Marty Minto's really been plugging this exhibit. It seemed interesting, but I hesitated to blog it due to some implicit Evangelical Protestant bias. However, Pittsburgh Catholic seems to think it's a good thing, so I'll give it the benefit of the doubt.
Dead Sea
Scrolls 'fragments' on exhibit
Tour includes other ancient biblical texts drawn from private collections
A remarkable array of ancient and antique biblical texts, including four fragments of the Dead Sea Scrolls, will be on exhibit at the Monroeville ExpoMart from Friday through June 20.
Fragments of Dead Sea Scrolls on view at ExpoMart
Documents written 5,000 years ago sit a mere arms-length away. Peruse a copy of temple-era biblical scrolls or skim through a page of the Guttenburg Bible.
Dead Sea Scrolls exhibit emphasizes Bible history
Early colonial printers in Philadelphia played a key role in Bible history in this country when they produced the first Bible in English in America in 1782, followed eight years later by the first Catholic Bible. The city�s printers also produced the first Hebrew Bible.
On a related note:
Local museum boasts rare finds
Buried in the basement of Pittsburgh Theological Seminary in Highland Park is a small archaeological treasure: The James L. Kelso Bible Lands Museum.
Funky Dung
















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