
01:17:07,457 --> 01:17:10,336
the historical disciplines
that are at work here.
1121
01:17:27,977 --> 01:17:31,897
- This is a huge living piece
of history and it's here.
1122
01:17:32,024 --> 01:17:33,066
It's incredible to see in person
1123
01:17:33,191 --> 01:17:36,319
and just to walk around
the entire exhibit itself.
1124
01:17:36,444 --> 01:17:39,447
- Young people aren't aware
of the history before them
1125
01:17:39,572 --> 01:17:42,534
and how hard it was for
people to get to this point.
1126
01:17:43,534 --> 01:17:48,039
- To give women this voice,
mentioning Jesus Christ is God
1127
01:17:48,164 --> 01:17:50,082
for the first time ever
that we have written
1128
01:17:50,207 --> 01:17:53,002
outside the scriptures, just amazing.
1129
01:17:54,462 --> 01:17:55,672
- It just shows you that God can work
1130
01:17:55,797 --> 01:17:57,882
in all sorts of different facets of life
1131
01:17:58,007 --> 01:18:01,177
and different backgrounds in history too.
1132
01:18:01,302 --> 01:18:04,389
- [Dr. Parker] This movement
brought people together
1133
01:18:04,514 --> 01:18:06,599
who were not like-minded.
1134
01:18:06,724 --> 01:18:09,602
It brought people together who
grew up with the scriptures
1135
01:18:09,727 --> 01:18:13,147
and people who grew up
with a pagan culture
1136
01:18:14,399 --> 01:18:18,652
and yet provided a space
for them to figure out
1137
01:18:18,779 --> 01:18:21,906
how to be a like-minded people.
1138
01:18:26,119 --> 01:18:29,206
[bright music fades]
1139
01:18:36,046 --> 01:18:40,341
- [N.T. Wright] The church
in its unity and multiplicity
1140
01:18:40,467 --> 01:18:45,472
is designed to be the small
working model of new creation,
1141
01:18:46,931 --> 01:18:51,144
to demonstrate to the
world who the true God is
1142
01:18:51,269 --> 01:18:53,562
and what this true God is doing
1143
01:18:53,687 --> 01:18:55,356
and will do and will complete.
1144
01:18:57,066 --> 01:18:58,861
We see this in the mosaic.
1145
01:18:59,694 --> 01:19:01,446
And so when they said Jesus is God,
1146
01:19:01,571 --> 01:19:04,574
this wasn't an abstract
philosophical proposition.
1147
01:19:04,699 --> 01:19:07,034
This was when we're with Jesus,
1148
01:19:07,161 --> 01:19:09,829
we know we are with the
God who made the world
1149
01:19:09,954 --> 01:19:11,997
and who is in the process of remaking it.
1150
01:19:13,249 --> 01:19:15,126
- [Yisca Harani] Megiddo to me is a place
1151
01:19:15,251 --> 01:19:19,839
where Samaritans, Jews,
Pagans and Romans lived.
1152
01:19:21,257 --> 01:19:25,344
And if they lived together,
at least for one century,
1153
01:19:26,679 --> 01:19:31,517
well maybe that can be a
lesson to this wounded world.
1154
01:19:32,561 --> 01:19:34,729
And I think for Megiddo,
1155
01:19:34,854 --> 01:19:37,064
this is maybe providence, I don't know.
1156
01:19:38,859 --> 01:19:41,236
- [Bear Grylls] The
Megiddo Mosaic is a story
1157
01:19:41,361 --> 01:19:43,529
of an unlikely community
1158
01:19:43,654 --> 01:19:46,407
drawn together because of a shared belief.
1159
01:19:47,326 --> 01:19:51,412
That belief was a bold
claim, that Jesus is God.
1160
01:19:52,414 --> 01:19:55,041
A statement that changed history.
1161
01:19:56,126 --> 01:20:00,922
And as the debate of Jesus
continues even after 2,000 years,
1162
01:20:01,047 --> 01:20:04,926
one thing is certain,
the story isn't over.
1163
01:20:05,051 --> 01:20:07,387
History is still speaking.
1164
01:20:07,512 --> 01:20:10,264
What will it reveal next?
1165
01:20:18,022 --> 01:20:21,442
[bright uplifting music]
1166
01:20:28,032 --> 01:20:32,287
[bright uplifting music continues]
1167
01:20:38,042 --> 01:20:42,297
[bright uplifting music continues]
1168
01:20:48,136 --> 01:20:52,391
[bright uplifting music continues]
1169
01:20:58,146 --> 01:21:02,401
[bright uplifting music continues]
1170
01:21:08,156 --> 01:21:12,369
[bright uplifting music continues]
1171
01:21:18,082 --> 01:21:22,337
[bright uplifting music continues]
1172
01:21:28,009 --> 01:21:32,264
[bright uplifting music continues]
1173
01:21:38,102 --> 01:21:42,022
[bright uplifting music slows]
1174
01:21:48,071 --> 01:21:52,284
[bright uplifting music continues]
1175
01:21:58,081 --> 01:22:02,336
[bright uplifting music continues]
1176
01:22:08,091 --> 01:22:12,346
[bright uplifting music continues]
1177
01:22:18,059 --> 01:22:22,314
[bright uplifting music continues]
1178
01:22:28,069 --> 01:22:31,989
[bright uplifting music rises]
1179
01:22:38,079 --> 01:22:42,334
[bright uplifting music continues]
1180
01:22:48,089 --> 01:22:52,344
[bright uplifting music continues]
1181
01:22:58,016 --> 01:23:02,269
[bright uplifting music continues]
1182
01:23:08,109 --> 01:23:12,364
[bright uplifting music continues]
1183
01:23:18,077 --> 01:23:22,289
[bright uplifting music continues]
1184
01:23:28,129 --> 01:23:32,884
[bright uplifting music continues]
1185
01:23:33,009 --> 01:23:36,887
[bright uplifting music fades]
90080
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