Celebrated "Scholar jw":
HellriderJosephus supports 607 by the very fact that he supports the interpretation of the seventy years by celebrated WT scholars. Josephus also disagrees with the accepted Neo Babylonian chronology because he shows different regnal years for the Babylonian rulers so this weakens such chronology.
He does? Show me where! I bet you can`t. But I can show you where Josephus lists a chronology that would set the return of the exiles to, oh I don`t know, somewhere in the 400s bc. This is because Josephus was way off when it came to Babylonian chronology, and his chronology doesn`t support the "WT chronology", on the contrary, it disagrees with both 607 and 587. From "Antiquities of the jews", book X, chapter 11:
NOW when king Nebuchadnezzar had reigned forty-three years, he ended his life.
But now, after the death of Nebuchadnezzar, Evil-Merodach his son succeeded in the kingdom, who immediately set Jeconiah at liberty, and esteemed him among his most intimate friends. He also gave him many presents, and made him honorable above the rest of the kings that were in Babylon; for his father had not kept his faith with Jeconiah, when he voluntarily delivered up himself to him, with his wives and children, and his whole kindred, for the sake of his country, that it might not be taken by siege, and utterly destroyed, as we said before. When Evil-Mcrodach was dead, after a reign of eighteen years, Niglissar his son took the government, and retained it forty years, and then ended his life; and after him the succession in the kingdom came to his son Labosordacus, who continued in it in all but nine months; and when he was dead, it came to Baltasar, who by the Babylonians was called Naboandelus; against him did Cyrus, the king of Persia, and Darius, the king of Media, make war; and when he was besieged in Babylon, there happened a wonderful and prodigious vision.
How does this get us to a 70-year interpretation? Just these three kings reigns, according to Josephus for 101 years! Saying that Josephus "supports the 607-date" is ridicolous. Just because he doesn`t support the 587-date, that doesn`t mean that he supports neither the 607-date, nor the Societys interpretation of the "70 years of desolation". If 99.999% of all historians claim that Jerusalem was destroyed in either 586, 587 or 588, and one (self-proclaimed) historian says it happened in 607, the 607-guys date is not supported just because there is another guy that says it happened sometime in the, oh I don`t know 650s bc? (if we are to accept the 539-date as the end, and the lengths of reigns that Josephus gives). If you are unable to understand that, then you must be completely ignorant.
Hellrider
So what! All dates in any chronology are of necessity, derived dates. There is no fantastic irony in this unless you are completely ignorant. The fact of the matter is that we have a selected pivotal date from secular sources, 539 BCE. Thereupon, another derived date in harmony with secular and biblical evidence is calculated to be 537 BCE for the Return of the Jews from Exile. Counting back the exilic period of the biblical seventy years establishes the derived date of 607 BCE as the beginning of the Exile and the Fall of Jerusalem. This calculated and derived methodology is irrefutable.
scholar JW
Looool. You just don`t get it, do you. The 539-date is derived from a chronology that sets the destruction of Jerusalem to be around 586/587. If you insist on the 539 and 537-dates as "pivotal dates" without acepting the rest of the chronology that lead (!!!! do you understand? LEAD!!!) to the derived 539 and 537-dates, then you must give up claiming that the 539 and 537-dates are "pivotal dates" with a solid secular basis, and base also these dates on pure belief.