PNW STAFF
From the crumbling walls of Jericho to Hezekiah's secret tunnel and the ancient stronghold of King David, the land of Israel is alive with stories the Bible recorded thousands of years ago--and archaeology is confirming them. Each stone, each passage, each artifact tells a story of faith, obedience, and God's providence in history.
Now, the Temple Mount Soil Project offers a tangible connection to this sacred past, allowing believers to hold in their hands pieces of the very soil where Solomon built God's temple and countless biblical events unfolded. By linking these discoveries to the soil itself, the project transforms ancient history into a living encounter with God's Word, inviting us not just to read about His acts, but to touch them. This is the only project in the world that will allow you to obtain real, authenticated soil from the Temple Mount.
Let's take a closer look.
1. The Walls of Jericho (Joshua 6)
We all know the story. Trumpets blared, the Israelites shouted, and the mighty walls of Jericho fell by the hand of God. But is there any proof?
Actually, yes. Archaeologists have uncovered a collapsed wall at ancient Jericho (known today as Tell es-Sultan) that dates precisely to the time of Joshua. What's more stunning is how the walls fell--outward, not inward, which is rare in ancient warfare. Typically, invaders would batter walls inward. But Jericho's walls seem to have tumbled outward, as if pushed from the inside--matching the Bible's account of a supernatural collapse.
Even more compelling? The city shows signs of intense fire and destruction immediately following the fall--just as described in Joshua 6.
This find stirs awe not just because of the archaeology, but because of what it says about obedience. The Israelites followed God's strange instructions with unwavering faith--marching, blowing trumpets, shouting. The result? God moved. Today, the ruins of Jericho still echo with that lesson: that victory doesn't always come through might, but through faith and obedience.
It's a testimony not only to God's power, but to His precision. The archaeological details confirm the biblical narrative with uncanny accuracy, leaving even secular researchers puzzled. Could a nomadic people thousands of years ago really fabricate such detailed records? Or is it more likely they were simply reporting what they witnessed--God doing the impossible?
And just a short distance from these biblical battlefields, the Temple Mount Sifting Project is uncovering even more history. With every stone sifted from the Temple Mount, we're reminded that the Bible's history is not just a story--it's a record. The Temple Mount Soil team offers believers a chance to hold that history in their hands with soil and artifact sets from this sacred site. You can support the ongoing work and connect with the land your faith was born in.
2. Hezekiah's Tunnel (2 Kings 20:20)
Picture this: an invading army is closing in, and your people's only water source is exposed and vulnerable. That's what King Hezekiah faced when Assyria threatened Jerusalem. So, he did something brilliant--he ordered a secret tunnel carved through solid rock to divert water safely inside the city walls.
You can still walk through that tunnel today. It stretches over 1,700 feet through the bedrock of Jerusalem, and the famous Siloam Inscription, found carved in its wall, describes the workers meeting in the middle--just as the Bible records.
This isn't just an ancient engineering marvel. It's a living testimony that a king named Hezekiah prepared for battle in faith, trusting God to do the rest. And He did--Jerusalem was miraculously spared.
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