The cover story in a recent issue of Biblical Archaeologist, published by the American Schools of Oriental Research, the leading American scholarly society of Biblical archaeologists, makes the startling suggestion that the famous Siloam Inscription, once thought to mark the completion of King Hezekiah’s eighth-century B.C.E. tunnel in Jerusalem, was in fact carved in the second century B.C.E. Because of the importance of this disclosure—if correct, it calls into question the date of the tunnel itself, because the inscription was carved in the tunnel wall to commemorate the tunnel’s completion—we checked with several experts in ancient inscriptions to determine […]