@Alwayshere:
djeggnog, you say Nabopolassar begin to rule as King of Babylon in 646 but the Vol. 1 of the Insight Book on page 144, the right side, last paragraph, says his rule begin in 625.
Does it? Please provide the name of the article you were reading in the Insight book; I primarily use the Bible, but I'll read the article if you provide the name of the article. I checked the articles on "Babylon," "Chronology" and "Nineveh, but I gave up looking for the article to which you are referring here.
Vol. 2 of the Insight, page 332, 2nd paragraph, they quote Jer.25:11-12, then in the 4th paragraph, they say God is wrong, Babylon fell BEFORE the 70 years of the exile.
While this is the conclusion that you have reached upon reading the Insight article "Exiles Return from Babylon," but nowhere in this article does it say that God is wrong. God's prophecy as recorded at Jeremiah 25:11, 12, states that "these nations will have to serve the king of Babylon seventy years." You are reading something more into Jeremiah's words at Jeremiah 25:11, 12, than they actually say, for it had been foretold that God's people would have to become exiles in Babylon to fulfill seventy years "until the land had paid off its sabbaths." (2 Chronicles 36:21)
As to the words, "these nations," used at Jeremiah 25:11, "these nations" would include Egypt, Tyre, Moab and the Medes (Jeremiah 25:17-26), for after God's theocracy in Jerusalem was deposed, Babylon had become the dominant world power and all of "these nations" drank from Jehovah's "cup" for at least 70 years. Recall that before Egypt was deposed by crown prince Nebuchadnezzar in 625 BC, Nebuchadnezzar's father, Nabopolassar, was the reigning king of Babylon, who in 632 BC had deposed Assyria and Nineveh during his 14th year as king of Babylon, and Nabopolassar's rule began in 646 BC. (Zephaniah 2:13) That means that until it was deposed by the Medes and the Persians in 539 BC, Babylon had been the dominant world power over God's people from 607 BC for 68 years, and the Babylonian Dynasty lasted for 107 years!
It's all who you want to believe, God or man. 646-539=107 625-539=86. I don't believe Babylon had world power 107years or 86 years.
Babylon didn't become the dominant world power until it deposed the theocratic kingdom of God in Jerusalem in 607 BC, but you're absolutely right: It's who or what you want to believe. Jehovah's Witnesses read the Bible and assign dates to the many recorded events that are described it, just as do other organizations that study the Bible. Although are many theologians once rejected Belshazzar as being the king of Babylon about whom Daniel wrote, Jehovah's Witnesses believed what Daniel wrote about "Belshazzar the king of Babylon" in Daniel chapters 5, 7 and 8 without reservation. (Daniel 7:1)
You remind me of many active Jehovah's Witnesses that are tied to our publications in such a way that without them, they would have to rely upon their memory of things that they really had not learned. Not once in this thread do I quote from the Insight book; not once. As a Bible scholar, I do from time to time need to conduct research using various publications, including those publications that were produced by the Watchtower Bible & Tract Society, but I use such publications in the same way those of us that have obtained a college education or that attended high school would use them: To validate statements of opinion proffered as fact.
Despite some of the boneheaded statements that one might have read in any of our publications in the past -- and there have many of them since the inauguration of the Watchtower, Golden Age and Awake! magazines, like the opinion that was once floated about how reading the Watchtower could actually replace someone reading the Bible! -- our literature is more carefully scrutinized than ever before by our governing body, which ensures that unscriptural flourishes of the pen do not make it to the presses. Every one of Jehovah's Witnesses are expected to read our literature and report any apparent errors or misstatements either by writing a letter to Brooklyn, New York, or by reporting such to one of the elders in the local congregation so that the error or misstatement should not be repeated. There is nothing at all that is the equal of the Bible and to believe such is nonsense, even when one Jehovah's Witnesses says so.
Our literature is essentially an aid to studying the Bible, but you may have noticed that I will typically not quote anything from any of our literature here on JWN, except from the New World Translation of the Holy Scriptures, since anyone that quotes something that may have appeared 100 years ago, 60 years ago, even five years ago in our literature -- as you did in your message -- betrays that they may be nursing the totally false notion that everything that one reads in them are representative of the current beliefs of Jehovah's Witnesses, when the truth is that our beliefs are progressive as the light of truth becomes lighter and for this reason are subject to change.
For example, when the book, Reasoning From the Scriptures, was first released in 1985, many thought it could be used to win arguments with the householder in our field ministry, and although the Reasoning book clearly states that "this book is only an aid" and that "a quick glance" at some of the thoughts under the subheadings that appear under a main heading "may be all that you need," many attempted to use it as if it were a field service manual, instead of as a handbook designed to help Jehovah's Witnesses "to cultivate the ability to reason from the Scriptures and to use them effectively in helping others" in our field ministry.
Anyone that is qualified to teach others ought to know how to locate the appropriate scriptures in 2 Kings, 2 Chronicles, Ezra, Isaiah, Jeremiah, Daniel, Haggai and Zechariah to explain scripturally how God's prophetic word affected God's people in 607 BC and how God's prophecy came to be fulfilled when the Persians deposed Babylon in 539 BC, thus releasing the Jews from exile so that they could return to Judah at the end of 70 years in 537 BC, but until they should become more proficient in the use of the Bible, many Jehovah's Witnesses will use "crib notes" that they keep in their Bibles.
A little help regarding the subject we're here discussing is provided in the Reasoning book under the headings "Bible" and "Dates," but only by undertaking a study of the Scriptures themselves can one become proficient in using them, for not everyone is comfortable with the fact that dates in the "BC" sequence are counted in reverse of the way one reckons dates in the "AD" sequence and so having a knowledge of when a king of Judah reigned in relation to Nebuchadnezzar's reign is key to demonstrating the reliability of Bible prophecy.
Research typically requires one to authenticate what are really the opinions of many scholarly types in order to form one's own conclusions as to the topic being researched. But if one takes copious notes when conducting research, there should never arise a need to so the same research again, something that many Jehovah's Witnesses are guilty of doing as if for the very first time. Once you have learned, for example, that the overthrow of Babylon, which occurred in the year 539 BC, to be a historical fact, there should be no need for you to do a Google search, no need for you to visit a local public library, no need for you to open up one of our publications or use the Watchtower Library cdrom to re-learn what you have already learned.
Now those that must research the same things a second, a third or even a tenth time are memorizing and are not really learning anything. If someone can articulate the ages of their parents, each of their maternal and paternal grandparents, the ages of their parents' siblings (your aunts and uncles) and of their own siblings, as well as the ages of their own children as well as that of their nieces and nephews, this is the same kind of detail-oriented learning that research entails
If you should believe Jehovah's Witnesses -- and that is really what the Watchtower Bible & Tract Society are, Jehovah's Witnesses -- are perfect, so that you have made the stretch to also believe that what things we publish are as infallible as the Bible itself is infallible, then frankly, whoever you are, are just plain stupid. Now when I say this, @Alwayshere, I don't mean you personally, but I am referring to those that have decided that what things we have published in one of the many publications that have been produced over the years in order to help people to (1) obtain an understanding of what things they read in the Bible and (2) let them know where we perceive we are in the stream of time serve to represent much more than what we as a body of Christians may have concluded to be true at that time, as if the beliefs of Jehovah's Witnesses must be as static as those of Christendom's denominations.
Jehovah's organization is a progressive organization that is led by holy spirit, which simply means that our beliefs are not static, so that we both acknowledge and accept that various doctrinal matters will become progressively understood as we also give prayerful consideration to God's words while also taking into consideration the things currently taking place in the world that in hindsight help us to obtain a better grasp on Bible truth. Jehovah's Witnesses pay attention to history and news accounts that either contradict what beliefs we may have had to abandon or that confirm our beliefs as true.
For example, prior to August 23, 2006, the Watchtower Bible & Tract Society has included many references to Pluto as being a planet, whereas our awareness of the International Astronomical Union vote that reclassified Pluto as being no longer a planet, but a "dwarf planet," which astronomer Percival Lowell had prior to February 18, 1930, called "Planet X," which another astronomer, Clyde Tombaugh, later declared to be a planet. There may have been other things contained in science books published before August 24, 2006, that are just as current today, but until those books were replaced in classroom, teachers would have had to explain to their students that the information regarding Pluto being one of nine planets was no longer accurate.
Just as school teachers cannot be held responsible for what they believed to be true as to Pluto's being the ninth planet in our solar system between February 18, 1930, and August 23, 2006, neither can Jehovah's Witnesses be held responsible for what we believed to be true and printed in our literature as to Pluto's designation as a planet during this 76-year period, but since August 23, 2006, Jehovah's Witnesses have discontinued referring to Pluto as if it were a planet in any of our literature as it is our endeavor to embrace the truth and to abandon falsehood.
Another example I can cite here as to how Jehovah's Witnesses endeavor to embrace the truth and abandon falsehood is how it was from 1929 to 1962 we had understood the "superior authorities" to which Romans 13:1 refers to be Jehovah God and Christ Jesus to whom absolute subjection is due, but we, being guided by holy spirit, made a careful reanalysis of this matter, so that we came to understand through the pages of the Watchtower dated November 1, 1962, November 15, 1962, and December 1, 1962, that the "superior authorities" are the secular rulers, the political rulers of this world, who "stand placed in their relative positions by God" to whom only relative subjection is due.
As a progressive organization, Jehovah's Witnesses have had to shed unchristian habits such as to the appeal by some to creature worship due to the charisma possessed by certain circuit and district overseers or members of the governing body of Jehovah's Witnesses, so starting in 1942, neither the names or the initials of any contributor to the Watchtower or to any of our literature is credited to anyone, and all material contributed by Jehovah's Witnesses in North America, South America, Europe, Asia, Africa and the islands of the sea is provided to all of the congregations in the world under the supervision of our governing body. This is why it is laughable when some of the folks here on JWN indicate their belief to the effect that Jehovah's Witnesses get their "marching orders" from just "a few old men in Brooklyn."
In this thread, reference has been made to the Nabonidus Chronicle and to Ptolemy's Canon, and while neither of these reckon Belshazzar to have been a king of Babylon, again Jehovah's Witnesses pay attention to news accounts about things that have surfaced which have shed light on things that were previously historical unknowns.
The Skeptical Review has an online article entitled "Was Daniel an Eyewitness of 6th-Century B.C. Events Part Two" by Everette Hatcher III --
http://www.theskepticalreview.com/tsrmag/012dan.html
-- which article makes reference to archaeologist Alan Millard's piece, "Daniel and Belshazzar in History," published 26 years ago back in 1985, provides six (6) pieces of archaeological evidence reasons that support the view that Daniel was an eyewitness to sixth century BC events that no one writing about them during the second century BC could have known, which has forced critics to abandon the position that they had formerly held about Daniel being some fictitious character and Belshazzar "a figment of the Jewish writer's imagination":
[1] Belshazzar was ruling during the last few years of the Babylonian Empire.
[2] The Babylonians executed individuals by casting them into fire, but the Persians threw the condemned to the lions.
[3] The practice in the 6th Century was to mention first the Medes, then the Persians.
[4] Laws made by Persian kings could not be revoked.
[5] In the sixth century B.C., Susa was in the province of Elam (Dan. 8:2).
[6] Nebuchadnezzar had a pride problem (Dan. 4:30) and often boasted about his great building projects.
Commenting in "Discoveries from Bible Times" on the four-inch-long clay cylinders covered in cuneiform script that dating back to the sixth century that were discovered in 1854 by a British consul in Iraq, Professor Millard wrote that "[w]hen the consul took his finds to Baghdad, his senior colleague was able to read the inscriptions, for, fortunately, he was Sir Henry Rawlinson, one of those who had deciphered the Babylonian cuneiform script, and Rawlinson stated:
'The inscriptions had been written at the command of Nabonidus, king of Babylon 555–539 B.C.... The words they carried proved that the ruined tower was the temple of the city of Ur. The words were a prayer for the long life and good health of Nabonidus--and for his eldest son. The name of that son, clearly written, was Belshazzar.'"
Regarding Belshazzar's kingship in Babylon, Alan Millard wrote in the Biblical Archaeology Review: "It may have been considered quite in order for such unofficial records as the Book of Daniel to call Belshazzar 'king.' He acted as king, his father’s agent, although he may not have been legally king. The precise distinction would have been irrelevant and confusing in the story as related in Daniel." The fulfillment of God's prophetic word with respect to the coming of the Messiah was wholly dependent upon the seed of God's promise to Abraham being born in the line of Judah through David, and what happened in 607 BC didn't derail the Abrahamic promise in the least, but gave proof that Jehovah is the God of prophecy, and that what he foretells will occur in the future does, indeed, come to pass.
The question arises why should Jehovah's Witnesses care so much about the salvation of other people that they would spend time studying Bible prophecy and sharing what things they have learned with others? Notwithstanding that it is God's will that "all sorts of men should be saved and come to an accurate knowledge of truth," Jehovah’s Witnesses view fellow humans as potential members of the Christian congregation. Some here on JWN have wondered how Jehovah's Witnesses hoping to survive Armageddon expect to obtain suitable clothing, transportation and gasoline for our vehicles if the infrastructure that exists in this world should no longer exist, but what they failed to realize is that not only are Jehovah's Witnesses involved in manufacturing, engineering, etc., today, but many of the "unrighteous" that will be resurrected in the new earth will then be in a position to use their former expertise as scientists, engineers, whatever, to benefit survivors and resurrectees alike as they, too, become members of the Christian congregation, or whatever it is we will be called under Christ's Millennial Kingdom.
Like I said above, you're absolutely right it being who or what you want to believe, but Jehovah's Witnesses choose to believe Jehovah God and his word, we choose to believe in the principles that His son and our King, Jesus Christ taught, and we are exercising faith in his ransom sacrifice. Some refer to Jehovah's Witnesses as "prophets of doom," but we are ministers of God, ambassadors and envoys of the kingdom of God substituting for Christ, as God makes entreaty through us that those to whom we speak might enter his rest and "become reconciled to God." (2 Corinthians 5:20)
We choose not to believe man, who must live in hope that God's word is bogus, because they know that if they are wrong and it isn't bogus, then they will forever be foreclosed on being one of the survivors of Armageddon. There's no reason that you should believe Babylon to have been a world power; none. However, it is my hope is that you will have a change of mind before it's too late and that you will put your faith in Christ Jesus, for "there is no salvation in anyone else." (Acts 4:12) Jehovah's Witnesses are prophets though in the sense that we today, as did Jesus Christ, during his ministry, speak what are in reality the works of Jehovah in fulfillment of prophecy. (John 14:10; Matthew 24:14)
@TD:
[T]ying a specific year of Cyrus' reign to a specific year of Nabonidus' reign is important inasmuch as 539BC would be either confirmed or falsified by that correlation.
Actually, the year when Babylon was deposed by Cyrus is not an issue in dispute today. What many dispute despite the existence of archaeological evidence to the contrary is the fact that during his third year of his reign Nabonidus, the king of Babylon, had appointed his son and crown prince, Belshazzar, as coregent, who after Nabonidus was the second ruler of Babylon, and who was considered by the Jewish exiles in Babylon (like Daniel) as the king of Babylon. (Daniel 7:1; 8:1)
For example, according to the Nabonidus Chronicle, Cyrus defeated Astyages of Media and Ecbatana fell just prior to the 7th year of Nabonidus. (Presumably the 6th) In the [king-list] below, what year would that be?
Nabopolassar, 646 BC for 21 years
Nebuchadnezzar, 625/624 BC for 43 years
Evil-Merodach, from 581 BC for two years
Neriglissar, from 579 BC for four years
Labashi-Marduk, from 575 BC for three months
Nabonidus and Belshazzar, coregents, from 575/574 BC for 35 years
[Belshazzar (557/556 BC) for 17 years]
End of Babylonian Dynasty, 539 BC
Nabonidus' accession year would have begun in the year 575 BC, so his first regnal year would have been 574 BC. He appointed his son, Belshazzar as coregent of Babylon during his third regnal year, which would have been 572 BC. Accordingly, Nabonidus' seventh regnal year would have been 569 BC. (I have no idea what "Presumably the 6th" means, @TD, so regarding this I have no comment.) The reason Belshazzar is listed here as ruling for 17 years is not because he only ruled for 17 years, but just to make the point that he had ruled for at least 17 years, this 17-year period of which Ptolemy's Canon assigns to his father, Nabonidus, alone:
Nabopolassar, 627 BC for 21 years
Nebuchadnezzar, 606/605 BC for 43 years
Evil-Merodach, from 562 BC for two years
Neriglissar, from 560 BC for four years
Nabonidus, from 556 BC for 17 years
End of Babylonian Dynasty, 539 BC
BTW, my "king-list" would be as follows:
Nabopolassar, 646 BC for 21 years
Nebuchadnezzar, 625/624 BC for 43 years
Evil-Merodach, from 581 BC for two years
Neriglissar, from 579 BC for four years
Labashi-Marduk, from 575 BC for three months
Nabonidus and Belshazzar, coregents, from 575/574 BC for 35 years
[Belshazzar (572 BC) for 33 years]
End of Babylonian Dynasty, 539 BC
@Alwayshere:
Thats the trouble with the Watchtower, they always "assume" instead of proving what they say.
Here's your problem though: You're talking to someone that is one of Jehovah's Witnesses; you are not talking to the Watchtower that you seek to disparage at every chance you get. I am the one here providing proof of the things I have been saying here, with the inclusion of secular works that contain information that bears upon the Belshazzar's having been confirmed by archaeologists as king of Babylon, Nabonidus' son, and note that I've not quoted anything to you here from the Watchtower or from any of our publications. In fact, I've been primarily using the Bible here, but if you feel you must bash the Watchtower Bible & Tract Society or other Jehovah's Witnesses for the things I have been saying to you in this thread, then so be it.
I didn't assume anything or ask you or anyone else here to assume anything. I've merely told you the truth, and if you should be at all interested in verifying the same evidence for yourself that I have uncovered instead of exhibiting your bias against Jehovah's Witnesses, then all you would have to do is do a little research for Professor Millard's "Daniel and Belshazzar in History," which was published back in 1985.
The Insight Book vol.1 page 458 2nd paragraph says, you can count forward or backward from a pivotal point and goes on to say 539 is a pivotal point. So use 539 and count up with the years you used 17,35,4,2,43, and 21. How do you get 646?
Here you are against quoting something you read in one of the two volumes of the Insight book, when you don't believe anything that the Insight book has to say, so what difference could it possibly make to you what this book says about the year 539 BC?
I think you are claiming a problem that really doesn't exist, except in your own mind, for you are the one using the number "17" used in Ptolomy's canon instead of the number "35." Just refer to the number of years in the king-list included in my response to @TD, that is, if you are truly interested in knowing how it is one arrives at 646 BC as being the beginning of Nabopolassar's reign.
So when was King Neb. 1st year to rule?
Nebuchadnezzar's first regnal year was 624 BC; his accession year was 625 BC.
@Witness My Fury:
I highly recommend the book. Eggnog if you havent read it then I suggest you do and like me probably more than once to get the full sense of it.
Enjoy reading Johsson's book, @Witness My Fury. He is entitled to his opinion the same as you, but he ignores archaeological evidence that I have found to be illuminating.
You may want to cross reference Egyption history against the bible accounts as well when it mentions the various pharoahs... not by just adding 20 years to ALL the worlds history like the WTS likes to do either!
I am a Bible scholar and I have primarily been here in this thread quoting from the Bible, although I did mention that there is a problem with Ptolomy's Canon in attributing only 17 years to Nabonidus' reign, the man that succeeded Neriglissar, who like Nabonidus was also one of Nebuchadnezzar's sons-in-law (after the short reign of Neriglissar's son, Labashi-Marduk), and appointed his eldest son, Belshazzar during his third regnal year as coregent in Babylon.
I don't suppose Johsson's book explains any of this, but what I have been saying here regarding Belshazzar and his father, Nabonidus, has nothing at all to do with anything to which you might be referring that has been published by the Watchtower Bible & Tract Society, and I don't see why you are even mentioning the WTS since we are discussing what the Bible has to say regarding the events that I have said occurred in the year 607 BC, which events others here say occurred in the year 587 BC, right?
@djeggnog