Narkissos
Post 8754
The five references of the 'seventy years' by Josephus are certainly consistent with the testimony of the Bible writers that this period can only be viewed as a period of servitude-exile-desolation from the Fall to the Return, He is the only secular historian of Jewish history outside of the authors of the OT even though he is a first century historian far removed from the sixth century his testimony must stand on its own merits, He remains the sole source for Berossus who himself lived some three centuries from that late Judean period. Secular history is imperfect and we have use those records that are available even though these are not contemporaneous with the events in question. For this reason, the testimony of Bible writers is far superior as they recorded events as observed at the time or soon thereafter.
In regard to the seventy years which Jeremiah and Daniel experience first hand and soon after were commented upon by Ezra and Zechariah so their testimony as a collective is nicely confirmed by Josephus.
You too make assertions without proof at a particular time for example in your post 8717 that the seventy years is a round number, that the seventy year texts do not have the same period in view, and that there are three interpretations of the period none of which is supported by argument. What I do agree with you is that within scholarship and apostate opinion, the seventy years has become a complex situation.
It is certainly correct that there are conflicting views of the seventy years and you have your own view and Jonsson has another in which he unlike yourself views the seventy years as a period of Babylonian domination and serviude. If I am incorrect on this point then please confirm whether you agree totally with Jonsson and if not please explain how you differ.
The two references in Zechariah to the seventy years refers to that past historic period as this is the only view thatmakes sense otherwise you periods all over the place and how could a Jew living then or a person living now have any means of knowing what time period is in question. Jonsson's analysis of these texts is impossible and the chronology is plain stupid. Do you agree with the chronology that he sets forth? Rolf Furuli who is a competent Hebre schollar has examined the philology and the linguistics of those texts and proves that the Hebrew syntax shows that Zechariah was speaking of a previous period of seventy years, known by all of the people, namely the Babylonian exile which had ended more than 15 years earlier.
One very simple reason why all of the seventy years texts refer to one and the same period is the simple fact that they all echo the prohecy of Jeremiah and this is also found in Josephus. Also, such commonalities as 'serving', desolation, exile are the key elements of the seventy years period in short, these texts have a common vocabulary and theme.
I stand apart from scholars and apostates for the simple reason that I do not share their confusion over the interpretation of the period hence the pseudonym scholar JW
scholar JW