Biblical Archaeology Daily
Biblical Archaeology Society
 
A “Jesus Hideout” in Jordan
Biblical Scholar James Tabor Looks From the Gospels to Wadi  el-Yabis


 
_James Tabor_ (http://www.biblicalarchaeology.org/author/james-dt/)    •  
09/05/2012 

 
In 1999, at the very first Biblical Archaeology Society “Bible and  
Archaeology Fest” held that year in Boston, I gave a lecture titled “_A  Jesus 
Hideout in Jordan: Texts, Geography, and Archaeology  Converge_ 
(http://store.bib-arch.org/A-Jesus-Hideout-in-Jordan/productinfo/9HB12/) .” If 
I am not 
mistaken, that lecture has proven to be the  most popular of the hundreds I 
have done in Biblical Archaeology Society  seminars over the past 20 years. The 
academic paper, _linked  here_ 
(http://jamestabor.com/2012/06/23/sbl-paper-on-wadi-el-yabis-and-cherith-traditions-in-the-gospel-of-john/)
 , that I 
read at the Society of Biblical Literature annual meeting last  year, offers 
the technical underpinnings of my basic theory and proposal. I  thought I 
would offer here a less technical overview of my analysis on this  subject.  
All our gospels are theological by definition. That is one solid  result of 
the past 100 years of critical-historical work on these texts.  However, it 
has generally been acknowledged that the gospel of John, in contrast  to 
our three Synoptic gospels–Mark, Matthew, and Luke–is the most explicitly  
theological, especially in the long “red letter” sections where Jesus is  
represented as giving extended teaching about topics such as the spiritual  “
birth from above,” receiving eternal life, a spiritual resurrection, his  “
incarnation,” and mystically consuming his “flesh” and “blood.” Consequently 
 John is usually dated late, even into the 2nd century CE, and he is 
usually  regarded as much further removed from the “historical Jesus” than the 
Synoptics,  and thus less useful for doing serious historical work on Jesus as 
we might  imagine him to have been. 
Nonetheless some scholars have begun to reexamine the underlying narrative  
framework found in the gospel of John. John provides details about both  
chronology and geography that are most intriguing. In contrast, Mark has few  
chronological markers, so much so that halfway through his account (chapter 
8 of  16 chapters total), Jesus is already on his final journey to Jerusalem 
where he  is crucified. What goes on before that, essentially Jesus’ entire 
preaching  career, narrated in chapters 1-8, is presented in a rapid and 
sweeping flow of  events with no indication as to whether the time involved 
was days, weeks,  months, or even years. In my book, _The  Jesus Dynasty_ 
(http://jesusdynasty.com/) , I adopted the three and one-half year 
chronological 
 scheme of the gospel of John (Fall, 26 CE to Spring, 30 CE) and attempted 
to  understand Mark’s fast paced narrative in that light.
 
I have posted a useful document charting the narrative movement in the 
gospel  of John _here _ 
(http://religiousstudies.uncc.edu/people/jtabor/johnnarrative.html) on my UNC 
Charlotte Web site. It is interesting that Mark 
provides a few  “hooks” into John’s framework. The most obvious is the sequence 
of events with  Jesus feeding a crowd, walking on the Sea of Galilee, and 
teaching in the area  of Capernaum, found in Mark 6 and John 6. According to 
John’s account this is  around the time of a 2nd Passover, which would be the 
spring of the year 29 CE.  The most interesting and intriguing of these “
hooks,” however, is the short  statement in Mark 10:1: 
“And he left there (Capernaum) and went to the region of Judea and  beyond 
the Jordan, and crowds gathered to him again; and  again, as his custom was, 
he taught them.”
Until the last week of Jesus’ life when Jesus goes to Jerusalem, Mark sets  
his entire rapid-paced narrative around the Sea of Galilee, but here he 
seems to  at least be aware of the tradition that we find elaborated in John, 
that Jesus  made these excursion-like forays south to Judea and east beyond 
the Jordan.  Jesus’ move across the Jordan River during the final months of 
his life is  something that really caught my attention in the spring of 1992. 
I was teaching  my standard New Testament/Christian Origins class and we 
were working through  the ending of the gospel of John when these words jumped 
off the page at me: 
“He went away again across the Jordan to the place  where John at first 
baptized, and there he remained. And many came to  him…” (John 10:40)
I was showing the students how that verse tied into the one in Mark, and  
that, according to the gospel of John, Jesus had made a quick trip to 
Jerusalem  at Hanukkah (December, 29 CE), and that Mark at least mentions him 
going 
“to the  region of Judea” but with no details, but we know from the gospel 
of John that  Jesus’ life was actually in danger and he was in need of a 
safe place to hide  until he decided to make his final moves in Jerusalem the 
following Spring. But  what caught my attention that day was John’s 
reference to a specific  place. I had never noticed that before. I remembered 
that  
earlier in his gospel John had actually pinpointed that very place with this 
 description: 
“John also was baptizing at Aenon near Salim, because there were many  
pools there; and people came and were baptized” (John  3:22).

 
We pulled out the Oxford map of Galilee in the time of Jesus and quickly  
located Aenon near Salim, just south of Scythopolis, or Beth Shean today.  
Directly across the Jordan from that spot I noticed two things. There was a  “
Wadi” or ravine named Cherith, and just to the north the Decapolis town of  
Pella. Both rang different bells in my head. Cherith, of course, was the 
ravine  where Elijah hid and was fed by the ravens when he fled from king Ahab 
and queen  Jezebel when his life was in danger (1 Kings 18:1-7). And Pella 
was the  traditional location where the followers of Jesus fled around 68 CE 
when  Jerusalem was put under siege by the Romans prior to its destruction. 
Scholars  have always had problems imagining this flight of the Nazarenes, 
led by Shimon  bar Clophas (whom I argue in The Jesus Dynasty is Jesus 
brother Shimon  rather than his cousin), to a pro-Roman Hellenistic city such 
as 
Pella and any  number have questioned the historical probability of this 
tradition. However,  recent research, by Houwelingen_*_ 
(http://www.biblicalarchaeology.org/daily/biblical-sites-places/biblical-archaeology-places/a-“
jesus-hideout”-in-jordan/#note01)   and others, in my view at least, has shown 
the tradition is most likely  reliable. I have also become convinced that 
perhaps the Pella tradition referred  to the area of Pella, not the city 
itself. 
The Wadi Cherith is just six  kilometers to the south, literally part of 
the “precincts” of what could be  called Pella. In a matter of minutes it all 
began to fit together.
 
 
The Wadi Cherith, across the Jordan, would have been remembered as a “place 
 of safety” for Elijah. Although some have located the Wadi Cherith to the 
south,  the weight of evidence favors the northern Gilead location. It fits 
the  description in 1 Kings 17 precisely, and the site of Jabesh-gilead (Abu 
el  Kharaz) as well as Tishbe has been located in the Wadi. If Jesus also 
went  “across the Jordan,” from Aenon near Salim, that would put him right 
into the  Wadi Cherith, and thus provide an explanation for this odd choice 
of location  for his flight. Finally, nearly 40 years later, his followers, 
some of whom  would have been with him in the winter of 29 CE flight, would 
have returned to  that area. 
I had been to Jordan before but only to see the standard tourist sites. I 
had  no idea what the Wadi Cherith might be like. On a modern map of Jordan I 
saw the  name used today: Wadi el-Yabis, which actually connects to the 
name  Cherith (“to cut”), referring to the rugged rock-cut nature of the Wadi. 
I  decided to make a trip to Jordan as soon as the semester was out and in 
June of  that year I found myself hiking with some students and friends deep 
into the  reaches of Wadi el-Yabis. 
What we found was quite amazing. The Wadi was incredibly rugged with water  
falls, pools, and surrounding high cliffs on both sides, dotted with 
abundant  caves. We searched some of the caves and found early Roman period 
pottery shards  in abundance.
 
 
 
I asked the extraordinarily gifted artist _Balage Balogh_ 
(http://archaeologyillustrated.com/) , who specializes in  archaeological 
drawings and 
painting, and who was doing illustrations for my  book, The Jesus Dynasty, to 
create a scene that would portray Jesus and  his small band of followers living 
in this Wadi that last winter of Jesus’ life.  He took great care in the 
details, as he always does, wanting to get the  clothing, hairstyles, and other 
things just right. The result, in color, is  quite stunning and it helps 
one to suddenly imagine an amazingly moving scene  from the life of Jesus that 
has never until now been imagined. I have called it  “The Last Winter.” I 
wanted to share it with my readers here. 
Based on the traditions of both Mark and John regarding Jesus’ excursion  “
beyond the Jordan,” as well as the Pella flight tradition, I am convinced 
that  the location of Wadi el-Yabis as a “Jesus Hideout” has good historical 
 probability. If John’s chronology is correct this is where Jesus and his  
entourage spent the last winter of his life, from December until early 
April,  when he hears of Lazarus being deathly ill and is summoned by Mary and 
Martha of  Bethany to come to the Jerusalem area. It would also be the 
location where the  band of fleeing Nazarenes went in 68 CE as the Roman laid 
siege 
to Jerusalem. A  Wadi el-Yabis Survey Project (G. Palumbo, J. Mabry, I. 
Kuijt) begun in the 1990s  has identified a number of Late Bronze Age and Early 
Iron Age sites but a  specific concentration on potential early Roman 
habitation of the caves south of  Pella remains to be done. I have been back to 
Wadi-el Yabis four times and we  have surveyed the caves and found 1st 
century CE Roman pottery is quite  abundant. Perhaps in the future more work 
can 
be done here.
 
 
(http://dbcfaa79b34c8f5dfffa-7d3a62c63519b1618047ef2108473a39.r81.cf2.rackcdn.com/wp-content/uploads/Balage-Wadi-el-Yabis-Watermarked.jpg)
   
Artist Balage Balogh portrays Jesus and his small band  of followers living 
in this Wadi that last winter of Jesus’ life
 
 
========================
 
 
Dr. James Tabor is Chair of the Department of Religious  Studies at the 
University of North Carolina at Charlotte where he is professor  of Christian 
origins and ancient Judaism. Since earning his Ph.D. at the  University of 
Chicago in 1981, Tabor has combined his work on ancient texts with  extensive 
field work in archaeology in Israel and Jordan, including work at  Qumran, 
Sepphoris, Masada, Wadi el-Yabis in Jordan. Over the past decade he has  
teamed up with with Shimon Gibson to excavate the “John the Baptist” cave at  
Suba, the “Tomb of the Shroud” discovered in 2000, and ongoing work at Mt 
Zion.  Most recently, Tabor, along with Rami Arav, have been involved in the  
re-exploration of two tombs in East Talpiot; the controversial “Jesus tomb” 
and  a related tomb less than 200 feet away that has ossuary inscriptions 
Tabor and  Arav interpret as Judaeo-Christian. Among his publications are 
Things  Unutterable (1985), A Noble Death (1992) Why Waco: Cults and  the 
Battle for Religious Freedom in America (1995) and The Jesus  Dynasty: A New 
Historical Investigation of Jesus, His Royal Family, and the  Birth of 
Christianity (Simon & Schuster, 2006). His most recent book,  co-authored with 
Simcha 
Jacobovici, is The Jesus Discovery: The New  Archaeological Find that 
Reveals the Birth of Christianity (Simon &  Schuster, 2012). He has a new book, 
Paul and Jesus: How the Apostle  Transformed Christianity (Simon & Schuster), 
coming out in November,  2012. You can find links to all of Dr. Tabor’s web 
pages, books, and projects at  _jamestabor.com_ 
(http://www.jamestabor.com/) .  

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