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Media
Contact:
Dr. S. Thomas
Parker, 919/513-2223
Mick Kulikowski,
News Services, 919/515-3470.
Oct.
31, 2002
New Artifacts
Bolster Case for Oldest Purpose-Built Christian Church
FOR
IMMEDIATE RELEASE
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Over
the last eight years, Dr. S. Thomas Parker, professor
of history at North Carolina State University,
and teams of graduate and undergraduate students
and Jordanians have worked to uncover the secrets
behind a mud-brick building discovered beneath
the swirling sands of Aqaba, Jordan.
Evidence
gathered in four trips to Aqaba prior to this
summer - including coins dating to around A.D.
300, shards of pottery, glass oil lamps, and a
cemetery, in addition to the building itself -
confirmed that he and his archeological teams
discovered the lost city of Aila within the modern
city of Aqaba, and led them to believe they may
also have found the world's oldest purpose-built
Christian church.
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NC
State professor Dr. S. Thomas Parker believes
this slab of sandstone was used as an offering
table in the oldest purpose-built Christian
church in history. A digital image of this photo
can be obtained by calling NC State News Services
at 919/515-3470 or newstips@ncsu.edu.
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Artifacts
unearthed this summer, including what Parker believes
is an offering table, add further credence to the claim
that the building was indeed a church. An offering table
holds the sacred bread and wine that is consumed during
a Christian service's celebration of the Eucharist.
The
sandstone table was found intact near the entrance of
the building, Parker recounts. It measures about 3.3
feet long and 2.5 feet wide, and has two slots on one
side that would allow it to be attached to a wall. Parker
believes the most likely scenario is that, after an
earthquake in A.D. 363 that led to the church's collapse
and abandonment, looters may have detached the table
from a wall and attempted to carry it out of the building.
But
the heavy sandstone object, which took four able-bodied
students to move, was likely dropped and left by the
looters, only to be buried under shifting sand until
its discovery this summer. "I'm more convinced
than ever that we've found an early church, possibly
the oldest purpose-built Christian church in history,"
Parker says. Due to its obvious historical significance,
the table remains in Aqaba.
Other
evidence supporting the hypothesis that the building
is a church include its orientation toward the east,
similar to later churches; the fact that the basic floor
plan matches that of later churches; and the preponderance
of artifacts inside the structure. For example, the
glass oil lamps that would have illuminated the church
- and which were used widely in later churches - are
concentrated inside the building's walls and rare elsewhere
at the Aila site.
While
older "house" churches have been identified,
Parker says the Aila church - which he proposes was
built around A.D. 300 - would be the oldest structure
built as a church. "The earliest Christians worshipped
in private homes because Christianity became an illegal
religion and was actively persecuted by the Roman government,"
Parker says.
But
the period from A.D. 260 to 303 was a time of "de
facto toleration" of Christianity, according to
Parker.
"The
anti-Christian laws were still on the books but not
enforced," Parker says. "Contemporary Christian
writers assert that many large and beautiful churches
were built during this time."
Yet
in A.D. 303, the Emperor Diocletian initiated the Great
Persecution, which lasted until 313 and returned to
the rigorous enforcement of anti-Christian laws. Most
of the churches built during the brief period of tolerance
were torn down, Parker says. Yet somehow the Aila church
survived.
"This
church may have been far enough away to avoid being
pulled down, since it was on the southeast periphery
of the Roman Empire," Parker says. He also notes
that the end of persecution after A.D. 313 would have
allowed the church to thrive until its devastation by
earthquake in A.D. 363.
The
discovery of the lost city of Aila, which served as
a thriving port on an arm of the Red Sea, and its antiquities
in present-day Aqaba has serious economic implications
in addition to the obviously important historical impact,
Parker says.
Aqaba,
with its coral reefs and pristine beaches, has been
one of Jordan's prime tourist spots. Now, after the
devastating, worldwide effects on tourism associated
with the Sept. 11 terrorist acts, the Jordanian government,
with assistance from the U.S. government and specialists
like Parker, is attempting to make historic preservation
as enticing to tourists as scuba-diving opportunities.
Jordan recently gave Aqaba special economic zone status,
offering tax incentives for companies to do business
there. The U.S. government recognized this zone in an
official act. As a result, goods purchased in Aqaba
are duty-free.
"The U.S. government sees the new Aqaba Special
Economic Zone as a model for helping private economic
growth in the developing world," Parker says. The
church also has serious implications for how Aila's
economy is viewed by historians. "To build a church
like this, there must have been substantial private
local resources available locally since there was obviously
no government support," Parker said. "This
implies the existence of a prosperous Christian community
at Aila with the economic wherewithal to build this
monumental public structure at the turn of the fourth
century."
Parker
is serving as an advisor in the creation of an archeological
park at Aqaba, including the erection of a permanent
shelter over the church and the creation of a local
museum.
Parker's
work at Aqaba has been supported by the National
Endowment for the Humanities, National
Geographic Society, Samuel
H. Kress Foundation, the Joukowsky
Family Foundation, Lockheed Martin Corporation Foundation,
and the Foundation
for Biblical Archaeology.
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kulikowski -
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