Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Heavenly unearthing

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Heavenly unearthing

    Posted on Sat, Jan. 27, 2007

    Heavenly unearthing

    Self-styled legend chaser sees Scripture as one big archaeological road map
    By Mark I. Pinsky

    THE ORLANDO SENTINEL

    ORLANDO, Fla. - Bob Cornuke, the evangelical Indiana Jones, admits he comes
    to biblical archaeology from an unlikely background. This controversial
    researcher and author tells audiences he started his professional life as a
    SWAT-team member and crime-scene investigator for the Costa Mesa, Calif., Police
    Department.
    On second thought, he tells visitors at the Holy Land Experience theme park
    in Orlando, Fla., maybe it wasn't all that unlikely.
    "I learned I had a skill: researching and collecting little scraps of
    evidence," he says. "God just gave me this ability. It was a gift."
    After leaving police work, Cornuke, 55, was drawn into archaeology by Apollo
    15 astronaut Jim Irwin, who asked Cornuke to join Irwin's High Flight
    Foundation and the search for Noah's Ark.
    Connecting with Irwin "changed the direction of my life," Cornuke says.
    While working with someone who walked -- and drove -- on the moon, "the doors
    would open up."
    The notion of a swashbuckling, Bible-believing archaeologist who "proves"
    the truth of the Bible is as attractive to many evangelical Christians as the
    Indiana Jones movies have been to the general public. So attractive that Tim
    LaHaye, co-author of the best-selling Left Behind novels, has launched a
    successful new fictional series with just such a character, called BabylonRising.
    The novel's non-fiction counterpart tells the audiences at Holy Land's
    Shofar Auditorium that he uses the Bible as "a road map and a compass. We have to
    go back to the source. The word of God is never wrong. Archaeology can only
    reveal truths that are already existing in the Bible."
    Because faith is defined as belief in things unseen, a larger question is
    whether it's possible -- or necessary -- to integrate science and Scripture.
    "Absolutely," Cornuke says. "Everybody wants a natural explanation for a
    supernatural event. That is empowering to them because it can be measured,and
    science abhors a mystery."
    Cornuke, the author of half a dozen books chronicling his adventures
    searching for biblical sites, has sparked controversy along the way because his
    conclusions are often at odds with those of traditional archaeologists.
    He thinks the sacred peak of the Exodus is in Saudi Arabia, not the Sinai
    peninsula. Noah's Ark, he thinks, came to rest on a mountain in Iran, rather
    than on Mount Ararat in Turkey. Furthermore, St. Paul's boat was wrecked off a
    reef along the southern shore of the Mediterranean island of Malta, rather
    than in a bay on the northern shore. And he thinks the Ark of the Covenant
    exists and might be in the Ethiopian highlands.
    In fact, this week Cornuke was scheduled to leave on an expedition to
    Ethiopia, his 10th trip to the area.
    Dan Hayden, director of Holy Land, introduces Cornuke as someone who "is
    causing quite a stir" with his claims.
    Others, especially researchers with formal academic training in archaeology
    -- which Cornuke lacks -- are more critical of his methods.
    William Dever, retired biblical archaeologist at the University of Arizona
    and a recognized authority in the field, has called Cornuke a charlatan,
    telling the San Diego Union- Tribune that Cornuke wouldn't know Mount Sinai if he
    "stumbled on it."
    Cornuke is not troubled by such criticism or claims by some that there is no
    factual basis for biblical stories such as Noah's Ark.
    "Scientists have an anti- supernatural bias, by and large," he says.
    "Science is a great tool for understanding these great mysteries, but science can't
    prove God or disprove God. We have finite minds trying to comprehend an
    infinite God."
    However, criticism also has come from researchers who are evangelicals and
    who believe in biblical inerrancy, such as James Hoffmeier, author of Ancient
    Israel in Sinai: The Evidence for the Authenticity of the Wilderness
    Tradition.
    Hoffmeier, who calls Cornuke a dilettante, says Cornuke "wraps himself in
    the banner of taking the Bible literally when it's convenient to his theory,
    and in other places he does not take it literally."
    Cornuke, who bills himself as an "explorer/apologist" and "The Legend
    Chaser," will return to Orlando in February to speak at Holy Land's Annual
    Bible
    Conference. He is planning to move his ministry, the Base Archaeology Search
    and Exploration Institute, from Colorado to Orlando, where he will be a
    "minister-at-large" with Holy Land.
    As he lectures, Cornuke holds a Bible in his hands, citing passages from
    Exodus and Kings to bolster his views, and setting it aside only to hold up an
    artifact. He also quotes Beach Boys lyrics to make a point about
    interpretation and context.
    And he clearly strikes a chord with his audience.
    "I think it just confirms that the best road map is God's word," says Jeff
    Siegel of Lawrenceville, Ga. "Cornuke used God's word to find these places.
    The word of God showed him where to find these places, and when he went there
    the things that he found confirmed that these were the very places that the
    Bible talked about."
    Cornuke never went to church until he was 12, and then went by himself on
    his bicycle. But Sunday worship was not a spiritual experience. It was the
    search for Mount Sinai in Saudi Arabia that transformed him. In 1988, standing
    where he believed Moses spoke with God, was also spiritually transforming.
    "It changed my life," he recalls. "I had an epiphany at that moment. I was
    there -- and it changed me."
    It also brought Cornuke into the spotlight. He and Montana millionaire Larry
    Williams had slipped into the country using forged documents, claiming a
    connection with the Saudi royal family. When they were captured and imprisoned
    by soldiers, who suspected them of being Israeli spies, Cornuke pretended to
    be a doctor.
    The adventure was chronicled in the 1997 best-seller, The Gold of Exodus:
    The Discovery of the True Mount Sinai by New York Times reporter Howard Blum,
    and optioned to Hollywood.
    But for Cornuke, who wrote his own version of that adventure, the search for
    Mount Sinai also had a downside.
    "I did cut corners," he admits. "I snuck in. I forged documents. I regret
    that more than anything I've ever done."
    But Cornuke has no regrets about the course he has taken since.
    "Scripture is a treasure chest of clues," he says.


    © 2007 Lexington Herald-Leader and wire service sources. All Rights Reserved.
    http://www.kentucky.com
Working...
X