littletoe,
Daniel was included in the canon that was translated into the Greek Septuagint. Work started on that during the 4th Cent. BC.
A sorta deceptive statement. No evidence exists that Daniel was translated into Greek before the 1st century BC. That is the bottom line.
In addition, tradition states that Alexander the Great was shown scriptures that highlighted his arrival at the gates of Jerusalem.
A "tradition" without any supporting evidence, and knowing the credibility of such "traditions", totally spurious.
I will happily stand corrected if it can be PROVED that the OT wasn't fixed by this time.
You can't have any "proof" in questions of history. You can, however, have evidence. And it's a very good evidence that Daniel "predicted" events up to 167 (from memory) quite accurately (being in error on some about ancient details though, mixing up Darius and Cyrus), while his actual predictions, about a final war between Antiochus and Ptolemy, failed completely.
That said, you reverse the burden of evidence. If I claim I had predicted, say, the events on Sept 11, before the fact, people would reasonably demand very solid evidence that I had actually made such a prediction before the fact. If no records of such predictions could be produced, the claim had to be rejected. Extraordinary claims require extraordinary proof.
Same about the Bible. The burden of evidence is on those who claim some text predicted an event to show that 1) a text predicting these events was really written before the fact and 2) that what was foretold in those texts did actually happen.
All claims to Biblical prophecy fail at least one of these tests. The "prophecies" about Jesus, for example, generally fail on both.
- Jan
--
"Doctor how can you diagnose someone with Obsessive Compulsive Disorder and then act like I had some choice about barging in here right now?" -- As Good As It Gets