News Link • Archaeology
Ancient stones speak: Laodicean discovery validates biblical narrative and early Christian courage
• https://www.naturalnews.com, Ava GraceThe find in the biblical city of Laodicea provides tangible, stone-carved evidence for one of the seven churches addressed in the Bible's final book – moving its narrative from theological allegory into the realm of documented history. The excavation located in modern-day Denizli, Turkey centers on a structure known as a bouleuterion – a city's political and judicial heart.
This particular hall dating to approximately 50 BC was a monument to Roman imperial power, capable of seating 800 dignitaries, leaders and citizens. Its very purpose was the administration of Roman law and order. Yet etched into its fabric are the defiant symbols of a movement that Rome initially sought to crush: A cross and the Chi-Rho monogram.
The Chi-Rho is one of the earliest Christian symbols, formed by superimposing the first two letters of the word "Christ" in Greek (???????). To the modern eye, it may appear a simple monogram, but in the first few centuries after Christ, it was a potent and dangerous declaration of faith.
Its presence in a Roman government building is not a mark of original construction, but a powerful act of reclamation by later Christians likely added between the second and fourth centuries. This was an era when professing Christianity could mean death, making this public engraving a breathtaking risk and a testament to profound conviction.
The legacy of the "lukewarm" church of Laodicea
For students of the Bible, Laodicea is infamous. The Book of Revelation, written around 90 to 100 AD, contains a specific message from Jesus to the church of Laodicea, delivered through the apostle John. It rebukes the community for being "lukewarm, and neither cold nor hot," a spiritual apathy so distasteful that it would be "spued out of the mouth."
The historical context of Laodicea reveals why this find is so significant. The city was a major administrative and commercial hub within the Roman Empire for over 750 years, from around 133 BC until its decline in the 7th century AD.
The hall itself, with seats inscribed with the names of council members and a headless statue of the expansionist Emperor Trajan, underscores its importance. That Christians would later mark this seat of temporal power with their spiritual symbols signifies a dramatic shift in the city's identity, foreshadowing Christianity's eventual rise.




