Londo, this thread passed me by. I've only seen the intro. video and it looks good. I have some catching up to do with the other videos and I'll let you know if anything else strikes me other than what Jeffro's pointed out. Your voice is fine - it has a nice tone to it but it just needed to sound a tad more lively. Minor stuff. Shame the audio is crackly though.
Neil! I'm almost pleased to see you (the real you this time LOL). I hope you are settled now in your new location. You know, you're repeating the same ol' default position that has been demolished on here by various people many times over. I see you're getting creamed again. Why do you do it? Why submit yourself to more humiliation?
Anyway, I know I'm late in the day, but I wanted to add a few comments.
You have contributed nothing new to this long standing academic debate for all that you have presented is simply a rehash in a pictorial form of Carl Jonsson's Gentile Times Reconsidered.
Naturally so. COJ also presented what academia has long known.
Scholars have and continue to stumble over an interpretation of the seventy years, they cannot agree as to its beginning and end nor its duration and this is where you have a major problem.
Which 70 years do they 'stumble over'? Jeremiah's? Zechariah's? Are the 70 years to be seen as symbolic (as with Tyre's 70 years)? Rounded? Literal and precise? It depends on what the 'stumbling' scholars are talking about. You are already aware of Ross E. Winkle's studies that apply Jeremiah's 70 years literally with the established chronology and it fits very well.
Carl Jonsson who has researched this subject most thoroughly has not decided whether 605 or 609 BCE is the begiining of the seventy years for either date has the acceptance of some scholars.
*Sigh* The Assyrians were finally made to serve Babylon in 609 BCE; Judea and the surrounding nations were made to serve Babylon in 605 BCE; Tyre was made to serve Babylon some years later.
As the 'celebrated WT scholars' wrote:
"'These nations will have to serve the king of Babylon seventy years.' (Jeremiah 25:8-17, 22, 27) True, the island-city of Tyre is not subject to Babylon for a full 70 years, since the Babylonian Empire falls in 539 B.C.E. Evidently, the 70 years represents the period of Babylonia’s greatest domination—when the Babylonian royal dynasty boasts of having lifted its throne even above 'the stars of God.' (Isaiah 14:13) Different nations come under that domination at different times. But at the end of 70 years, that domination will crumble." - Isaiah's Prophecy I, p. 253.
However, one of your biggest problems is the fact that even to this day scholars do not know the precise calender year for the Fall whether it is 586 or 587 BCE for the Fall.
I don't know why you spin this line yet again. You have long been aware of Rodger C. Young's solution and how the 587 BCE date is confirmed.
The scholarly literature has always and continues to this day favour the 586 date as opposed to 587.
The 'celebrated WT scholars' disagree with you.
"Secular historians usually say that Jerusalem was destroyed in 587 B.C.E." - w.2011, 10/1, p. 29.
[To Jeffro] Scholar is not impressed by pretty mischevious diagrams appearing on your blog.
Ann is amused that Neil is referring to himself in the 3rd person so soon and attributing naughty behavior to attractive diagrams. Perhaps they should be spanked most vigorously for their misbehavior and sent to their rooms without supper.
you have a fuzzy date for the ending of the seventy years.
October 12/13, 539 BCE ended Jeremiah's "70 years for Babylon." (Jer. 25:12a) What's fuzzy about that? You want an atomic clock time as well?
our chronology is just as credible and valid as any other scheme.
'Your' chronology is a non-starter and conflicts with both Bible and historical facts.
[To Jeffro] The other major problem with your 538 proposal is that you have no ringing endorsement from Carl Jonsson who merely assigns this matter to a footnote in his GTR. His silence or reticience on this speaks volumes.
That's a fib. Shame on you. COJ discusses it in the main text as part of his argument about when Jeremiah's '70 years' ended.
Oh, and make a note, Neil: Jeffro isn't seeking endorsement from COJ - hasn't even read COJ's work - so your comment is meaningless to him. Your fixation with COJ blinds you to the fact that there is no viable support, biblically or extra-biblically or among respected scholarship, for the WT chronology of that period. Period.
As a side point one well respected chronologist who has published several articles on chronology in the Journal of the Evangelical Theological Society over the years ...
How 'Watchtower' of you not to provide a specific reference.
... and supports 587 for the Fall has produced a king list that nicely agrees with WT chronology having a total number of 390 years.
You think that because the year totals amount to 390, it somehow confirms WT chronology? LOL, you goon!