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01-03-2007, 09:23 AM | #11 |
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The accuracy of Daniel varies with time: somewhat inaccurate in its account of when Daniel supposedly lived, getting better after that, then conforming closely to events during the Maccabean Rebellion (when it was actually written, according to modern scholars), then "losing it" by predicting a long life for Antiochus II Epiphanes (who died in 164 BC IIRC).
The book is also never mentioned before the Maccabean period, and even Ezekiel's brief mention of a "Dan'el" does not describe him as a contemporary. Given the lack of any good reason to believe that the book was written before the Maccabean period, it is indeed a very poor choice for a "proof of prophecy" of any events up to this point. I think we can all agree that it WAS written well before Jesus, but it doesn't specifically prophesy him. Furthermore, much of the alleged "fulfillment" relies on unverifiable claims ("...coming of the Holy Spirit"? Even if we were to assume that this is what Daniel was referring to: where's the actual independent proof that the "Holy Spirit" came?). Book of Daniel Revealing Daniel There have also been many discussions of Daniel on this forum, of course. |
01-03-2007, 09:34 AM | #12 |
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Jack,
There is much, much more in that first post than that to which you have responded, such as the kingdom, the church, etc. In addition, the book of Daniel's date is not questionable except by those with an agenda to begin with. The only reason anyone would late date it, given what the Book itself says about its timeframe, is to get rid of the prophecies. For that matter, that is the reason behind destructive criticism in the first place. I.e. get rid of miracles and prophecy, since they cannot exist. |
01-03-2007, 09:39 AM | #13 | |
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And there is still no reason whatsoever to assign an early date to it. You seem confused about where the burden of proof lies. YOU are making an extraordinary claim: and extraordinary claims require extraordinary proof. YOU must establish that the book was written early. YOU must establish that it made predictions. YOU must establish that the predictions were actually fulfilled. These cannot be assumed by default. |
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01-03-2007, 09:47 AM | #14 |
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Write a prediction vague enough and it has to come to pass. Eventually something will match close enough to fool gullible people. Besides, you're using the same reference to say that the prophecy was completed as the prophecy it self. Sorry, but any schmuck could write something down, then a few pages later say it happened and name himself an oracle. I'm not impressed.
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01-03-2007, 09:53 AM | #15 | ||
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http://www.usccb.org/nab/bible/daniel/intro.htm Quote:
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01-03-2007, 09:56 AM | #16 | |
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The fact remains that you will find this same "late date" resulting from the same consideration of the evidence given in many Bible commentaries including Harper's and Jerome. |
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01-03-2007, 09:59 AM | #17 |
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funinspace,
There will be always in existence people who disagree. That proves nothing except that there will be always in existence people who disagree. Once again, God Himself could come to earth and tell some that 'x' was true and they would not agree. That is not far fetched, as some here have said God could appear to them and they still would not believe. What does the evidence show? That is the question. What is the rational response to the evidence? That is the key. |
01-03-2007, 10:01 AM | #18 | |
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Amaleg13,
You have made my point when you say, Quote:
The 'recognition' is the assumption people take, then they set out about to destroy any evidence to the contrary (i.e. destructive critics, late dating, etc) in order to prove their assumption. |
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01-03-2007, 10:09 AM | #19 | |
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01-03-2007, 10:11 AM | #20 | ||||||||||||||||||
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The image of the statue was written slightly before Antiochus IV's time. The four kingdoms are Babylon, Media, Persia and Greece. There is a chronological problem built into the work about Media, for it existed at the same time as Babylon and it was absorbed into the Persian empire, but it is the image used in 8:2ff with the ram with two horn, ie Media and Persia, with Media coming first, but it was broken, then Persia came, only to be defeated by the goat, Alexander, but at the height of Alexander's efforts his horn is broken and his power is divided into four, the Diadochi. The first horn of the ram is what interests us, for it represents Media, just as the second kingdom is Media and the third Persia. The fourth is Greece again, but the trunk is divided into two legs, the Seleucids and the Ptolemies, who fought with each other continually one having advantage over the other then the positions were reversed, ie the feet of iron and clay, mixed showing one stronger then the other. They, at times, even had marriages between them to attempt peace -- that's the reference to mingling the seed of men, ie marriage, in 2:43. Isaiah 13:17-19 talks about the Medes overthrowing Babylon. It didn't happen of course. It was the Persians who received Babylon's surrender. Quote:
The text was written at the time when history becomes guessing about the future and therefore turns wrong. That time describes the period of Antiochus IV, though the text doesn't know about the death of Antiochus IV, for although it has much of his life chronicled, it doesn't know the end of it. That dates the writing of the second part of Daniel to 165 BCE. The were in the last half week, ie three and a half years, of the prophecy in Dan 9. The anointed one of Dan 9:26a is the high priest Onias III -- that's where the idea of messiah came from, the priesthood, god's chosen on earth, the high priest being the only person who could come into god's presence on earth the holy of holies in the temple. The high priest is removed from office by Antiochus IV and eventually killed. Antiochus gave the high priesthood first to Onias's brother Jesus/Jason and then to a higher bidder Menelaus. Eventually he got upset with the refractory Jews and after half a week of years he polluted the temple. Once you start reading the new testament, you are no longer interested in Daniel, but what the n.t. says. Quote:
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So we have two kingdoms, the Medes and the Persians. Notice interestingly that when Isaiah 13:17ff makes the prophecy about the Medes overthrowing Babylon, the Persians were nowhere in sight. Quote:
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Now while I can give you good reason why Daniel was written during the reign of Antiochus IV, can you give me a good reason why the story of Daniel according to you was written in the period it was set? After all it is simply wrong about such things as the relationship between Belshazzar and Nebuchadnezzar the latter not being the father of the former. If you want to treat the work as being written in the sixth century then it is also wrong about a number of other things. Quote:
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Another such detail in Daniel is the story of the three horns that the little horn surplants in 7:8. When Antiochus IV came to power, his brother Seleucus had just died and Heliodorus had propped up a son of the dead king as his puppet, so Antiochus came to power, doing away with both of them, so the three horms he surplanted were Seleucus his brother and the other two. This Heliodorus is also mentioned in 11:20 as the official who was sent to raid the temple ("the glory of the kingdom"), "but within a few days he will be broken". You can read all about the event in 2 Macc 3. But back to 11:21, we read about Antiochus IV "on whom royal majesty had not been conferred". Antiochus was not destined to be king, but his brother died under strange circumstances while Antiochus was away from the country and returned to take power. There are just so many specific details in Daniel that can be accounted for if one realizes that the book is about the time of Antiochus IV. Shift it from that context and so much will suddenly become confusing. spin |
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