In 1969, archaeologists located the original Bethlehem on a roughly
circular mound, 770 meters above sea level and about 400 meters in
diameter (including its slopes). The present Church of the Nativity
stands on the western end of this tell, which extends to the area of
the Milk Grotto and the cemeteries. The mound drops steeply on all
sides we can see; on the west, however, the massive structures of the
church make the slope hard to gauge. We can see the formidable height
of the hill from Shepherds' Fields.
No spring has been found. Hence,
Bethlehem had to be "little"(Micah 5:2). It took the birth
of David to put it on the map.
The inhabitants must have relied on cisterns. Throughout the ages, as
the town developed, they kept hewing them from the waterproof chalk:
there are thousands in the larger town of today, including some that
are ancient. David, we recall, sent his heroes to bring him water from
the well at the gate (2
Sam. 23: 15 - 17). If this was a well, not a cistern (the Hebrew
can mean either), it has since disappeared without trace. The
so-called "David's well" (three cisterns, in fact) lies too far north
of his Bethlehem.
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