Yet another archaeological
find that confirms the Biblical narration of Christ's miracle healing of a born
blind man...
The Bible says in John chapter 9 that when Jesus saw the man born blind begging at the entrance into the Temple He “Spat on the ground and made clay of the spittle” and rubbed the clay on the man‘s eyes and told him to go and wash at the Pool of Siloam.
There is a clear message in
this act that would be familiar with the Pharisees and anyone observing,
especially anyone who knew the writings of the Rabbis. It was customary in the
Hebrew culture to use saliva to cure a wound, and it would be best if it were
the saliva of the first-born son of the father. Here are two quotes from the
Gemara, a rabbinical commentary on the Jewish Mishnah.
The Gemara says:
A man once came before Rabbi Chaninah and testified to him, “I am
sure that this man is the firstborn.” Chaninah asked, “How is it
that you are certain of this?” The man said, “Because when sick
people came to his father he would tell them, ‘Go to my son Shikchat.
He is firstborn and his spittle heals.’” … there is a tradition that
the spittle of the firstborn of a father heals.
(Talmud, b.Bava
Batra 126b)Another says:
The Gemara asks: But perhaps he is his mother‘s firstborn? The Gemara answers: It is learned as a tradition that the saliva of a father‘s firstborn heals this ailment but the saliva of a mother‘s firstborn does not heal this ailment.Rabbinical literature also taught that the Messiah‘s spit would heal someone who was blind from birth. And of course there is the prophecy of Isaiah in chapter 42 (below) which is one of the most famous prophecies about the Messiah, saying that the Messiah will be a Servant who will open the eyes of the blind: "I the Lord have called you in righteousness and I shall hold your hand and strengthen you, and have given you as a covenant to a people, for the light of Gentiles, to open the eyes of the blind, extract from bonds those who are bound, and from a home of imprisonment those who are sitting in darkness." (Is. 42:6-7) The Pool of Siloam - First Century Jerusalem Source:
https://www.bible-history.com/jerusalem/firstcenturyjerusalem_pool_of_siloam.html
The Pool of Siloam in the Second Temple Model at the Israel
Museum
SILOAM Josephus frequently mentions Siloam, placing it at the termination of the Valley of the Cheesemongers or the Tyropoeon Valley (Wars 5.4.1)-but outside the city wall (Wars 5.9.4)-where the old wall bent eastward (Wars 5.6.1), and facing the hill upon which was the rock Peristereon, to the E (Wars 5.12.2). From these descriptions it is quite evident that Josephus speaks of the same place as the present Birket Silwan, on the other side of the Kidron. Further, the evangelist's account (John 9:7) of the blind man sent by Jesus to wash at the pool of Siloam seems to indicate that it was near the Temple. It was from Siloam that water was brought in a golden vessel to the Temple during the feast of Tabernacles; our Lord probably pointed to it when He stood in the Temple and cried, "If any man is thirsty, let him come to Me and drink" (7:37).
Hezekiah’s
Tunnel
The pool of Siloam is fed by a conduit that is cut for a distance of 1,780 feet through solid rock, and which starts at the so-called Virgin's Spring (see En-rogel). The reason for which it was cut is unmistakable. The Virgin's Spring is the only spring of fresh water in the immediate neighborhood of Jerusalem, and in time of siege it was important that, while the enemy should be deprived of access to it, its waters should be made available for those who were within the city. But the spring rose outside the walls, on the sloping cliff that overlooks the valley of Kidron. Accordingly, a long passage was excavated in the rock, by means of which the overflow of the spring was brought into Jerusalem; the spring itself was covered with masonry, so that it could be "sealed" in case of war. That it was so sealed we know from 2 Chron 32:3-4. The following account of the channel and its inscription is from Major C. R. Conder (Palestine, pp. 27 ff.). "The course of the channel is serpentine, and the farther end near the pool of Siloam enlarges into a passage of considerable height. Down this channel the waters of the spring rush to the pool whenever the sudden flow takes place. In autumn there is an interval of several days; in winter the sudden flow takes place sometimes twice a day. A natural siphon from an underground basin accounts for this flow, as also for that of the 'Sabbatic river' in North Syria. When it occurs the narrow parts of the passage are filled to the roof with water.
The inscription records only the making of the tunnel; that it began at both
ends; that the workmen heard the sound of the picks of the other party and were
thus guided as they advanced, and that when they broke through they were only a
few feet apart. The character of the letters seems to indicate that the scribes
of Judah had been accustomed for a long time to write upon papyrus or parchment.
The Pool of Siloam in Jerusalem
Source:
https://www.bible-history.com/sketches/ancient/pool-siloam.html
The Pool of Siloam was the only permanent water source for the city of Jerusalem
in the first century AD. It was fed by the waters of the Gihon Spring diverted
through Hezekiah's Tunnel, built in the 8th century BC.
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Article published in English on: 26-03-2019. Last update: 5-8-2023. |