The "70 Years" -- without dates!

by Doug Mason 10 Replies latest watchtower bible

  • Doug Mason
    Doug Mason

    Here is the story of the “70 years” with no dates!

    First, see the picture at:
    http://au.geocities.com/doug_mason1940/Outline_Decay_and_Fall_of_Judah.pdf

    Then read the book at:
    http://au.geocities.com/doug_mason1940/Decay_and_Fall_of_Judah.pdf

    This story has everything that would make a good movie. Set against the powerful nation of Egypt with its famed pyramids and the glory of Babylon with her renowned Hanging Gardens, is the story of a small agrarian nation of Judah, deeply influenced by the wicked practices of its surrounding neighbors.
    The story has everything – murder, child sacrifices, cannibalism, male prostitution, power politics, spiritualism, and religion. What else would a movie want?

    At the same time, the story shows that the Watchtower Society starts its analysis of the “70 years” at the wrong end, and that it then travels along the wrong path. Even more intrigue.

    Doug

  • VM44
    VM44

    The second link does not work.

  • JCanon
    JCanon

    Hi Doug, quite impressive. Very nice.

    The 70-years issue is primarily a "relative" chronology issue, not an absolute one. So removing the dates don't help.

    Here's Josephus' interpretation of Jeremiah's prophecy and who fulfills it. Would you care to comment on his interpretation, especially since he is reflecting the traditional Jewish history? Thanks.

    ANTIQUITIES 11:1:1

    1. In the first year of the reign of Cyrus (1) which was the seventieth from the day that our people were removed out of their own land into Babylon, God commiserated the captivity and calamity of these poor people, according as he had foretold to them by Jeremiah the prophet, before the destruction of the city, that after they had served Nebuchadnezzar and his posterity, and after they had undergone that servitude seventy years, he would restore them again to the land of their fathers, and they should build their temple, and enjoy their ancient prosperity.

    The people were not completely removed out of their land until the last deportation in year 23 of Nebuchadnezzar per the Bible, Jer. 52:30. Further, those removed were deported from Egypt; that is, those last removed were the remnant of those who had run down to Egypt and escaped from the sword.

    CONTRADICTION: Note that when Josephus applies these seventy years of "servitude" specifically to the 'poor people" of the last deportation and ends those 70 years in the 1st of Cyrus, it completely contradicts the NB chronology since it requires the NB Period to be 26 years longer than has survived in the Persian-revised Babylonian records (i.e. the Babylonian Chronicle, for instance is self noted to have been copied in the 22nd year of Darius. The Cyrus Cylinder and Nabonidus Chroicle, likewise are datable to the late Pesian Period.) Copied documents are always immediately suspect for revisionism.

    Thus your wonderful chart reflects not the Jewish historical assignment of the 70 years. Since you seem to be noncomittal, why not alternatively show a 26-year longer NB Period with the 70 years from the last deportation to the 1st of Cyrus? That way, individuals are informed of the potential controversy regarding the 70 years and can make up their own minds. As it is, you are only representing a single view of when the 70 years occurred. There are other views on this, and other historical references, such as Josephus, which contradict your interpretation of the 70 years.

    But thanks for your wonderful presentation!! I just wish it was more objective and inclusive of the 70-years issue.

    JC

  • Doug Mason
    Doug Mason

    Hi VM44,

    I don't understand why the hyperlink does not work.

    I notice that when I copy and paste the address into my browser, that it works:

    http://au.geocities.com/doug_mason1940/Decay_and_Fall_of_Judah.pdf

    Although my browser comes up with another address:

    http://au.share.geocities.com/doug_mason1940/Decay_and_Fall_of_Judah.pdf

    I don't understand. If you cannot get hold of the file, I suggest that you go to the web site:

    http://au.geocities.com/doug_mason1940

    and then navigate through the "Scripture", "Jehovah's Witnesses" and "Babylonian Captivity" tabs. Then scroll down to locate the download of "Decay and Fall of Judah".

    When I do that, I somehow get the address:
    http://au.share.geocities.com/doug_mason1940/Decay_and_Fall_of_Judah.pdf

    Don't ask me.

    Doug

  • Doug Mason
    Doug Mason

    It appears that the second link is redirected by Yahoo to:

    http://au.share.geocities.com/doug_mason1940/Decay_and_Fall_of_Judah.pdf

    Doug

  • Doug Mason
    Doug Mason

    I do not know why the second link does not work directly.

    I suggest that you copy and paste the second link into your browser.

    If that does not work, copy and paste the following address into your browser.:

    http://au.share.geocities.com/doug_mason1940/Decay_and_Fall_of_Judah.pdf

    Doug

  • Doug Mason
    Doug Mason

    JC,

    Thank you for your comments about my presentation.

    From your comments, it appears that I have not made myself crystal clear. My basic premise is:

    1. God condemned the Jews to the same fate as the Israelites. In this context, he made his first judgment against Judah during the long reign of king Manassah.
    2. Apart from king Josiah, Judah continued its moral decline despite several warning by God that he would wipe them out. He pleaded with them, saying that he would forgive them and make them strong and prosperous, if only they would change their ways.
    3. The reformist king Josiah only brought a delay in the execution of God’s judgment.
    4. Babylon’s defeat of Egypt meant that Judah was now subservient to Babylon. At the same time, the LORD declared that all of the named nations had to serve Babylon for 70 years. This included Judah. Any nation that followed God’s declaration would serve their servitude in their own land. Any nation that rebelled would be desolated.
    5. Despite several pleas by God for Judah to obey his edict, Judah continued along its long path of disobedience. Their continuing disobedience to the already imposed 70-years servitude would result in God executing the judgment that he had brought down during Manassah’s long and evil reign.
    6. Finally, and unnecessarily, God had his city destroyed, and asked that people be left to tend the land.
    7. The 70 years servitude to Babylon continued for a further 50 years after Jerusalem was destroyed.

    There is thus in the Biblical account no need for Jerusalem and Judah to have suffered absolute (SHAMEM) desolation. They could have remained in their desolated (CHORBAH) places during the declared 70 years, just as their neighbors had.

    There is thus no relationship between the length of the servitude and the timing of Jerusalem’s destruction. (The people considered the land depopulated simply because it had been handed over to the Babylonians, as shown in my presentation).

    My presentation is “objective” since it reports the Hebrew scripture and it fully accommodates the “70 years”. I believe it is complete in that it canvasses the full context of the 70 years as well as the execution of God’s judgment on Judah and Jerusalem.

    The WTS starts its calculations from the end of the “70 years” and then travels along the path leading to the destruction of Jerusalem.

    The factual evidence from the Bible shows that the WTS should have traveled from the start. If they worked from the terminus, they should then have traveled back in time along a path that ignores the destruction of Judah and Jerusalem.

    In my presentation, I relied solely on the Hebrew Scriptures. The only uninspired commentary that I used was mine. I did not make reference to Josephus or to any other secular source. I have no intention of widening the scope. My points are adequately shown by citing Scripture.

    I deliberately made no reference to dates or even lengths of kings’ reigns, since that provided an opportunity for a distraction from the clear point I was making. The dates do not matter; the lessons do.

    I welcome information on corrections, omissions, improvement, and so on.

    Doug

  • JCanon
    JCanon

    Hello Doug,

    Thanks for your further commentary. I didn't realize how up you were on this topic. But you touch on a key point that is pertinent to Olof Jonsson's position. That is, that I can see where one could apply a 70-year period of servitude by the nations beginning anytime that Babylon conquered any nation. But that is a point besides a separate 70 years for the land to pay back its sabbaths.

    That means, I have no argument against your concept of a 70 years that begins before the last deportation, if you want. You don't see 70 years of desolation to necessarily be connected with the servitude of these nations. Well that's fine. But the chronology of the 70 years of desolation starting with the last deportation would be a separate 70 years.

    In my presentation, I relied solely on the Hebrew Scriptures. The only uninspired commentary that I used was mine. I did not make reference to Josephus or to any other secular source. I have no intention of widening the scope. My points are adequately shown by citing Scripture.

    I deliberately made no reference to dates or even lengths of kings’ reigns, since that provided an opportunity for a distraction from the clear point I was making. The dates do not matter; the lessons do.

    You note that you do not mention any uninspired commentary. But the fact is, you could not come up with the concept of the 50 years without any uninspired commentary because that comes from secular history, and revised secular history at that. Even so, I don't need any non-Biblical reference to establish a 70-year period after the fall of Jerusalem confirming the Jews were still in exile. Zechariah 1 does that for me. Thus, I would have to comment on this reference:

    ZECH 1: 7 On the twenty-fourth day of the eleventh month, that is, the month She´bat, in the second year of Da·ri´us, the word of Jehovah occurred to Zech·a·ri´ah the son of Ber·e·chi´ah the son of Id´do the prophet, saying: ...

    12 So the angel of Jehovah answered and said: “O Jehovah of armies, how long will you yourself not show mercy to Jerusalem and to the cities of Judah, whom you have denounced these seventy years?”

    This is the second year of "Darius" and it has been 70 years since the denunciation of Jerusalem and the cities of Judah. God has not yet shown "mercy" to these denounced cities. Now one interpretation, the one I have, is that this is a reference to the destruction of Jerusalem and the cities of Judah in the 19th year of Nebuchadnezzar, and by the 2nd year of Darius, these cities remained denounced. That is, God had not yet shown "mercy" to Jerusalem and the cities of Judah. And what does showing "mercy" to these denounced cities mean? To me, it means that he will lift the denouncement and allow them to be rebuilt. Thus this represents the 70th year after the destruction of these cities and they were still not rebuilt yet, and thus the Jews are still in exile. Yet it is the second year of "Darius."

    Adding to this is verse 16:

    16 “Therefore this is what Jehovah has said, ‘“I shall certainly return to Jerusalem with mercies. My own house will be built in her,” is the utterance of Jehovah of armies, “and a measuring line itself will be stretched out over Jerusalem.”

    The above tells us that the house of God, his temple, had not been built yet. A measuring line is used when the foundations and walls are about to be built. So this is very much into the context that Jerusalem was still completely desolated and not rebuilt. Yet this is the second year of "Darius." Since we know the people began to rebuild in the 1st of Cyrus when they first returned, this must be before that time.

    So what is happening here? Jeremiah 52:30 is what is happening:

    29 In the eighteenth year of Neb·u·chad·rez´zar, from Jerusalem there were eight hundred and thirty-two souls.

    30 In the twenty-third year of Neb·u·chad·rez´zar, Neb·u´zar·ad´an the chief of the bodyguard took Jews into exile, seven hundred and forty-five souls.

    The LAST DEPORTATION was in year 23 of Nebuchadnezzar. Verse 30 does not distinguish that this last deportation wasn't from Jerusalem either. It specifically notes the 18th year deportation was from Jerusalem though. Is there any indication that this last 23rd year deportation was from Jerusalem as well? Yes. You see while the few poor people left in the land did run down to Egypt and refused to return, the Bible says those left remaining from the sword would return to Judah, thus Jerusalem:

    Jeremiah 44: 28 And as for the ones escaping from the sword, they will return from the land of Egypt to the land of Judah,few in number; and all those of the remnant of Judah, who are coming into the land of Egypt to reside there as aliens, will certainly know whose word comes true, that from me or that from them.”’”

    And how do we know that the last deportation was of these Jews returning to Judah? 2 Chronicles 36 says they were, calling them the "ones who escaped from the sword."

    20 Furthermore, he carried off those remaining from the sword captive to Babylon, and they came to be servants to him and his sons until the royalty of Persia began to reign; 21 to fulfill Jehovah’s word by the mouth of Jeremiah, until the land had paid off its sabbaths. All the days of lying desolated it kept sabbath, to fulfill seventy years.

    Those who were left "remaining from the sword" are those who had been left off from being killed down in Egypt. These would return to "Judah" and so must have been deported after returning in the 23rd year of Nebuchadnezzar. They would serve Nebuchadnezzar and his sons until the "royalty of Persia" began to reign. That is, when Cyrus the PERSIAN began to reign, versus Darius the MEDE began to reign. The first king of Babylon after Cyrus conquered Babylon with the Medes was none other than Darius the MEDE.

    Daniel 5: 30 In that very night Bel·shaz´zar the Chal·de´an king was killed 31 and Da·ri´us the Mede himself received the kingdom, being about sixty-two years old.

    Now we all know about Daniel and the Lion's den. And it is clear that Darius is King of Babylon at this time. So Daniel was still an official during the reign of Darius the Mede. But the Bible says Daniel's service ends at the 1st of Cyrus:

    19 And the king began to speak with them, and out of them all no one was found like Daniel, Han·a·ni´ah, Mish´a·el and Az·a·ri´ah; and they continued to stand before the king. 20 And as regards every matter of wisdom [and] understanding that the king inquired about from them, he even got to find them ten times better than all the magic-practicing priests [and] the conjurers that were in all his royal realm. 21 And Daniel continued on until the first year of Cyrus the king.

    This is consistent with Darius ruling over Babylon for a time before Cyrus actually took over rulership, during which time, Daniel was still in bondage at Babylon. That Darius' rule was first and separate from that of Cyrus is indicated at Daniel 6:

    28 And as for this Daniel, he prospered in the kingdom of Da·ri´us and in the kingdom of Cyrus the Persian.

    Now please note that per 2 Chronicles, the Jews that were last deported were to continue in servitude until the "royalty of Persia" began to rule. That means it was not until the 1st of Cyrus that the Jews were released. Thus the "royalty of PERSIA" is distinctly apart from the rule of Darius the MEDE. Darius the MEDE was not considered part of the "royalty of PERSIA."

    But now this explains for us the reference in Zechariah 1, where we find it is 70 years after the destruction of Jerusalem and the cities of Judah and yet the Jews are still in exile wondering when God is going to show mercy to the cities and allow the Jews to return and rebuild them. But there is no conflict here, since this would obviously be the second year of Darius the MEDE that is in reference here. Why not conflict? Because as 2 Chronicles notes, Jeremiah's prophecy was about the land paying back its sabbaths and that was to take 70 years. The people were to be off the land for those 70 years. If so, and those 70 years did not begin until the last deportation in year 23 of Nebuchadnezzar, 4 years after the fall of Jerusalem, then the Jews would have still been in exile a mere 70 years after the fall of Jerusalem. They still would have had four more years to go. That means that Darius the Mede must have ruled for a full 6 years before Cyrus took over the entire empire and started ruling from Babylon. That the Pesian royalty would rise up and dominant the Medes was even prophetic!

    Daniel 8: 3 When I raised my eyes, then I saw, and, look! a ram standing before the watercourse, and it had two horns. And the two horns were tall, but the one was taller than the other, and the taller was the one that came up afterward . 20“The ram that you saw possessing the two horns [stands for] the kings of Me´di·a and Persia.

    So we learn that one part of the empire would become dominant over the other but not at first, later. This perfectly explains how Cyrus became king over the united Persian Empire after a short period of equal co-rule after Medo-Persia conquered Babylon. Darius the Mede ruled over Babylon and Cyrus ruled over the Persian part of the empire. Then Cyrus became king over all of Persia after six years of rule by Darius the Mede and the Medes became subjects of the "royalty of Persia." This was also the official end of the Neo-Babylonian Empire because Darius the Mede was the "son"/grandson of Nebuchadnezzar.

    SUMMARY: In summary, even if a period of 70 years of servitude for some of the nations serving Babylon occurred when they first were conquered, that is apart from the 70 years the land of Judah and Israel had to remain desolated, and it was not desolated until the last deportation. That is consistent with the Jews still being in exile 70 years after the fall of Jerualem, which expired in the 2nd year of Darius the Mede. So we are in agreement that it might not be necessary to connect any 70 years of servitude for the nations that might have begun prior to the last deportation. But that would not change at all the 70 years of desolation that begins with the last deportation where the Jews continued off the land until the 1st of Cyrus. This establishes BIblically that Darius the Mede ruled for six years.

    So, in essence, it is not enough to PROVE that there was a period of 70 years for the nations to serve Babylon apart from the servitude of those of the last deportation. What you have to do is to DISPROVE that the lenth of service of those last deported was not a 70-year period.

    So you have the same position as Olof Jonsson here. He goes to a lot of trouble to establish that there would be a 70-year period of servitude for the nations to Babylon. That's fine. But that doesn't mean there wasn't also a 70-year period of servitude for those lasted deported in year 23 of Nebuchadnezzar. Both of you are saying the desolation of the land and the servitude of the people last deported are not connected to the 70 years of servitude by the nations. That's fine if you don't want them connected. But that doesn't prove those last deported didn't serve 70 years as well. It doesn't disprove that the land of Judah did not remain completely desolated for 70 years as well following the last deportation.

    JC

  • Doug Mason
    Doug Mason

    It looks like you will have to copy and paste the address:

    http://au.geocities.com/doug_mason1940/Decay_and_Fall_of Judah.pdf

    It appears to me that you cannot paste the "redirect" address.

    Doug

  • Doug Mason
    Doug Mason

    Canon,

    You seem to have a hang-up with Carl Jonsson. It is interesting that he and we came to the same conclusions independently, at different times, and separated by half a world. Let me explain.

    As a newly baptized SDA in 1964, I wanted to be able to answer the JWs who kept calling at my door. (I left the SDAs 20 years ago, so I know what it means to leave a small, intensive religious group, such as the JWs).

    Quite serendipitously, at that time I happened across a study written by Geoff Rogerson, an SDA living in the small West Australian country town of Denmark. He provided a detailed account of the WTS’s errors with its neo-Babylonian chronology.

    Max Hatton, a JW working at the Town Hall in the nearby West Australian town of Albany, encountered Geoff. As a result, Max conducted a very deep study of the subject and just like COJ did more than 15 years later, produced the result of his investigation and left the WTS. I fortunately got hold of a copy of Max’s study. I still have Geoff’s and Max’s papers.

    At the same time, I decided that the average SDA would not be able to grasp the essential elements of Geoff’s and Max’s studies, so I started producing my own material on chronology, as well as on other WT-related topics.

    I was particularly incensed when the “Aid” book came out. When the first part was published, which contained the article on “Chronology”, I discovered that it contained many deceitful misquotations and misinformation. (I have not gone to your original sources to see if you do the same).

    I produced deeper works during 1973/1974 and for the remainder of the 1970s I assisted Bruce Price with content on chronology for his “Witness” magazine. I do not know the circulation of Bruce’s magazine, but I received a nice letter from Edwin Theile, congratulating us for the work we were doing.

    My interest in the neo-Babylonian chronology has always been to use that information to help break the WTS’s mental stranglehold, given the authority it claims based on that chronology. My interest in the use of the neo-Babylonian chronology goes no further. When the WTS’s claims are seen to be false, it is then possible to provide the message of the True Gospel, such as described in Romans and Galatians.

    Hence your additional “70 years” are of no interest. The WTS does not teach them, so they are irrelevant and insignificant. They do not provide the WTS with its authority, so I ignore them as being pointless.

    You might have left the WTS, but I doubt that the WTS has left you.

    -----------------

    Let’s consider some of the points you made in your response to my “Decay and Fall of Judah”:

    Canon: I can see where one could apply a 70-year period of servitude by the nations beginning anytime that Babylon conquered any nation.
    Doug: You therefore agree with Jeremiah, for that is what he taught. And he included Judah among those nations.

    Canon: You could not come up with the concept of the 50 years without any uninspired commentary because that comes from secular history.
    Doug: We know that the 70-year servitude started in the early years of Jehoiakim. The length of his reign and that of Zedekiah indicate how long afterwards Jerusalem was destroyed. The destruction of Jerusalem, unnecessary that is was, took place some 20 years after the 70 years had commenced. (70 – 20 = 50)

    Canon: But that is a point besides a separate 70 years for the land to pay back its sabbaths.
    Doug: Why is it separate? According to the Scriptures, the land was already desolate while there were people living in it – years before Jerusalem was unnecessarily destroyed. You have a limited understanding of the Hebrew for “desolate”.

    Canon: I have no argument against your concept of a 70 years that begins before the last deportation, if you want.
    Doug: Thank you. It’s not what I want, it’s what Scripture says. That is the 70 years. And Jeremiah also tells us that God would heed his people if they called on him, as happened with Daniel in his great prayer.

    Canon: You don't see 70 years of desolation to necessarily be connected with the servitude of these nations.
    Doug: Jer 25:11 says “this whole country (Judah) will become a desolate wasteland, and (all of) these nations will serve the king of Babylon seventy years.” You overlook the shades in the Hebrew that are covered by our single word “desolation”. The degree of their desolation depended on their obedience, including obedience to the LORD’s instruction that they were to continue to serve Babylon for 70 years. The Judahites maintained an obstinate disobedience to the 70 years servitude so that Jerusalem, along with its temple, was unnecessarily destroyed.

    Canon: The chronology of the 70 years of desolation starting with the last deportation would be a separate 70 years.
    Doug: That is pure invention. Besides, people continued to live on the lands of Judah and Israel.

    Canon: The 70 years the land of Judah and Israel had to remain desolated, and it was not desolated until the last deportation.
    Doug: Another pure invention. Israel was desolated before Manassah’s time. Judah was desolated as soon as Babylon took the land. It was CHORBAH, the city became unnecessarily SHAMEM. There are about 6 Hebrew words that are used to describe shades of desolation.

    Canon: So you have the same position as Olof Jonsson here.
    Doug: Thank you for telling me. If that is so, it is interesting that he and I agree, quite independently. JWs, such as you, Scholar and the GB have a paranoid concern about COJ’s work.

    Canon: (Olof Jonsson) goes to a lot of trouble to establish that there would be a 70-year period of servitude for the nations to Babylon.
    Doug: There is no trouble showing this, because that is precisely what Jeremiah says.

    Canon: But that doesn't prove those last deported didn't serve 70 years as well.
    Doug: They did not have to.

    Canon: It doesn't disprove that the land of Judah did not remain completely desolated for 70 years as well following the last deportation.
    Doug: This is completely pointless and of no value. At least you are showing there is no relationship between Jeremiah’s warnings and prophecies, and your imagined “70 years”. “Doesn’t disprove … did not remain”. How many double negatives can you put in one sentence.

    Canon: What you have to do is to DISPROVE that the length of service of those last deported was not a 70-year period.
    Doug: Why do I have to? The length of the “servitude” following the deportation in Nebuchadnezzar’s 23rd year is of no interest, because the WTS does not hang its authority on the date of that event.

    BTW, Are some of the words in your post colored red? If there are, I am sorry but I cannot distinguish red text from black text. Try using another color or method that stands out.

    Doug

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