How Archaeology Helps Us Trust the Bible

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You can read it yourself, follow along, or just listen.


“The stones will cry out.”
Luke 19:40

When people read the Bible, some wonder something important.

Is the Bible just stories, or is it real history?

Bible Explorers love discovering the answer.

Archaeology is the study of things people left behind long ago.

Archaeologists dig in the ground and find cities, buildings, tools, and writings from the past.

These discoveries help us learn how people really lived.

And many times, archaeology matches what the Bible says.

The Bible talks about real places.

Jerusalem.
Bethlehem.
Jericho.
Nazareth.

These are not made up cities.

People can visit them today.

The Bible also names real kings and rulers.

For a long time, some people thought certain biblical leaders never existed.

Then archaeologists discovered inscriptions with their names on them.

The Bible was right all along.

Archaeology does not prove God.

But it does show something important.

The Bible fits real history.

It knows the world it describes.

The customs, the cities, and the people match what archaeologists find.

That means the Bible is not a fairy tale.

It is rooted in the real world.

Sometimes discoveries surprise people.

Things once doubted later turn out to be true.

That teaches Bible Explorers something important.

Just because something has not been found yet does not mean it never existed.

Archaeology is still uncovering new discoveries every year.

The Bible does not need archaeology to be true.

But archaeology often supports it.

Each discovery reminds us that Scripture speaks honestly about the past.

The Bible invites investigation.

It is not afraid of questions.

When Bible Explorers learn about archaeology, we see that faith is not blind.

It is grounded.

The Bible connects to real people, real places, and real history.

That makes it trustworthy.


Think About It

• Why is it important that the Bible talks about real places?

• How can discoveries help us understand the past?

• Why do you think archaeology often matches the Bible?

• What does it tell you about God that His Word fits history?

• How can learning history strengthen faith?


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