Latest Resources

Methods of Trade
Donkeys or oxen? Rivers or seas? See what the logistics of trade were in biblical times.Throughout the biblical period, trading was usually conducted at the town gate or near the entrance to towns. As trading became more complex, market stalls were set up in central parts of cities. Traveling merchants from other nations also traded their goods in these marketplaces.…
READ MORE
Local Trading and Local Economies
What did average people bring to the market in biblical times? Find out here.Ancient Palestine was largely an agricultural society. People traded farm products and animals from their flocks in the marketplaces. Farmers brought wheat and barley, grapes and wine, olives and olive oil, figs, dates, and nuts to markets in nearby towns and cities. Herders brought milk, cheese, and…
READ MORE
Improvements in Transportation
Trading on foot is a tough business – you can only exchange what you carry. See how improved transportation changed the trade landscape.As trading between regions and countries became more important, so did travel. In fact, trade and travel link so completely that discussing one involves discussing the other.Improvements in transportation made it easier for merchants to trade in distant…
READ MORE
Trade
The nation of Israel was a strategic trade location. Check out what they traded and how trading shaped the culture of the Ancient Near East.The earliest Israelites traded in animals, milk, cheese, and wool. Even after they settled in Canaan, the Israelites were farmers and herders, but few were professional merchants. However, unlike more isolated areas of the world, the…
READ MORE
Early Israelites
Most of the Israelites were nomads. Find out where and how they traveled in the Ancient Near East. Before they settled in Canaan, the earliest ancestors of the Israelites were nomads, which means that they lived by moving herds of sheep and goats from place to place to find good pastures. For example, the Bible tells us how Abraham moved…
READ MORE
Early Travel
In the beginning . . . human societies interacted with each other. See how they did it.No clear evidence has been found to show how the earliest human beings traveled. Archaeologists date the earliest evidence of any kind of travel from the end of the “Ice Age,” about 40,000 years ago. Evidence suggests that some kind of trading occurred in…
READ MOREGod’s Word heals and brings hope
Your generosity will give the gift of Scripture to people worldwide who need its life-changing message.
