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Old 05-05-2006, 06:36 AM   #201
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Quote:
Originally Posted by King of Men
I don't think I would care to read all you posted in any detail, either. It's a message board, not a scholarly journal.
I like to consider Biblical Criticism & History "more scholarly" than say the "Lounge" or "Free Thought and Humor" boards; and if someone just wanted a place to bloviate opinions without any substance, than by all means go to a message board where people bloviate unsupported opinions all day long. IIDB forums like this one tend to attract people who want to learn and share ideas- and quoting sources and supporting your opinions is the best way to foster this kind of learning as it allows others to go look the information up for themselves.
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Old 05-05-2006, 09:25 AM   #202
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Default A Challenge for Richbee

Quote:
Originally Posted by dongiovanni1976x
So do you believe that the city of Tyre, in Ezekiel's day, was not located on an island?

Richbee:
I don't divide the two because it doesn't matter.
Indeed it does matter, because Ezekiel prophesied that Nebuchadnezzar would slay the "daughter-towns" of Tyre and then turn his military efforts against Tyre itself and destroy it completely. This has all been presented to Richbee in a verse-by-verse explication of Ezekiel 26, which he has completely ignored, but the fact that Nebuchadnezzar was unable to take Tyre proper shows that the prophecy failed.

Quote:
Richbee:
IMO, Ezekiel gets it correct straight from the beginning.
Your opinion is wrong, because if Nebuchadnezzar did not succeed in taking Tyre proper and destroying it completely, then Ezekiel actually had it wrong from the beginning. I have already posted two or three times explications of sections of chapter 26, which show that the prophecy was that Nebuchadnezzar would destroy Tyre. Here it is again.

Quote:
Richbee:
He will slay with the sword your daughter villages in the fields; he will heap up a siege mound against you, build a wall against you, and raise a defense against you [Prediction 4]...

Till:
As I pointed out in the first part of my reply to Richbee, the "daughter villages in the fields" would have been the mainland satellite villages belonging to Tyre. They would be slain with the sword or, in other words, quickly destroyed, since they lacked the fortifications of the island stronghold, and then Nebuchadnezzar--who had been identified in verse 7, omitted by Richbee's ellipsis--would direct his attention to the city of Tyre itself. Obviously, the heaping of a siege mound against Tyre, the building of a wall against it, and the raising of a defense against it didn't happen during Nebuchadnezzar's siege; hence, the prophecy failed.

The ellipsis in the last verse that Richbee quoted above indicates that he omitted more verses, so I will reinsert them with the third-person singular pronouns emphasized to show that the prophecy was referring to what Nebuchadnezzar would presumably do to Tyre.

9 He shall direct the shock of his battering rams against your walls and break down your towers with his axes. 10 His horses shall be so many that their dust shall cover you. At the noise of cavalry, wheels, and chariots your very walls shall shake, when he enters your gates like those entering a breached city. 11 With the hoofs of his horses he shall trample all your streets. He shall put your people to the sword, and your strong pillars shall fall to the ground.

Till:
During Nebuchadnezzar's siege, none of this happened within the island city, because Nebuchadnezzar never gained access to it. Now notice that after having omitted all of the verse that made third-person singular references to the instrument that Yahweh would use to destroy Tyre, Richbee began quoting again at the point where the pronoun they was injected into the prophecy. I will explain the significance of this later.

Richbee:
They will plunder your riches and pillage your merchandise; they will breakdown your walls and destroy your pleasant houses; they will lay your stones, your timber, and your soil in the midst of the water [Prediction 5]...

Till:
Richbee was following a popular inerrantist ploy here. He skipped to the third-person plural pronouns in order to leave the impression that "they" rather than "he" would destroy Tyre, but this deception won't work. Reference was made in the verses reinserted above to "horses" and a "calvary" and "chariots" that would thunder through the streets of Tyre, so the antecedents of they would be the horses, calvary, and chariots, which would require a third-person plural pronoun. Nevertheless, the destruction being prophesied was to be administered by Nebuchadnezzar's soldiers.

None of this, by the way, happen either during Nebuchadnezzar's siege, so this part of the prophecy failed.

Now let's look at what was omitted where Richbee's ellipsis was put at the end of his last verse quoted above.

13 I will silence the music of your songs; the sound of your lyres shall be heard no more.

Till:
The pronoun your was singular in the Hebrew text, which can be verified by checking the KJV, where the obsolete English pronoun thy was used to translate it. This is further evidence that the prophecy was directed against a single city--the island stronghold--and not a mainland "kingdom," which would have consisted of villages [plural] referred to earlier as "daughters in the field." If the prophecy had been referring to all of these, the text would have used the second-person plural pronoun in Hebrew and not the singular, when it said that "thy" songs would be silenced and the sounds of "thy" lyres would be heard no more.

Richbee:
I will make you like the top of a rock; you shall be a place for spreading of nets, and you shall never be rebuilt [Prediction 6]...

Till:
The you in this verse was also singular, as the "thee" and "thou" in the KJV will confirm, so what I said above applies here. The prophecy was directed against a single city--the island stronghold--and not the a plurality of mainland villages in some perceived "kingdom." As I pointed out earlier, it is unlikely that the prophecy was predicting that the dust from the entire surface of a mainland "kingdom" would be scraped off to make the land like the "top of a rock."

Richbee's ellipsis here skipped over six verses, which I am going to reinsert from the KJV so that readers can see that the "yous" and "yours" in it were singular in the Hebrew text.

KJV:
15 Thus saith the Lord GOD to Tyrus; Shall not the isles shake at the sound of THY fall, when the wounded cry, when the slaughter is made in the midst of THEE? 16 Then all the princes of the sea shall come down from their thrones, and lay away their robes, and put off their broidered garments: they shall clothe themselves with trembling; they shall sit upon the ground, and shall tremble at every moment, and be astonished at THEE. 17 And they shall take up a lamentation for THEE, and say to THEE, How art THOU destroyed, that wast inhabited of seafaring men, the renowned city, which wast strong in the sea, SHE and HER inhabitants, which cause their terror to be on all that haunt it! 18 Now shall the isles tremble in the day of THY fall; yea, the isles that are in the sea shall be troubled at THY departure. 19 For thus saith the Lord GOD; When I shall make thee a desolate city, like the cities that are not inhabited; when I shall bring up the deep upon THEE, and great waters shall cover THEE; 20 When I shall bring THEE down with them that descend into the pit, with the people of old time, and shall set THEE in the low parts of the earth, in places desolate of old, with them that go down to the pit, that THOU be not inhabited; and I shall set glory in the land of the living....

Till:
I also emphasized she and her to show that throughout this text, which Richbee conveniently omitted, singular pronouns were used to convey that the prophecy was directed against a single entity, i. e., the island stronghold.

Richbee:
I will make you a terror, and you shall be no more; though you are sought for, you will never be found again [Prediction 7].

Till:
Notice that the prophecy clearly said that Tyre would "be no more" and would "never be found again." I showed earlier that this part of the prophecy obviously failed, because Lebanon's fourth largest city now sits on the location of ancient Tyre. To spare readers the inconvenience of looking for my link to pictures of modern Tyre, I am reinserting it here http://tyros.leb.net/tyre/.
Since we are discussing prophecy, I will make one here: Richbee will ignore this again, just as he has ignored almost all rebuttal arguments posted here.

Quote:
Richbee:
Not only does the Kingdom fall under Babylonian and the Persian power and taxes, but the island.
As I have pointed out several times now, if the island "fell" in the sense of its becoming a vassal that paid tribute and taxes, then the prophecy failed, because Ezekiel had predicted that it would be completely destroyed and left like a bare rock, which would remain uninhabited. For the umpteenth time, here is the part of the prophecy that clearly predicted permanent destruction and abandonment.

Quote:
Ezekiel 26:19 For thus says the Lord Yahweh: When I make you a city laid waste, like cities that are not inhabited, when I bring up the deep over you, and the great waters cover you, 20 then I will thrust you down with those who descend into the Pit, to the people of long ago, and I will make you live in the world below, among primeval ruins, with those who go down to the Pit, so that you will not be inhabited or have a place in the land of the living. 21 I will bring you to a dreadful end, and you shall be no more; though sought for, you will never be found again, says the Lord Yahweh.[/b]
As I have asked now more times than I can remember, is Richbee just unable to understand the meanings of words like laid waste, not inhabited, no more, and never? If tribute and taxes were being paid to Babylon, there had to have been some inhabitants on the island to pay them, but as any reasonable person who reads the passage quoted above can see, the prophecy was that the city would be destroyed and left uninhabited forever.

Quote:
Richbee:
Just consider the source of pervious trade, like lumber for ship building or fresh water? It was impossible for the island to remain independent from Babylon.
The prophecy was not that Tyre would become a vassal state of Babylon; the prophecy was that Nebuchadnezzar would destroy it, make it like a bare rock, and leave it uninhabited forever. That didn't happen, so the prophecy obviously failed.

Quote:
Richbee:
Follow some of the details of wealth and power and the Spirtual [sic] pride that Tyre had in the gods of Baal.
Once again Richbee seems to be arguing that the prophecy was that only the glory, wealth, greatness, etc. of Tyre would be destroyed, so I will challenge him again to show us where the prophecy said that the greatness of the city would be destroyed but that the city itself would continue to exist.

Quote:
Richbee:
Farrel Till never addressed Ezekiel 26, 27, and 28 in total context, and in the context of History.
Excuse me? I never addressed Ezekiel 26 in total context. I just quoted above part of my explications of this chapter, which have been posted now two or three times. Richbee has yet to address those explications.

As for the "total context[s]" of chapter 27 and 28, I don't recall that they have ever been entered into the discussion beyond Richbee's mere cutting and pasting of chapter 28 (which he repeated below), but if he will enter into evidence explications of all or parts of these chapters, which he thinks helps his case, I assure him that I will respond point by point on the condition that he will agree to reciprocate and reply point by point to my explications of chapter 26. If he really thinks that he has a sound, verifiable case, he will accept this proposal. If he doesn't accept it, we will know that he understands that his position is indefensible.

Quote:
Richbee:
Ezekiel 28 (New International Version)

A Prophecy Against the King of Tyre


1 The word of the LORD came to me:
2 "Son of man, say to the ruler of Tyre,
'This is what the Sovereign LORD says:

" 'In the pride of your heart
you say, "I am a god;
I sit on the throne of a god
in the heart of the seas."
But you are a man and not a god,
though you think you are as wise as a god.
3 Are you wiser than Daniel?
Is no secret hidden from you?
I have snipped the rest of this, because the mere quotation of a chapter does not in any way prove Richbee's position. If he accepts my proposal above and then presents explications of chapter 28 that he thinks will support his case, I will reply to him point by point.
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Old 05-05-2006, 09:47 AM   #203
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Default Reply to #160

Quote:
Originally Posted by Spanky
Yes I would like to join him, in fact I feel I could learn a lot from the years of experience he has had.

Richbee:
Yet. he has never been to "modern" tyre!
I haven't been to Tokyo either or to San Francisco or to Cairo or.... Well, even Richbee should get the point.

Quote:
Spanky:
I have nothing to add because I know nothing about this subject. At least I can admit it. You obviously don't know much about it either. I am here to show you that. You are also a poor excuse for a fellow poster.

Richbee:
You're a BUZZ KILLER!

What happened to the gods of Baal in Tyre? You know, the ones that Ezekiel prophesied about?
The gods of Baal in Tyre, which Ezekiel prophesied about? Where did he prophesy about the "gods of Baal in Tyre"? Baal was mentioned nowhere in Ezekiel, and he didn't even use the word gods.

For the sake of argument, let's assume that Ezekiel had prophesied that "the gods of Baal in Tyre" would come to naught. What would that prove? Like the Hebrew god Yahweh, they didn't exist, so what would be so great about prophesying that something that didn't exist would come to naught?

Quote:
Richbee:
Do some homework here, or sit down and shut up!
Richbee needs to heed his own advice.
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Old 05-05-2006, 09:48 AM   #204
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Quote:
Originally Posted by yummyfur
With this said, I can actually come up with an apologetic argument that easily explains all of this in Ezekial away, I should really become a Christian

The "prophesy" is actually given directly to the Tyrians, and possibly Nebi. There was no intention on these being correct, god was lying to these heathens to manipulate their actions to his ultimate goal. Since these "prophecies" weren't given to his believing people, they were not actually prophecies.

While many Christians might baulk at the concept of god being a crass lying manipulater, my guess is that the bulk of the inerrantist crowd would be thrilled with such an explaination, as it would justify such actions toward unbelievers. But if any of you steal my apologetic, you must tell them it was thought up by an atheist.
Actually, prophecy and prediction are not the same thing. Jeremy Rifkin, Rachel Carson, and other environmentalists, count as prophets. Their warnings are all hypothetical: "If present practices continue....". Most true Biblical prophecy, as in Amos, is of that hypothetical sort. Jonah, is of course, not a real prophet, only a fictional one, recognized as such by the Jews of the time when the book was written and by all sane Bible readers since that time. But notice that his dire prophecies to the people of Nineveh were not fulfilled. The Ninevites (?) repented, and Yahweh changed his mind, to Jonah's great indignation.

So, you can even say that Ezekiel was not lying. There was a tacit assumption that the people of Tyre would continue their wicked ways and be destroyed. But if they repented like the people of Nineveh, the prediction didn't have to come true.

All that being said, "biblical prophecy" is a barren, arid waste land, no better than the "predictions" of Nostradamus. You can find a dozen fits over a couple of millennia, for almost any "prediction." For example, when Jack van Impe was asked if the Bible predicted 9/11, he cited Revelation 18:19, which says, "And they cast dust on their heads, and cried, weeping and wailing, saying, 'Alas, alas that great city, wherein were made rich all that had ships in the sea by reason of her costliness! For in one hour is she made desolate.' "

Seems to fit, doesn't it? It also fits Easter Sunday in Lisbon, 1755, when the city was destroyed by an earthquake. (Portugal had made immense fortunes from its merchant marine.) It also fits Rotterdam during World War II, which was bombed almost to extinction. It also fits Tyre in the time of Alexander the Great. It also fits..... well, make up your own scenario. I guess we can be thankful the USA was still rational enough in 2001 not to burn heretics to turn away the wrath of Jehovah, as the Portuguese did in 1755. (But give us time...)
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Old 05-05-2006, 09:54 AM   #205
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Originally Posted by EthnAlln
Seems to fit, doesn't it? It also fits Easter Sunday in Lisbon, 1755, when the city was destroyed by an earthquake. (Portugal had made immense fortunes from its merchant marine.) It also fits Rotterdam during World War II, which was bombed almost to extinction. It also fits Tyre in the time of Alexander the Great. It also fits..... well, make up your own scenario. I guess we can be thankful the USA was still rational enough in 2001 not to burn heretics to turn away the wrath of Jehovah, as the Portuguese did in 1755. (But give us time...)
Wow! That prophecy had the holy living fuck fulfilled out of it!

I imagine most prophecies only get fulfilled once or twice, that one sounds like it was fulfilled like a hundred times! Praise GOD!
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Old 05-05-2006, 10:42 AM   #206
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Default Reply to Richbee's Plagiarism

Quote:
Originally Posted by dongiovanni1976x
EZEKIEL’S PROPHECY IS UNSPECIFIC, INSIGNIFICANT AND WAS NEVER FULFILLED

Alexander the Great was never specified in the prophecy. And I assume that if something is not specified then it is unspecific. Therefore if you want to use Alexander in support of your argument then you must acknowledge that this prophecy is not “incredibly specific and detailed” but rather Ezekiel's prophecy is made unspecific.

Richbee:
Skeptics are funny.

They will believe anything or twist the prophesy to fit their dogma of unbelief!
And this does what to answer what dongiovanni1976x said above?

Quote:
Richbee:
The city of Tyre was one of the most prominent commercial cities in the Mediterranean in ancient times.Today, nothing of its supremacy remains.
And now Richbee is resorting to plagiarism. Compare what he wrote above to these opening lines from "Deconstructing Tyre" by Will Skiles accessible at http://www.loxafamosity.com/old_school/0200-01.html.

Quote:
Skiles:
The city of Tyre was one of the most prominent commercial cities in the Mediterranean in ancient times. Today, nothing of its supremacy remains.
This is word-for-word plagiarism.

Quote:
Richbee:
The Judeo-Christian Scriptures predicted the desolation of Tyre: that God in His righteous judgment would destroy this city because of its people's sins against Him. The Scriptures provide significant insight into the nature of the Hebrew God, Yahweh, His attributes, and why He is to be feared and honored.
Now compare that to the next lines in Skiles' article.

Quote:
Skiles:
The Judeo-Christian Scriptures predicted the desolation of Tyre: that God in His righteous judgement would destroy this city because of its people's sins against Him. The Scriptures provide significant insight into the nature of the Hebrew God, Yahweh, His attributes, and why He is to be feared and honored.
Word-for-word plagiarism again.

Quote:
Richbee:
[The Kingdom of] Tyre was once the commercial center of the ancient world, a market place of nations, and a city renown for its beauty and elegance. This city was described as a very wealthy and luxurious place where commerce revolved and business flourished. In the book of Isaiah (23:8), its merchants are called princes, and its traders are designated as "the honorable of the earth." It is apparent that these individuals held tremendous status and power, and that their city was one of the most illustrious and prestigious in the known world.
Now here are the next lines in Skiles' article.

Quote:
Skiles:
Tyre was once the commercial center of the ancient world, a market place of nations, and a city renown for its beauty and elegance. This city was described as a very wealthy and luxurious place where commerce revolved and business flourished. In the book of Isaiah (23:8), its merchants are called princes, and its traders are designated as "the honorable of the earth." It is apparent that these individuals held tremendous status and power, and that their city was one of the most illustrious and prestigious in the known world.
The only change that Richbee made was to insert [The Kingdom of] in brackets at the beginning of this paragraph.

There is no need to continue this, because we now know that Richbee is intellectually dishonest. I taught college English for 30 years, so as soon as I saw the polished style of writing, the improvement in syntax, the frequent use of transitional devices generally missing in Richbee's other posts, etc., I knew that he had cut and pasted all this from some other source before I saw his link at the end. Despite the link, this is still a form of plagiarism, because some who are not so skilled in recognizing stylistic changes in writing might not notice the link and actually think that he had written this himself. I suspect that this is what he wanted some to think; otherwise, he would have identified his source at the beginning and informed readers that he was quoting verbatim someone else's work.

As for what Skiles said in his article, there is really nothing in it that deserves a reply, because he showed his ignorance of history in paragraphs like this one. As you read it, please notice that he, like Richbee, doesn't seem to know the difference in prophesy and prophecy.

Quote:
This Prophesy [sic] must be compared to external historical accounts, and must be scrutinized for validity. Shortly after Ezekiel prophesied of God's judgement against Tyre, King Nebuchadnezzar of Babylon laid siege to Tyre. After a thirteen-year siege, Nebuchadnezzar broke down the city gates and found the city virtually abandoned. Most of Tyre's citizens moved to an island about one-half mile off the mainland, and there they fortified a city. Though mainland Tyre was destroyed in 573 B.C. by Nebuchadnezzar's army (Prediction 4), Tyre continued to flourish and remained a powerful city many years thereafter.
So Skiles is perpetuating the historical error of claiming that Nebuchadnezzar laid siege to mainland Usu for thirteen years before he was finally able to take it, but this was not the case. The mainland villages were sitting ducks and were easily taken, but the island stronghold was something entirely different. Nebuchadnezzar could not take it, so he settled on a treaty and withdrew. Skiles indicated that he has bought in to the old inerrantist claim that the island city of Tyre didn't exist until inhabitants of the mainland escaped, went to the island, and "fortified a city." Richbee has now admitted that he realizes that the island stronghold of Tyre existed long before Nebuchadnezzar's siege, so I have to wonder why he is quoting someone who knows no better than what Skiles was claiming in his article.

Skiles also showed his ignorance in the final paragraph that Skiles quoted in his article.

Quote:
Skiles:
During the Crusades the Crusaders used Tyre as a military base, and were overrun by the Muslims in 1291 A.D. The Muslims burned the houses, temples, and buildings, and utterly destroyed the city. What was once a great city became as stark as the top of a rock (Prediction 2), and today many secular scholars note that Tyre is now a place where fishermen frequently lay their nets out to dry (Prediction 3). To this day the city of Tyre has not been rebuilt, and it remains are bare rock with no ruins to mark its glorious past (Prediction 6).
We now know where Richbee got his numbered predictions, which he posted early in the Tyre discussion, but if he would like to defend the predictions that Skiles listed in the paragraph above, I defy him to do so. If he will take them one by one and present his supporting evidence, I will reply in detail if he will agree to reply in kind.
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Old 05-05-2006, 11:36 AM   #207
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Default Reply to #168

Quote:
Originally Posted by dongiovanni1976x
......Remarking about the many times Tyre was attacked leading up to, and including Nebuchadnezzar, Maurice Cherab, the Director general of Antiquities in Lebanon says, “If the invaders, however, sometimes succeeded in subduing the coast (i.e. Ushu), the island, which was the heart of Tyre’s maritime empire, eluded them.” (Cherab, Maurice, Tyre, trans: Afaf Rustum Chalhoub, p11)

[b]Richbee:[/b}
A problem develops for skeptics when they attempt to divide the Kingdom or city in two.
And what problem is that? As I have shown by explications of Ezekiel 26, which you persist in evading, the prophecy was that Nebuchadnezzar would be Yahweh's instrument for destroying Tyre. He would "slay the daughter-towns with the edge of the sword" and then turn his military efforts against Tyre, make it like a "bare rock" and leave it uninhabited forever. He took the mainland villages, because, as the director of antiquities indicated in the quotation above, Ushu was overrun many times. The island stronghold, however, was something else, and the prophecy was that Nebuchadnezzar would destroy it and leave it like a bare rock.

That didn't happen, so the prophecy failed no matter how much glory, wealth, and grandeur that Tyre may have since lost. As I have repeatedly said, the prophecy was that Tyre proper would be completely destroyed, an act that by natural consequence would have taken care of its greatness and glory. Richbee is trying to twist the prophecy to mean that the loss of Tyre's greatness was a fulfillment of the prophecy, but he has yet to show us where Ezekiel prophesied that the glory and greatness of Tyre would be destroyed forever but that the city itself would continue on through the centuries.

Quote:
Richbee:
What was the island, or became the island of Tyre became subject to Babylon and/or Persia, and it's mainland trade taken over. Who can deny this basic reality?
This is a syntactically poorly structured sentence, typical of Richbee's writing, which makes his plagiarism easy to detect. Anyway, he was here trying to recycle his claim that Tyre's subjugation to Babylon fulfilled the prophecy, but as I have said before, if Tyre became "subject" to Babylon, it could not have done so unless there was something there, inhabited by people, to be in subjection. Tribute could not have been paid unless there were people there to pay it. The prophecy, however, was that the city itself would be destroyed forever, and that didn't happen. The more that Richbee talks about the subjugation of Tyre to Babylon, the more he admits that Ezekiel's prophecy that Nebuchadnezzar would destroy it completely failed.

Quote:
Richbee:
Additionally, it is pointless to debate the old Kingdom or City of Tyre while denying it's [sic] power, wealth and position as a large port city or Kingdom of International trade. Very large! HUGE in fact.
Who has denied its power, wealth, and position? The prophecy, however, was not that its power, wealth, and position would be destroyed but that the city itself would be made a bare rock and left uninhabited forever. If this had been done, then by natural consequence the power, wealth, and position of Tyre would have been destroyed too, but Richbee has yet to show us where Ezekiel prophesied that the power, wealth, and position of Tyre would be lost forever but that the city itself would continue to exist down through the centuries.

Quote:
Richbee:
Seriously, I have no idea how skeptics can deny that Alexander the Great destroyed what little was left of the former Tyre?
This depends on what you mean by destroyed. No one that I know will claim that Alexander didn't devaste the city and crucify or otherwise kill most of its population, but he didn't destroy it completely and leave it uninhabited like a bare rock. We have quoted to you information that shows that Alexander didn't completely destroy the city and its population and that he actually later engaged in rebuilding projects there.

For the sake of argument, however, let's just assume that Alexander the Great did completely destroy the city and its population and did not engage in rebuilding projects. How would that prove that Ezekiel's prophecy was fulfilled? As we have shown and shown and shown and shown you, the prophecy was that Nebuchadnezzar would be the one to destroy the city and leave it uninhabited like a bare rock.

Quote:
Richbee:
Now, the most hilarious chapter in the debate is when skeptics try to pretend that "modern" Tyre in some way refutes Ezekiel.
Let me tell you something that's far more hilarious. That is a biblical inerrantist who refuses to admit that Ezekiel predicted the complete destruction of Tyre and its depopulation forever and that the presence of a city, complete with a population and commerce, now on the same site where ancient Tyre was located proves that Ezekiel's prophecy failed.

Quote:
Richbee:
I have observed that even the Mod' here doesn't see the facts on display through current pictures!
If you are referring to "current pictures" posted even by you, which show that the site of ancient Tyre is now occupied by a thriving city, then what are "facts" on display in these pictures that the moderator can't see?

If you want to talk about facts on display in pictures that you can't see, then what about your refusal to admit that pictures like these don't shown the utter ignorance of your position?






These pictures were originally posted in another thread http://www.iidb.org/vbb/showthread.p...=1#post2369471
by "Sauron," who made the following observation about them.

Quote:
Sauron:
The color picture is really useful. If you rotate it 180 degrees, you can see that it matches the drawing located here:
http://joseph_berrigan.tripod.com/id34.html



The enlarged and rotated version is currently in this thread:
http://www.freethought-forum.com/for...4771#post64771
With a little imagination, Richbee won't even need to rotate them to see the outline of the old island part, which is now covered by a city.

Will he now admit that he is wrong?

Will pigs fly someday?
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Old 05-05-2006, 12:08 PM   #208
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Woah, woah, woah, Richbee. Tyre, Lebanon is in your words a tiny little backwater with only a few Arabs in it? It has nearly 4 million people in it! Those are not the numbers of a tiny little backwater. Having nearly 4 million people doesn't mean utterly destroyed. Sure, the mainland was destroyed but the prophesy doesn't state the mainland of Tyre would be destroyed and made no more. It says the whole of Tyre.
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Old 05-05-2006, 12:32 PM   #209
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Originally Posted by Overkill
Woah, woah, woah, Richbee. Tyre, Lebanon is in your words a tiny little backwater with only a few Arabs in it? It has nearly 4 million people in it! Those are not the numbers of a tiny little backwater. Having nearly 4 million people doesn't mean utterly destroyed. Sure, the mainland was destroyed but the prophesy doesn't state the mainland of Tyre would be destroyed and made no more. It says the whole of Tyre.
I am not sure where the figure of 4 million came in here but according to the survey conducted in 1996 by the Ministry of Social Affairs, "the caza (region/district) of Tyre has 132,111 permanent residents… of which more than 30,000 reside in the city of Tyre.” (http://www.adr.org.lb/ENG/libansud_constat1_an.htm )
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Old 05-05-2006, 01:01 PM   #210
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Default Reply to #176

Quote:
Originally Posted by dongiovanni1976x
Quoting your own source, "Ezekiel predicts that Tyre would not be rebuilt, and that it would become a place for the spreading of fishnets. From Arrian's descriptions it is very clear that Alexander did not level the island fortress, in fact, he had Tyre rebuilt. Tyre remained an important trading and manufacturing center that was fought over by Alexander's immediate successors, the Ptolemies and the Seleucids."

Did you even read your own source?

RichbeeAbsolutely, did you see where I said, I disagreed with Bloom?
You seem to disagree with him a lot. Why do you quote him if you don't agree with him? If you disagree with him in what he says that is contrary to the position you are trying to defend, is it all right if we disagree with him too when he tries to claim that the prophecy was fulfilled?

Quote:
Richbee:
IMO, Ezekiel's prophesy [sic] is against more than a physical city,
We don't want your opinion; we want explicated evidence that your interpretation of the prophecy (notice how it is spelled) is correct. You say that the prophecy (notice how it is spelled) was against "more than a physical city," so you need to explain yourself. Was the physical city at least a part of the prophecy? If so, what was the scope of the prophecy against the "physical city"? Was it not that the physical city would be completely destroyed, made like a bare rock, and left uninhabited forever? If not, then what did Ezekiel mean in the following verses?

Quote:
Ezekiel 26:14 I will make you a bare rock; you shall be a place for spreading nets. You shall never again be rebuilt, for I Yahweh have spoken, says the Lord Yahweh.

Ezekiel 26:19 19 For thus says the Lord Yahweh: When I make you a city laid waste, like cities that are not inhabited, when I bring up the deep over you, and the great waters cover you, 20 then I will thrust you down with those who descend into the Pit, to the people of long ago, and I will make you live in the world below, among primeval ruins, with those who go down to the Pit, so that you will not be inhabited or have a place in the land of the living. 21 I will bring you to a dreadful end, and you shall be no more; though sought for, you will never be found again, says the Lord Yahweh.
For the sake of argument, let's assume that the prophecy did include predictions that Tyre would lose its glory, wealth, and power. It obviously included even more provisions that the "physical city" could be destroyed and the site left bare and uninhabited forever. Please tell us then how the prophecy could have been fulfilled unless Tyre was destroyed and left bare and uninhabited forever. A total destruction of the city would have taken care of its power and greatness, but destruction of its power and greatness wouldn't necessarily have destroyed the city.

You can't see that?

Quote:
Richbee:
it's against the King and the false gods - the Baals.
Where did Ezekiel prophesy against "the false gods--the Baals" of Tyre? I have already shown in another post that the words Baal and gods were not used in the book of Ezekiel. Is Richbee claiming that Ezekiel somehow prophesied against "the false gods--the Baals" without using either of the words?

Quote:
Richbee:
Alexander destroyed Tyre and led away the citizens as slaves.
But not all of them. He crucified many of them and took the others away as slaves, but he did not completely depopulate the island. He, in fact, assisted later in rebuilding it, but Ezekiel said that Nebuchadnezzar would completely destroy Tyre. What Alexander may have done centuries later is irrelevant, because if the prophecy was that Nebuchadnezzar would be Yahweh's destructive instrument against Tyre, and it didn't happen, then the prophecy failed.

Quote:
Richbee:
(I am curious about additional sources here.)
I don't know what you are referring to.

Quote:
Richbee:
There were no more Tyrians or Phoencians - just slaves or defeated ex-citizens of Tyre. No more ships. No more Navy.
Not so. As you have been told and told and told, reputable historians have recognized that Tyre made a rather quick recovery from Alexander's devastation and regained some of its wealth and greatness. Here, for example, is what Eerdmans Bible Dictionary says about its recovery.

Quote:
Many of the inhabitants of the city were killed or enslaved. Tyre's economy recovered somewhat under the Seleucids, and Greek culture was adopted. In Roman times, the city was administered from Syria (1987, p. 1025).
The city, of course, could not have been administered from Syria if there were no city in Roman times to be administered. Richbee has apparently swallowed hook, line, and sinker the inerrantist claims about Ezekiel's amazing prophecy fulfillments that are being recycled without being investigated. Had he examined them more critically, he wouldn't be as confused as he obviously is.

Something that hasn't yet been mentioned in this discussion is Isaiah's prophecy that Tyre would be destroyed but only for 70 years, after which she would recover.

Quote:
Isaiah 23:13 Look at the land of the Chaldeans! This is the people; it was not Assyria. They destined Tyre for wild animals. They erected their siege towers, they tore down her palaces, they made her a ruin. 14 Wail, O ships of Tarshish, for your fortress is destroyed. 15 From that day Tyre will be forgotten for seventy years, the lifetime of one king. At the end of seventy years, it will happen to Tyre as in the song about the prostitute: 16 Take a harp, go about the city, you forgotten prostitute! Make sweet melody, sing many songs, that you may be remembered. 17 At the end of seventy years, Yahweh will visit Tyre, and she will return to her trade, and will prostitute herself with all the kingdoms of the world on the face of the earth. 18 Her merchandise and her wages will be dedicated to Yahweh; her profits will not be stored or hoarded, but her merchandise will supply abundant food and fine clothing for those who live in the presence of Yahweh.
So Isaiah predicted that the Chaldeans [Babylonians] would make Tyre desolate but for only 70 years after which "her wages [would] be dedicated to Yahweh" and her merchandise would supply "food and fine clothing for those who live in the presence of Yahweh." When did this happen? Maybe Richbee can tell us.

At any rate, one prophet said that Tyre would be made desolate for 70 years and then recover but another said that it would be destroyed forever.

Which one should we believe?

Quote:
Richbee:
Greeks don't count IMO. Also, Arabs don't count in rebuilding what remains today.
Why not? If the prophecy was that Tyre would never be rebuilt, then why wouldn't that cover Greeks, Arabs, and anyone else who might try to rebuild it? The prophecy didn't say that Tyre would never be rebuilt except by Greeks and Arabs.

The prophecy failed, Richbee. Get over it.
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