Thirdwitless continues to ignore a fundamental flaw in the JW chronology: Because the Jews returned in 538 B.C. -- not in 537 -- the 607 date is wrong, and with it, everything based upon it. Thus, arguments trying to prove that the Gentile times is a 2,520 year period beginning in 607 are moot.
Thirdwitless' argument about the Gentile times can be compared to someone claiming, "Oh, New Orleans wasn't wiped out by Hurricane Katrina! It was wiped out by a tornado! After all, New Orleans is in Spain, and Spain doesn't get hurricanes but it gets a lot of tornados!" Then the moron spends a great deal of time arguing why he thinks that Spain gets a lot of tornadoes. The point here is that making an argument about Spain getting a lot of tornadoes is moot, because New Orleans isn't in Spain.
For the intellectually challenged JW defenders reading this thread, here is the comparison:
New Orleans is in Spain -> the Jews returned in 537
Spain gets a lot of tornadoes -> the Gentile times is a valid WTS concept
What bothers me so much about the JW defenders here is that they seem ineluctably incapable of understanding such simple points.
This general tendency to ignore inconvenient facts results in completely ass-backwards thinking by JW defenders. Rather than starting with a valid historical date and working things out from there, they actually start with a doctrinal necessity and work backwards, trying to fit real history in where possible and ignoring everything that doesn't fit. Look how this works with thirdwitless. In response to two posters, he began with 1914 as the doctrinally necessary date, and worked his way backwards to an actual historical date, ignoring certain historical facts along the way:
: Of course you cannot arrive at dates without secular sources. Even what happened in 1914 involves secular sources. Counting back 2520 years from 1914 we reach 607. Counting forward 70 years for the desolation and servitude of Babylon we reach 537. Amazingly secular history agrees that 539 was the year Babylon was conquered and so 537 fits.
Such ass-backwards thinking also ignores the actual history of the development of the Watchtower's 1914 date. Nelson Barbour came up with it in 1875, claiming that Babylon fell in 536 B.C., that the Jews returned in 536 B.C., and that a 70-year desolation of Jerusalem necessitated that Jerusalem be destroyed in 606 B.C. He then applied a tortuous chain of reasoning largely invented by others to arrive at the notion that "the Gentile times" of Luke 21:24 were a period of 2,520 years beginning in 606 B.C. and ending in 1914 A.D. He failed to note that there was no "zero year" between 1 B.C. and 1 A.D., and should have arrived at 1915. C. T. Russell adopted all of this nonsense lock, stock and barrel. Beginning in 1913, the Watchtower Society (i.e., C. T. Russell) was made aware of the "zero year" problem, but its leaders failed to make any changes in the Gentile times chronology until 1943, when they began a 12-year process of putting their chronological ducks in order. As a result, 536 went to 537, 538 and 539, and 606 went to 607 -- all with the goal of maintaining the doctrinally necessary 1914 date.
AlanF