"scholar" said to Gamaliel:
: I read with interest your post and the nonsense by Alan F who provides a dogmatic interpretation concerning 2 Chronicles 36:20, 21 which lies outside contemporary biblical scholarship.
Whether it does or not is irrelevant, because "if we just stick to the Scriptures", as I did in the discussion above with Analysis and Euphemism, the interpretation is dogmatic simply because the language is obviously completely unambiguous. Since these passages are irrefutable, and completely consistent with standard secular chronology -- which Jonsson did not invent but merely summarized -- there is no choice: Watchtower chronology is wrong.
: Thus far ,it is only Jonsson and a couple of SDA scholars that promote such a view.
Nonsense. While the view is not often stated directly, it is certainly implied by the fact that virtually all modern scholars accept the standard chronology for the Neo-Babylonian period. For example, in the book that you recently told us about (Judah and the Judeans in the Neo-Babylonian Period; talk about shooting yourself in the foot!), the Introduction gives background on the conference and colloquy that gave rise to the book. On page vii it states:
This ongoing colloquy, one of the truly successful efforts at collaborative scholarship involving (but not confined to) biblical studies, deals with various aspects of the history and culture of the western regions of the Perian Empire, including Judah, more or less corresponding to the Neo-Babylonian empire taken over by Cyrus II in 539 B.C.E...
No one doubts the importance of the Neo-Babylonian period for Judah. It witnessed the extinction of the Judean state and its institutions, including the religious institutions that had legitimated and sustained the state and the monarchy. Though Judeans had settled outside of Judah before the Neo-Babylonian period, the successive deportations of 597, 586, and 582 B.C.E., and perhaps others unrecorded, set up the contrast between homeland and diaspora as a permanent feature of Jewish life and consciousness. The larger context in which these events took place was the final eclipse of the Assyrian Empire in the last decade of the seventh century B.C.E., the defeat of the Egyptian effort to fill the vacuum, and the emergence of the Babylonian Empire under Nebuchadrezzar. The Babylonian epoch dates formally from the accession of Nabopolassar in 626 B.C.E., but effectively, as far as Judah was concerned, it ran from the Egyptian defeat at Carchemish in 605 B.C.E. to the fall of Babylon in 539 B.C.E.. These, then, are the chronological parameters within which the issues were discussed at the conference.
Note that the above statements completely disprove "scholar's" claim that these dates are merely part of an unproved and unscholarly "Jonsson hypothesis".
While many of the scholars whose writings appear in the book disagree on many details of events in the Neo-Babylonian period, they all accept "the chronological parameters" of the established Neo-Babylonian epoch. Explicitly or implicitly, because the Neo-Babylonian epoch ended in 539 B.C.E., they admit that, as I said in my previous post, "after the royalty of Persia began to reign, the Jews were no longer servants to Nebuchadnezzar and his sons."
: A direct reading of those texts shows that the land lay desolate for seventy years concluding with the decree of Cyrus.
A direct reading of other texts "shows" that the sun goes around the earth and the earth is the unmoving center of the universe. But a consideration of all biblical texts, along with secular information, shows that such "direct readings" result in internal contradictions or in conflicts with the irrefutable fact that the earth is not the center of the universe.
So it is with a direct reading of "those texts". A reading of all relevant texts along with a consideration of solid secular information results in no conflicts -- something that Jehovah's Witnesses will not accept because, and only because, of their worship of the Watchtower Society and its leaders.
: Support for this view can be discerned in that recent publication on Late Judean history that I have mentioned.
Only by some authors, and even those authors certainly do not accept Watchtower views on this topic. Indeed, author Charles E. Carter, writing in the chapter "Ideology and Archaeology in the Neo-Babylonian Period", states in his conclusion (pp. 317-8):
2 Chronicles 36 and to a lesser extent Leviticus 26 propose an empty land that enjoyed that sabbath rest it had been denied through years of unfaithfulness to the covenant. This ideology is not at all consonant with the archaeological record, for as we have seen, life went on in some manner in Judah after the destruction and deportations of 597 and 586.
If the archaeological record indicates that Judah was still populated after Jerusalem's destruction, right down until the return of the Babylonian exiles, then the Watchtower's claim that the 70 years of Jeremiah were years of complete desolation of the land is disproved, and there is no need for further discussion of any Watchtower claims about the chronology of the Neo-Babylonian period.
: Simply turn to the Scripture index and read how these verses are discusssed.
I did. They do not support your claims.
: I have not found the implied endorsement on this texts by WT critics within the literature because scholars cannot agree as to the beginning and end of the seventy years and that and only that fixes 607.
Nor are you ever going to find it, because it does not exist for the reasons I explained above.
: You can have all of the so called seculat evidence which is always subject to revision bu if it conflicts with the direct interpretation othe land being decolate for seventy years then you may as well pu it in the rubbish bin
True enough, but that's a false dilemma. The facts are as I have stated above.
: with the Jonsson hypotheisis.
I wonder when it will sink into your thick head that you've invented a myth here. Read the above material from the introduction until you understand it.
: Please be in mind that Greg Stafford also showed that that text has an alternative interpretation in his Three Dissertations.
Nonsense. Stafford wrote (p. 252):
2 Chronicles 36:20-21 tells us that the land kept sabbath while desolate "to fulfill seventy years." Here again, as is the case with Daniel 9:2, we find the term mal'ot, "to fulfill." Does this term relate to the length of time Jerusalem would be desolated, or does it refer to the period of Babylonian supremacy within which the desolate state of Jerusalem would come to an end? 2 Chronicles 36:20 certainly provides support for Jonsson's view since it refers to the serving of Babylonian kings "until the reign of the kingdom of Persia." But as with Daniel the ambiguous grammar of verse 21, which mentions seventy years in relation to the desolate state of Jerusalem, allows for alternative explanations. It seems the best solution is the one that is in harmony with the context of the verse in question, and the historical data that best supports the explanation offered.
Conclusion
Jeremiah 25:10-12 refers to the condition of the land of Judah and Jerusalem as "devastated." But there is some uncertainty about whether the period of time mentioned (seventy years) refers to the length of time the land would be in this condition or simply to the period of servitude to Babylon, or both. Daniel 9:1-2 and 2 Chronicles 36:20-21 offer interpretations of Jeremiah's prophecy that are grammatically ambiguous in terms of whether or not the seventy-year period mentioned refers to the length of time that Jerusalem would be desolated, or the the fulfillment of time for Babylonian supremacy, after which Jerusalem would no longer be desolate.
So, far from showing "that that text has an alternative interpretation", Stafford merely said that the text of 2 Chronicles 36:20-21 "allows for alternative explanations" but never gave one. On the contrary, his most direct statement was that '2 Chronicles 36:20 certainly provides support for Jonsson's view since it refers to the serving of Babylonian kings "until the reign of the kingdom of Persia."' In the final paragraph he even admits that the Watchtower interpretation is not conclusive, contrary to the claims of JW apologists.
Interestingly, on the next page (I will not quote this here), Stafford has the intellectual integrity actually to castigate the Society for its dishonest scholarship in several areas of chronology. Take a lesson, "scholar", and change your ways.
AlanF