@Londo111:
Welcome back, Djeggnog! It's been a while!
Yes, it has. Good to see you.
@Jeffro wrote:
djeggnog doesn't appear to know his subject very well. AnnOMaly here refers to the largest deportation of exiles according to the JW chronology. These are the exiles who were actually taken in 597BCE.
I suppose you could be right, but I don’t believe this to be the case. You are certainly entitled to believe differently than I do, @Jeffro.
I made no such 'mistake'. I quite deliberately explained how the context of Jeremiah 29 confirms that the seventy years at Jeremiah 25 could not refer to 70 years of exile. It's not my fault that Ethos couldn't figure out how the accounts relate.
Well, the "consensus" between @AnnOMaly and I is that you did make such a mistake. Look, @Jeffro: Nobody died; it could have been a worse mistake.
djeggnog attributes the following words to me:
All of the nations were not in Babylon for seventy years. But all the nations did not serve in Babylon for 70 years. And nor did the Jews.
That is from something Ethos claimed I said, but my actual statement was:
The 70 years was a period during which all the nations served Babylon. But all the nations did not serve in Babylon for 70 years. And nor did the Jews.
@djeggnog wrote:
Forget the temple; it's a "red herring" here. Jeremiah's prophecy should by your focus, @Ethos; did the king of Babylon taken into account by Jehovah after the Jerusalem had lie desolate for 70 years? The temple utensils were returned to the Jews to take with them to Judah toward the end of the fulfillment of Jeremiah's prophecy when Cyrus gave the order during his first regnal year, and how long after the order was it acted upon? What month? I think that's just an argument with no real answer. Within four months' time, the Jews that didn't leave Babylon stayed, but those that left Babylon left with the temple utensils and they arrived there by 537 BC. This is conjecture based on a drop dead date taken from the Nabonidus Chronicle of Tishri, the seventh Hebrew month, the 16th day, in the 17th year of Nabonidus' reign.
An inscription on the Nabonidus Chronicle reads: "Babylon fell VII/16/17," which indicates that Babylon's fall occurred on or about Tishri 16, 3223 AM, October 11, 539 BC, Julian, October 5, 539 BC, Gregorian. Ezra 1:1-3 indicates that it was "in the first year of Cyrus the king of Persia" -- Cyrus' first regnal year ran from Nisan 538 BC to Nisan 537 BC -- that Cyrus caused a decree to go out to the Jews to "rebuild the house of Jehovah the God of Israel," which means that what the Nabonidus Chronicle tells us is that Cyrus' accession year occurred in 539 BC.
Since Ezra 3:1 indicates that it was "after seventy years" in the "seventh month" of Tishri 537 BC -- the same month in which the land of Judah suffered desolation "without inhabitant" living in any of the cities of Judah as had been foretold by the prophet Jeremiah -- that the repatriated Jews had returned to their cities (Jeremiah 25:11, 12; 29:10; 33:10), and Ezra 3:6 states that "from the first day of the seventh month," that is to say, on or about Tishri 1, 3225 AM, September 4, 537 BC, Julian, August 29, 537 BC, Gregorian, the repatriated Jews began to offer sacrifices at God's altar in Jerusalem. This means that this 70-year period would have come to an end on Tishri 1, 537 BC, following the commencement of Cyrus' first regnal year.
x = 537 BC
x = x (+ -70)
x = 607 BC
Thus, by subtracting 70 years from 537 BC, we can deduce based on (1) the Bible, (2) Josephus and (3) the Nabonidus Chronicle that the land of Judah had been made to lie desolate by Babylon on or about Tishri 1, 3155 AM, September 27, 607 BC, Julian, September 20, 607 BC, Gregorian, which is when this 70-year period would have commenced.
@AnnOMaly wrote:
Tishri 537 BC began in October.
Is that right, @AnnOMaly? In 537 BC, yes, but in 539 BC? You might want to consult a calendar:
<iframe height="410" frameBorder="0" src="http://www.rosettacalendar.com" width="100%" height="600" frameborder="0" scrolling="yes">
</iframe>
EDIT: @Simon, on some websites, the above code isn't stripped from the post, but it would appear (I don't know) that you allow YouTube videos to be embedded into posts, but not web pages generally. Is this is not correct, could you please post a response to this thread when you can (no PMs since I've always experienced difficulty opening PMs) indicating how I would embed a web page from an external website here? Thanks.
Just scroll to "Hebrew calendar" section, and enter "1 Tishri 3225" and click "Convert"; you should get pretty much the same dates that I did, @AnnOMaly. The embedded calendar is my gift to JWN. If this web calendar isn’t embedded, just click this link to open it in another page. But "537 BC" and the 16th day" were inadvertent typos (as usual).
The temple utensils were returned to the Jews to take with them to Judah toward the end of the fulfillment of Jeremiah's prophecy when Cyrus gave the order during his first regnal year, and how long after the order was it acted upon? What month? I think that's just an argument with no real answer. Within four months' time, the Jews that didn't leave Babylon stayed, but those that left Babylon left with the temple utensils and they arrived there by 537 AD [you meant BC, of course!]. This is conjecture based on a drop dead date taken from the Nabonidus Chronicle of Tishri, the seventh Hebrew month, the 14th [you meant the 16th] day, in the 17th year of Nabonidus' reign.
Your date of Tishri 1, 537 BC is based on pure conjecture. You recognize that. We've been through this already in the earlier discussion with you and in this thread with Ethos. AlanF's research was presented, which included references to (1) the Bible and (2) Josephus, and showed 538 BC is on firmer ground than 537.
Yes, the date of Tishri 1, 537 BC is conjecture. In fact, every date we might fix to any Bible-related event is conjectured based on the drop dead date of Tishri 16, 3223 AM, October 11, 539 BC, Julian, October 5, 539 BC, Gregorian. I don’t have a problem with this since salvation isn’t based on getting any of these dates correct. For you this is fun; but for those of us for whom Bible prophecy strengthens our faith, this is all just water-cooler talk pretty much, @AnnOMaly. Other elders tend to think of this stuff as absolute, but I understand, just as you do, that this is all "pure conjecture."
@Jeffro wrote:
djeggnog attributes the following words to me:
All of the nations were not in Babylon for seventy years. But all the nations did not serve in Babylon for 70 years. And nor did the Jews.
That is from something Ethos claimed I said, but my actual statement was:
The 70 years was a period during which all the nations served Babylon. But all the nations did not serve in Babylon for 70 years. And nor did the Jews.
I’m not sure what happened here, but you’re right. I suppose that when I keyboarded this portion of my post instead of dictating it to my PC (I had to use my iPad to complete that post), I misquoted this portion of Post 3025, which says (on Page 20):
(@Ethos:)
Simple question: Where does Jehovah say he will make the Jews serve their enemies? In a land they have not known. Therefore, the servitude cannot begin in 609 BCE, while all the Jews remain comfortably abided in Judea.
Again, there is no mention of the 70 years at Jeremiah 17:4. The 70 years was a period during which all the nations served Babylon. But all the nations did not serve in Babylon for 70 years. And nor did the Jews.
(@Jeffro:)@djeggnog