scholar pretendus:
The simple fatct is that you do not have a complete chronology of the OT and you do not have a complete chronology for the reigns of kings for the Divided Monarchy in Israel and Judah. This is proved by the fatct that you cannot provide a complete and coherent account of the reigns of kings for the Divided Monarchy in Israel and Judah, which in turn is proved by the fatct that you can cite no complete and coherent discussion of any of these things in Mommy's literature. Nor can you provide a complete and coherent account of the Neo-Babylonian period, as proved by Alleymom's challenge, which shows that the Watchtower Society agrees with every detail of modern-day secular Neo-Babylonian chronology, but disagrees with the sum total. This, of course, is like agreeing that 1+2 makes 3, and 4+5 makes 9, but disagreeing that 1+2+4+5 makes 3+9 makes 12. Nor can you show anywhere in Mommy's literature where the most important of the 70-year-related biblical passages, as I have expounded upon at some length, are even discussed, much less shown to be coherent with Mommy's other teachings.
: What you do have is a chronology for the Neo-Babylonian period only.
Wrong. Secular chronology covers far more than that, and a number of fine scholars such as Edwin Thiele have provided full OT chronologies that most scholars agree are accurate to within a year or two at most. By contrast, Watchtower chronology is wrong for a good deal of the period of the OT by at least 20 years.
Furthermore, it should be obvious even to someone barely above the intelligence level of a clam that, because an accurate Neo-Babylonian chronology in and of itself firmly establishes that Jerusalem was destroyed, not in 607 B.C., since that was before Nebuchadenzzar was even king of Babylon, but in his 18th or 19th year (according to the Bible), which corresponds to 587 or 586 B.C., the Watchtower Society's chronology cannot be correct. So periods outside of accurately established Neo-Babylonian chronology are self-evidently irrelevant to the question of the date of Jerusalem's destruction, since said destruction comes within that period.
Thus, scholar pretendus, your repeated bleatings that imply that a lack of a full and complete OT chronology on the part of secular chronologists, but that Watchtower chronologists provide such, are demonstrably false, misleading, and irrelevant to the question at hand: is the Watchtower Society's claim that Jerusalem fell in 607 B.C. correct?
AlanF