Over $500 million worth of checks were found at a holy site in Jerusalem.

The discovery was made on Wednesday by worshippers at Jerusalem's Western Wall.

An envelope was found resting on a wall with 507 checks that were each worth a million dollars.

Shmuel Ben Ruby, a spokesperson for the Jerusalem police, said the worshipper took the checks to a lawyer, who turned them over to the authorities' lost and found unit, according to The Jerusalem Post.

The checks were brought to the police who are still trying to determine who they belong to and whether they are authentic.

It is likely that the checks are not worth any actual money.

Rabbi Shmuel Rabinovitch, the overseer of the Western Wall, doubted their authenticity and said that even if they are, he would be unable to cash them. The checks were signed but not addressed to anyone in particular. A majority of them were from Nigeria but there were also some from various places in the United States, Europe, and Asia.

According to Yahoo News, Rabbi Rabinovitch said that the checks have more symbolic value and that they were likely left because the person "wanted to give all they had to the Creator of the universe."

This isn't the first time checks have been left at Jerusalem's Western Wall.

Previous checks similar to the ones recently found were left at the wall along with charity boxes by worshippers within past years.

While investigators are searching for answers to the checks authenticity, authorities are also waiting to see if anyone comes to the downtown Jerusalem police station to claim them.

The Western Wall is one of the holiest site in Judaism and is a remnant of an ancient Jewish temple. Worshippers routinely leave notes and prayers in the cracks found along the ancient structure.