Anonymous ID: 096a19 April 17, 2022, 3:15 a.m. No.16091905   🗄️.is đź”—kun

By Madeleine Hubbard

Updated: April 16, 2022 - 10:30pm

Athird-century church that experts believe is the first in the world will be open to the public starting this summer after the prison on top of the site is relocated.

About a 20-minute drive south from Nazareth, Megiddo prison is located on top of the church and the first known mosaic dedicated to Jesus.

A Greek inscription "to the God Jesus Christ" was found in 2004 during archaeological excavations before a proposed prison expansion, The Times of Israel reported.

"Would you believe that the first church in the world is inside a prison?!" the Israeli Prison Service posted on Facebook, as translated, in an announcement about the prison's move.

The Megiddo Regional Council and the Israeli Prison Service met with the Israeli Antiquities Authority last month and decided to relocate the prison, according to officials.

The current prison will be moved so archaeologists can excavate the site further, and the church and its mosaic will be made into a tourist destination.

The mosaic is the first known time that Jesus was named as a god in Israel.

Other mosaics were also found, including patterns and a medallion of two fish.

The Ichthys, or fish, was a secret early Christian symbol used to recognize churches.

A total of three inscriptions in Greek were found in the church and deciphered by Israeli Antiquities Authority's Leah De Signi, the agency's website reports.

One says that a Roman army officer donated the money to build the mosaic. Another memorializes four women. The final mosaic faces west and features the name of a woman who dedicated an altar there to Jesus.

The archaeological evidence shows that Roman army officers were part of the early Christian community in the century before Emperor Constantine converted to Christanity.

The initial excavations took place from 2004 to 2008, with the help of more than 60 prisoners, The Jerusalem Post reported.

So far, the Antiquities Authority has discovered other building remains and alleys on the site, which experts have identified as Kfar Othnai, an ancient Jewish village and Roman army legion camp.

They have also uncovered an oil press, ritual baths, a stable, water cisterns and kitchen areas, among other things.

Yotam Tepper, who led the original dig, told the Post that many different communities lived together at the site.

"There was an early Christian community here way before Christianity became the official religion," he said. "Through the excavations, we learned about all the connections between Samaritans, Jews, pagans, Christians, soldiers and civilians: It is a microcosm."

He said, "To have neighborhoods of so many different religions and ethnicities in such geographical proximity to each other makes this very special."

The homes were built close to each other, and Tepper said he believes further excavations will allow archaeologists to learn more about how they interacted.

"We see their houses next to each other, which points to a good relationship," he observed, adding that he is eager to begin excavating again.

 

https://justthenews.com/nation/religion/earliest-known-mosaic-jesus-open-public-after-being-found-under-israeli-prison

Anonymous ID: 096a19 April 17, 2022, 3:21 a.m. No.16091916   🗄️.is đź”—kun

In the wake of Florida’s overwhelmingly popular law prohibiting classroom instruction on sexuality to students in kindergarten through the third grade, many Americans are honestly baffled by the outcry. Why do progressive educators, Disney, and the White House all insist that 5-year-olds must be able to learn about scientifically dubious beliefs such as fluid gender identities?

One controversial explanation for why American elites have gone all-in on defending the teaching of esoteric sexuality to younger children is that they are “groomers,” and the word is being thrown around casually as an online slur. Even if educators are not directly looking to abuse children themselves by sexualizing them at very young ages and enabling kids to hide their sexual expressions from their parents, they are priming them for sexual abuse by predatory adults.

Many progressives opposing Florida’s law resent being called groomers when they insist their goal is to help confused children. Even some conservatives have spoken out about the inherent unfairness of the label.

But even if the term is unfair, the current debate underscores a scary reality: Opposition to the sexual abuse of children is not a societal norm we should take for granted. Indeed, the sexualization and sexual abuse of children were commonplace in the ancient world. The rise of Christianity created moral intuitions we now take for granted: Children are uniquely vulnerable, and we must physically protect them and work to preserve their innocence.

Don’t take my word for it. The essential text here is When Children Became People: The Birth of Childhood in Early Christianity by the Norwegian theologian O.M. Bakke. Before Christ, Bakke observes, the ancient Greeks essentially created a societal hierarchy around their notions of “logos” or reason. Free male citizens were said to possess the most capacity for reason. Women and older men had less capacity, and children possessed even less rational capacity. Therefore, they were valued even less.

Indeed, unwanted children were frequently abandoned in the ancient world for trivial reasons, such as the desire to have a son instead of a daughter or in response to political or economic instability. The practice was known as expositio, where infants were simply left outside to die of thirst, exposure, or animal attacks.

And while most educated people possess some awareness that sex between adults and children occurred in ancient Greece and Rome, modern notions of cultural relativity often downplay the reality of what that meant. Children were often rescued from expositio by unscrupulous men or sold by their parents outright to become sex slaves. In ancient Rome, child brothels were a fact of life.

The Roman historian Suetonius records that emperor Tiberius taught his children to perform sex acts on himself, and it’s not at all clear whether Romans had specific moral objections to this. Bakke further notes that the Stoic philosopher Rufus openly muses whether a son who refuses to obey his father’s command to engage in sex with someone else is considered disobedient.

When Jesus said, “See that you do not despise one of these little ones. For I tell you that their angels in heaven always see the face of my Father in heaven,” he was proclaiming a powerful countercultural message. Children are as valuable in the sight of God as adults. Similarly, when Jesus said, “Anyone who will not receive the kingdom of God like a little child will never enter it,” He made it clear that children’s lack of corruption was something adults should preserve and emulate.

Christians responded to Christ’s message by building orphanages to save children from Roman depredations, and over time, strong Christian moral notions married to classical ideas about the development of reason at different ages created the concept of childhood we know today.

In our own time, a new breed of secular elites is inverting Christian norms about protecting the most vulnerable among us. The categories of people we understand need special protection under natural law—women, elderly people, the infirm, children, etc.—are being supplanted by catering to the needs of those who take on an “identity” that demands concessions. And in the case of people who are “gender diverse,” they are even demanding things that are grievously harmful to women and children.

For more than 2,000 years, Christians have been the driving force for protecting children. In an increasingly secular age, children will become more and more vulnerable. The left’s response to the Florida law is an ominous sign of things to come.

 

https://wng.org/opinions/protect-the-children-1650019354

Anonymous ID: 096a19 April 17, 2022, 3:25 a.m. No.16091921   🗄️.is đź”—kun   >>1924 >>1995

By Richard Moorhead

April 16, 2022 at 11:03am

Former President Donald Trump reacted to the crises facing the U.S. in a Wednesday interview with Fox News’ Sean Hannity.

Trump contrasted President Joe Biden’s governance with his own, offering policy solutions to energy and national security problems.

However, Trump brought up one approach to the presidency he’d fundamentally change in the event he returns to the White House.

Hannity asked Trump what he would “do differently a second time.”

“I think one of the things that I would do differently is I found the media is so corrupt that I would really not focus on them almost at all,” Trump said. “I would focus on getting the job done for the American people.

“You cater to the media, you deal with the media. They’re very dishonest. They write opposite things. They have sources that aren’t sources.”

“I think really I’d focus on getting the job done, getting our country back,” Trump said.

Trump has consistently signaled that he’s interested in becoming the second president in American history to serve non-consecutive terms in the White House. Democrat Grover Cleveland was the first at the end of the 19th century.

 

https://www.westernjournal.com/trump-reveals-1-thing-differently-re-elected-president/