Archaeologists unveil ancient
church in Israel
Discovery made on prison grounds near
biblical site Armageddon
November 7, 2005
MEGIDDO
PRISON, Israel - Israeli prisoner Ramil Razilo was removing rubble from the planned site of a new prison ward when his shovel
uncovered the edge of an elaborate mosaic, unveiling what Israeli archaeologists said Sunday may be the Holy Land’s
oldest church.
The discovery
of the church in the northern Israeli town of Megiddo, near
the biblical Armageddon, was hailed by experts as an important discovery that could reveal details about the development of
the early church in the region. Archaeologists said the church dated from the third century, decades before Constantine
legalized Christianity across the Byzantine Empire.
“What’s
clear today is that it’s the oldest archaeological remains of a church in Israel,
maybe even in the entire region. Whether in the entire world, it’s still too early to say,” said Yotam Tepper,
the excavation’s head archaeologist.
Israeli
officials were giddy about the discovery, with Prime Minister Ariel Sharon calling the church “an amazing story.”
Vatican officials also hailed the find.
“A
discovery of this kind will make Israel more interesting to all Christians,
for the church all over the world,” said Archbishop Pietro Sambi, the Vatican envoy to Jerusalem. “If it’s true that the church and the beautiful mosaics are from the
third century, it would be one of the most ancient churches in the Middle East.”
Razilo,
who is serving a two-year sentence for traffic violations, was one of about 50 prisoners brought into the high-security Megiddo
Prison to help excavate the area before the construction of new wards for 1,200 Palestinian prisoners.
Razilo
was shocked to uncover the edge of the mosaic. The inmates worked for months to uncover all the parts of the mosaic —
the floor of the church, he said.
“We
continued to look and slowly we found this whole beautiful thing,” said Razilo, who used a sponge and a bucket of water
to clean dirt off the uncovered mosaics Sunday.
Two mosaics
inside the church — one covered with fish, an ancient Christian symbol that predated the widespread use of the cross
symbol — tell the story of a Roman officer and a woman named Aketous who donated money to build the church in the memory
“of the god, Jesus Christ.”
Pottery
remnants from the third century, the style of Greek writing used in the inscriptions, ancient geometric patterns in the mosaics
and the depiction of fish rather than the cross indicate that the church was no longer used by the fourth century, Tepper
said.
The church’s
location, not far from the spot where the New Testament says the final battle between good and evil will take place, also
made sense because a bishop was active in the area at the time, said Tepper, who works with the Israel Antiquities Authority.
The inscription,
which specifies that Aketous donated a table to the church, indicates the house of worship predated the Byzantine era, when
Christians began using altars in place of tables in their rituals, Tepper said. Remnants of a table were uncovered between
the two mosaics.
The building
— most of which was destroyed — also was not built in the Basilica style that was standard under the Byzantines,
he added.
Stephen
Pfann, a biblical scholar and professor at the Holy Land University, said the second and third centuries were transitional periods where people
sought to define their religious beliefs and modes of worship. Iconography and inscriptions found in Nazareth and Caperneum — places where Jesus lived — show that people went there
to worship, although most did so secretly.
“This
was a time of persecution and in this way it is quite surprising that there would be such a blatant expression of Christ in
a mosaic, but it may be the very reason why the church was destroyed,” Pfann said.
The dig
will continue as archaeologists try to uncover the rest of the building and its surroundings, including what they believe
could be a baptismal site, Tepper said.
Joe Zias,
an anthropologist and former curator with the antiquities authority, questioned the dating of the find, saying there is no
evidence of churches before the fourth century. The building may have been in use earlier, but most likely not for Christian
religious purposes, he said.
“They’re
going to be hard, hard-pressed to prove it ... because the evidence argues otherwise,” Zias said.