Once in a while a book comes along that is too much fun to put down. This is one of those books. Allan Chapman is in fact an Oxford professor, teaching the history of science, and it shows throughout this book as he shows how scientific discoveries helped make possible the advancement of the fledgling science of Biblical archaeology. The book focuses on major figures who did what can be called adventure tourism to exotic Middle Eastern places, like the Pyramids in Egypt or the rose city of Petra in Jordan, and Chapman even explains the rise of Biblical tourism for the ordinary folks at the hands of Thomas Cook. Along the way we meet real scholars, quacks, interesting lay people, royalty and much more. Here is the description of the book on Amazon.
I have a few small quibbles with this enjoyable book (which is very well written). One of the points Chapman emphasizes multiple times is that what archaeology does is make plausible the descriptions of the social setting and culture and religion of the figures in the Bible, without proving the Bible to be historically true. While this is large right about what archaeology does— it helps us with context of the stories in the Bible. But occasionally that is not all. For instance, occasionally there are inscriptions that speak about figures in the Biblical text that not only confirm they existed, but confirm what the Bible says about them. I’m thinking for instance about the Erastus the aedile inscription in the ground at Corinth, and what Rom. 16 says about this same person. Or the story about governor of Cyprus Sergius Paulus in Acts, which various inscriptions and literary sources confirm was a real person, who really sent Paul to his hometown of Pisidian Antioch (and see my post about the honorific inscription about that governor found at Pisidian Antioch by Mark Wilson and myself). Here is a picture of the celebration of this find at the little museum in that town….
My other small quibble about this book is that it desperately needed a chapter about the greatest Biblical scholar of the Victorian Era, J.B. Lightfoot, who was one of the first to take advantage and incorporate the new archeological finds in the Lands of the Bible into his commentaries and essays. He was the perfect illustration of how Victorian Biblical scholars kept up with the changing nature of archaeology and its relevance to understanding of both the OT and NT, as the three volumes I collected from his handwritten notes and had published by InterVarsity Press over a decade ago show. I was also surprised that the famous illustrations of the Holy Land by David Roberts from the 1840s did not figure in this book.
It’s not often that what could be counted as well-written pleasure reading, is also an excellent example of a very educational and enlightening study, but this book by Prof. Chapman is such a book.