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  1. Jan 14, 2024 · Though the silver weight is uncertain, biblical texts give us an idea of a shekel’s purchasing power. A shekel was about a month’s wage for a common laborer. The Book of Exodus suggests a shekel was worth about 20 gerahs. It could buy one or two sheep, or purchase about 7 kilograms of flour.

  2. Sep 29, 2023 · Experts estimate the weight of a silver shekel to be around 11-12 grams. At today’s silver prices, that means that the conversion rate of a silver shekel to dollar is approximately $6-7. For example, in the book of Exodus, God instructs that a half shekel (around 6 grams of silver) should be donated for a census offering.

  3. See also Table 14-8 in The Bridge to the New Testament for a listing of this coin’s use in the New Testament. Jewish Mina. 1 Mina = 50 Shekels. A weight of any metal (gold, silver, bronze, iron, etc.). Not a coin. Originally 1 mina = 60 shekels. By the time of the inter-testament period, one mina = 50 shekels.

  4. Jan 14, 2024 · Silver held an integral role economically and spiritually in biblical history. A silver shekel could buy a decent amount of typical goods and represented a fair wage for average labor. Beyond purely economic value, silver carried symbolic importance and religious meaning thanks to its preciousness and purifying nature.

  5. In establishing the value of the shekel there is an additional complication in that the Bible mentions at least three kinds of shekels: in Genesis 23:16, a shekel of silver "at the going merchant's rate [over la-socher]; in Exodus 30:13, "shekel by the sanctuary weight [ha-kodesh]"; and in II Samuel 14:26, "shekels by the king's stone [b'even ha-melech]," that is, shekels stamped by the royal ...

  6. How much? The biblical terms “shekels” and “talents” may be unfamiliar, but their uses in ancient times are perfectly up-to-date even today: public-works funding, purchases, fees and bribes. Originally shekels and talents were units of weight. Stone weights in multiples or fractions of a shekel were used to weight quantities of gold or silver. The shekel in Israelite times averaged ...

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  8. A half shekel is worth anywhere from $500 to $2,000, while shekel coins from the time of Jesus usually have a value of $2,000 and up. The following video includes each of the coins from Jesus’ time mentioned above, plus other coins mentioned in the Bible: Joshua McMorrow-Hernandez ( Senior Editor ) I’m the Coin Editor here at TheFunTimesGuide.