Cath. Encyclopedia agrees with WT re 607

by Cygnus 13 Replies latest jw friends

  • Cygnus
    Cygnus

    Under the heading "Babylonia"

    At first Nabuchodonosor II began a small guerilla warfare against Jerusalem; then, in 607 B.C., he dispatched a considerable army, and after a while began the siege in person.

    Can any apostate tell me what's wrong with this quote?

  • mike047
    mike047

    It should have been listed under BALONEY??

  • Lionel_P_Hartley
    Lionel_P_Hartley

    Cygnus,

    Mainly it's out of context I think;

    Against the solemn
    warning of Jeremias the Prophet, Jehoiakim refused tribute,
    i.e. rebelled against Babylon. At first Nabuchodonosor II
    began a small guerilla warfare against Jerusalem; then, in 607
    B.C., he dispatched a considerable army, and after a while
    began the siege in person. Jechonias, however, son of
    Jehoiakim, who as a lad of eighteen had succeeded his father,
    surrendered; 7000 men capable of bearing arms and 1000 workers
    in iron were carried away and made to form a colony on a canal
    near Nippur (the River Chobar mentioned in Ezechiel, i, 1),
    and Zedekias was substituted for Jechonias as vassal King of
    Juda.

    Some ten years later Nabuchodonosor once more found himself in
    Palestine. Hophra, King of Egypt, who had succeeded Necho II
    in 589 B.C., had by secret agents tried to combine all the
    Syrian States in a conspiracy against Babylon. Edom, Moab,
    Ammon, Tyre, and Sidon had entered into the coalition, and at
    last even Juda had joined, and Zedekias against the advice of
    Jeremias, broke his oath of allegiance to the Chaldeans. A
    Babylonian army began to surround Jerusalem in 587 B.C.. They
    were unable to take the city by storm and intended to subdue
    it by starvation. But Pharao Hophra entered Palestine to help
    the besieged. The Babylonians raised the siege to drive the
    Egyptians back; they then returned to Jerusalem and continued
    the siege in grim earnest. On July the 9th, 586 B.C., they
    poured in through a breach in the wall of Ezekias and took the
    city by storm. They captured the flying Zedekias and brought
    him before Nabuchodonosor at Riblah, where HIS CHILDREN WERE
    SLAIN BEFORE HIM AND HIS EYES BLINDED. THE CITY WAS DESTROYED,
    AND THE TEMPLE TREASURES CARRIED TO BABYLON. A VAST NUMBER OF
    THE POPOLATION WAS DEPORTED TO SOME DISTRICTS IN BABYLONIA, a
    miserable remnant only was allowed to remain under a Jewish
    governor Godolias. When this governor was slain by a Jewish
    faction under Ishmael, a fraction of this remnant, fearing
    Nabuchodonosor's wrath, emigrated to Egypt, forcibly taking
    Jeremias the Prophet with them.

  • Moxy
    Moxy

    the problem is that it is describing the initial assault on jerusalem in 605 or 'shortly after' 607, when jeconiah was captured. (jer 24:1) the final siege and destruction, i believe you will find in the very next paragraph, is dated at 587.

    please dont tell me this is a quote cited in a WT publication in support of 607. is it?

    mox

  • ISP
    ISP

    Maybe that 1914 stuff was right after all...haha!

    ISP

  • Cygnus
    Cygnus

    Lionel,

    Yes, you're correct. I had a JW in a chat room today use that very quote to defend the 607 chronology, saying if I had a problem with JWs using it, then I had a problem with the Catholics as well.

    Moxy,

    I think the 607 reference is a typo. It should be 597. The Catholic Encyclopedia isn't infallible!

  • Moxy
    Moxy

    thats interesting. i wonder where he got that from. im pretty sure the WT hasnt tried using this quote that way.

    mox

  • zerubberballz
    zerubberballz

    Bloody hell you guys .. this changes everything .. where's my end times calculata .. let's see .. punch in 607BC >>fast forward>> 587BC >>fast forward>> 1975AD >>punch fred franz in>> ......1995 ooo that can't be right! what can it all mean?

  • RR
    RR

    And where exactly is this quote found in the Catholic Encyclopedia, anyone know?

    ____________________________
    "Pain is inevitable. Suffering is optional."

  • erik
    erik

    Hey Lionel,

    Thats very interesting, thanks for putting up the whole quote for us so we don't read it out of context. Is the quote you posted from the Catholic Encyclopedia?

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