Visionary Leader, CEO, Chairman - Governing Board, Founder and Chancellor of Biblical University
Evidence for Bible's Tower of Babel Discovered
The
Smithsonian Channel shows in the first episode of its documentary series
"Secrets" the emergence of new "very compelling" evidence that the
Tower of Babel, as mentioned in the book of Genesis in the Old
Testament, actually existed. "Biblical scholars have long debated
whether the Tower of Babel really existed. Now, a remarkable stone
tablet never before shown on film appears to settle that question," the
Smithsonian magazine says, featuring the video on its website.
The
tablet, which dates to about 600 B.C., is from the private collection
of Norwegian businessman Martin Schøyen, and it includes the clearest
image ever found of the Great Ziggurat of Babylon, according to Andrew
George, professor of Babylonian history at the University of London, who
also says in the video that it carries an illustration which looks like
a pyramid-like structure, with a depiction of King Nebuchadnezzar II,
the ruler of Babylon from 605-562 B.C.
Genesis 11:4 says, "Come,
let us build ourselves a city and a tower with its top in the sky, and
so make a name for ourselves; otherwise we shall be scattered all over
the Earth."
The
following verses state: "But the Lord came down to see the city and the
tower the people were building. The Lord said, "If as one people
speaking the same language they have begun to do this, then nothing they
plan to do will be impossible for them. Come, let us go down and
confuse their language so they will not understand each other. So the
Lord scattered them from there over all the Earth, and they stopped
building the city. That is why it was called Babel — because there the
Lord confused the language of the whole world. From there the Lord
scattered them over the face of the whole Earth."
The Schøyen Collection says on its website that
the ziggurat in Babylon was originally built around the time of
Hammurabi 1792–1750 B.C. "The restoration and enlargement began under
Nabopolassar, and was finished after 43 years of work under
Nebuchadnezzar II, 604-562 B.C."
It adds, "Here we have for the
first time an illustration contemporary with Nebuchadnezzar II's
restoring and enlargement of the Tower of Babel, and with a caption
making the identity absolutely sure. We also have the building plans, as
well as a short account of the reconstruction process. The text also
mentions the restoration of the E-ur-imin-anki ziggurat in Borsippa,
once believed by some scholars to be the Tower of Babel."
It goes
on to explain the text mentioning Nebuchadnezzar mobilizing workforces
from all over the then known world to complete the Tower of Babel,
people speaking a confusion of all the known languages at the time,
raises a question.
"Did God really come down from Heaven to Earth
to interfere in a building enterprise by creating language confusion as
stated in the Bible? The account in Genesis 11 could, according to the
text, have an entirely different and practical background: Obviously all
the tens of thousands of workers speaking different languages could not
communicate with each other, and this caused a total confusion at this
huge building project, which lasted 43 years.
"Neither the
Babylonian gods nor Yahweh needed to come down from Heaven to interfere
and cause language confusion. And most importantly, the Jews taken into
captivity in 586 B.C. after destruction of Jerusalem were there in
Babylon and observed the building of the Tower and the confusion. So,
when the Genesis text was composed by the Jews during the Babylonian
exile and after return to their homeland in 539 B.C., this down to Earth
chaotic building story had to be put in a theological context, and
hence the present text in Genesis 11:1–9. Also note the link to Acts 2
where the Holy Spirit reverses the language confusion and makes everyone
understand each other."