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Old 06-13-2006, 10:47 AM   #661
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Quote:
Originally Posted by manwithdream
I feel that the explanations people are giving about Ezek 26 don't consider this possible explanation.
How does "God simply could have said so" not consider this explanation?

Quote:
You said that G-d lied to Nineveh in Jonah by saying that He would destroy them and then He didn't do it. I never noticed that it sounds dishonest to say that they would be destoyed and then He did not destroy them. I only noticed that He had mercy on them.
Last time I looked, saying something which is not true while knowing that it is not true was called "lieing". I don't know why it's relevant for this fact if mercy was involved or not.

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I don't know why He did not say repent or be destroyed. Your point was interesting, but I think people can't really understand G-d .
Then people should stop arguing about what god actually says and what he wants. Your statement above actually renders the bible (and the Torah) null and void.

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The only real proof in the world for G-d's existence is when He reveals Himself like at Mount Sinai,or if He tells the future by prophets, or if He does miracles . Since none of those things are going on now, there really isn't any proof like in the old days , so I don't think there is any way to actually convince people today that G-d exists and that the Torah is true.
Problem is of course that other religions have similar stories about experiencing their god - and these stories even happen today (as they claim).
Revelation isn't a good guide too truth.

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People argue about religion, but there really is no hard proof. I believe without actual proof, and I know that.
Good for you. Now the only question which remains is: Why?
You equally well could believe in Allah or Vishnu without actual proof, why not choose one of those to believe in?

Quote:
I don't look at every quote and see them as cruel lies
I did not say "cruel lie". I said "lie".
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Old 06-13-2006, 02:07 PM   #662
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Johnny Skeptic
.......and [there is not any credible evidence] that the version of the prophecy that we have today is the same as the original.
Quote:
Originally Posted by bfniii
Do we have a reason to believe that it has been altered?
There is no rule of logic or law that says that all claims are true unless proven untrue. If you assume that the prophecy has not been altered, then please tell us why. Since God has allowed hundreds of millions of people to die without ever having heard the Gospel message, why in the world would he be interested in preserving the Bible without revisions? Surely an unaltered Bible is not any better than no Bible at all as far as those hundreds of mililions of people were concerned.
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Old 06-13-2006, 03:33 PM   #663
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bfniii, why are you still so confused? English may not be your first language (if it IS, you have serious problems), but this applies to quite a few other posters here, and they don't show this sort of confusion (especially after MANY corections).

There is no evidence that Ezekiel considers the daughter villages to be a part of Tyre itself: the text says otherwise. They belong to the Tyrians, but they're apparently not seen as an integral part of the city: they are "Tyre's daughter villages", not synonymous with "Tyre" itself. Yes, it could be argued that they are part of the Kingdom of Tyre: but this is not enough to rescue the "prophecy" from disaster, because of the reference to "ALL" of Tyre's streets.
Quote:
Most importantly, however, and disastrously for your argument: you require a shift to the mainland ONLY in order to exclude the island from ALL Tyre's streets:

it's no shift. he mentions the daughter villages in verse 8. in order for you to be correct, you would have to show a shift from the mainland to all of tyre or the island in verses 8, 9, 10 or 11.

You MUST change the subject completely AWAY from Tyre itself, the island: to EXCLUDE it.

again: ezekiel thinks of the mainland as tyre as well as the island. he's not excluding anything. he refers to each part (the mainland, the island, the nation) at different points.

But you CANNOT do this. The text does not ALLOW you to do this.

i am not the one who has to show a change in subject in verses 8, 9, 10 or 11. he starts with an idea and continues with that idea until there is an obvious change. if you want a change away from daughter villages in verse 9 or so, then you must show that from the text. if you think he is referring to all of tyre, show it in the text.
Verses 8, 9, 10 and 11 refer to Tyre. That's either the island, or possibly the island and the mainland together. It is certainly NOT the mainland alone!

This is your confusion. Ezekiel establishes that "you" is Tyre: this is the "you" that has daughter villages, and the same "you" that has walls etc. "You" is "Tyre", throughout. What Ezekiel SHOULD have said, in order to make your interpretation correct, is:
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Ezekiel 26:7 For thus saith the Lord Jehovah: Behold, I will bring upon Tyre Nebuchadrezzar king of Babylon, king of kings, from the north, with horses, and with chariots, and with horsemen, and a company, and much people.

Ezekiel 26:8 He shall slay with the sword thy daughters in the field; and he shall make forts against THEM, and cast up a mound against THEM, and raise up the buckler against THEM...

...Ezekiel 26:11 With the hoofs of his horses shall he tread down all THEIR streets; he shall slay THEIR people with the sword; and the pillars of THEIR strength shall go down to the ground.
But he does NOT say that. 26:7 refers to TYRE, and 26:11 STILL refers to Tyre. And, regardless of whether "Tyre" is just the island, OR the whole lot: Nebby failed to do this. He failed to gain access to ALL of the streets of TYRE, as Ezekiel 26:11 requires him to do.

And every single major translation agrees on this. Every single one of them has Ezekiel 26:8 refer to Tyre's daughter villages followed by the siege of TYRE itself, NOT the daughter villages:
Quote:
Available Translations and Versions for Eze 26:8
NLT - Eze 26:8 - First he will destroy your mainland villages. Then he will attack you by building a siege wall, constructing a ramp, and raising a roof of shields against you.
New Living Translation © 1996 Tyndale Charitable Trust

NKJV - Eze 26:8 - 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.
New King James Version © 1982 Thomas Nelson

NASB - Eze 26:8 - "He will slay your daughters on the mainland with the sword; and he will make siege walls against you, cast up a ramp against you and raise up a large shield against you.
New American Standard Bible © 1995 Lockman Foundation

RSV - Eze 26:8 - He will slay with the sword your daughters on the mainland; he will set up a siege wall against you, and throw up a mound against you, and raise a roof of shields against you.
Revised Standard Version © 1947, 1952.

Webster - Eze 26:8 - He shall slay with the sword thy daughters in the field: and he shall make a fort against thee, and cast a mount against thee, and lift up the buckler against thee.
Noah Webster Version 1833

Young - Eze 26:8 - Thy daughters in the field by sword he slayeth, And he hath made against thee a fort, And hath poured out against thee a mount, And hath raised against thee a buckler.
Robert Young Literal Translation 1862, 1887, 1898

Darby - Eze 26:8 - He shall slay with the sword thy daughters in the field, and he shall make forts against thee, and cast up a mound against thee, and lift up the target against thee;
J.N.Darby Translation 1890

ASV - Eze 26:8 - He shall slay with the sword thy daughters in the field; and he shall make forts against thee, and cast up a mound against thee, and raise up the buckler against thee.
American Standard Version 1901

HNV - Eze 26:8 - He shall kill with the sword your daughters in the field; and he shall make forts against you, and cast up a mound against you, and raise up the buckler against you.
Hebrew Names Version 2000

Vulgate - Eze 26:8 - filias tuas quae sunt in agro gladio interficiet et circumdabit te munitionibus et conportabit aggerem in gyro et levabit contra te clypeum
Jerome's Latin Vulgate 405 A.D.
So, the prophecy failed.

Quote:
Nebby is to make a "spoil of Tyre's riches"

did that not happen?

and even Ezekiel himself records that this failed (and history tells us why: Nebby failed to take the island),

ezekiel said no such thing
Of course he did! We've covered this before: Ezekiel 29:18.
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It doesn't mention Alexander in ANY sense. Not by name, not by title, not by allegory, not even as "he". The ONLY two individuals that appear ANYWHERE in the "prophecy" are Nebby and God.

incorrect. who are "they"?
Is this another example of your language difficulty? "They" is not an individual.
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Because what you say is doubly false. The nation of Tyre did NOT exist immediately PRIOR to Alexander's time (because it had already been absorbed into Persia),

how can you not see that you are providing information that supports my case? this fact dovetails into the prophecy perfectly. this is part of the dismantling of tyre. alexander came along and completed the job.

but it DID exist again a couple of centuries AFTER Alexander.

no, it did not. i have addressed this point. this is typical of your tactics. why don't you try addressing my response to this point instead of just repeating refuted claims?
Because you have not "refuted" anything. Your claim regarding Alexander is STILL doubly false. He could not have "destroyed" an independent kingdom that no longer existed as such, and he could not have permanently destroyed a kingdom that regained its independence later.

Remember: the "genocide and Greek replacement" happened only in your imagination, bfniii. It isn't historical. Your fantasy, no matter how badly you wish it to be true, does not entitle you to say "no, it did not".

History records that many Tyrians escaped (and you still haven't explained why the historian would lie). EVEN IF that didn't happen: what about all the Tyrians who were abroad when the siege began? (Tyre was a trading nation, remember?)... and what about all the thousands of Tyrian subjects in the villages and countryside? After Alex had left, many would quickly have moved in to take that valuable unoccupied real-estate (the harbors were still there, so Tyre was still a viable trading port: as history confirms, Tyre soon recovered). At least all these people would have been on the scene: unlike the Greeks, who had an army, but hadn't set out to colonize Tyre.

Quote:
Again, why do you post falsehoods that can so easily be checked? It's somewhat off-topic, but if you insist, I can give you a reference to every single post in which I used the phrase "Great Firmament Dodge" (and the relevant posts prior to when I started calling it that), and humiliate you utterly. I get the bizarre notion that you would enjoy this. Are you a masochist?

i will cite them myself because i know that i addressed this issue.

flat earth

readers, please refer to post 392 of this thread. about 2/3rds of the way down that post, i begin addressing the flat-earth issue. several posts followed after that. please note that jack used the bastion of scholaticism and equity, the skeptics annotated bible, as a reference.

btw, it seems that you are still operating with the same misconceptions you had before. we can revisit this topic whenever you like. however, it would probably be more beneficial if you would just go back and study the responses i have already posted.
...Hilarious! You're still continuing the Great Firmanent Dodge! The issue I was repeatedly drawing your attention to was the FIRMAMENT, the solid sky-dome which covered the flat Earth of Hebrew cosmology. Every argument against Biblical flat-Earthism that you attempted to make was worthless, because it ignored the historical context: the fact that the authors of the Bible believed the Earth WAS flat, and their various references to the FIRMAMENT DOME (a prominent feature of the Hebrew cosmological model) made this clear. This was pointed out to you in post #434, and the dance went on (and on, and on...in posts 458, 468, 471, 487, 500, 521, 527, 551 and 575). This whole digression began when I pointed out that there is no a priori reason to assume that the Bible is reliable (and you certainly haven't provided one): whenever there is an opportunity for the Bible's authors to reveal information beyond the experience of the backward primitives who actually wrote it, the Bible always fails to deliver (hence the apologetics).
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typical. you cite a pro-evolution website as support for evolution. if i ever tried something like that, you would go ballistic. why is that not hypcritical?
You falsely claimed that evolution was not a fact. It is.
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Come outside YOUR fishbowl, into the E/C forum, and the sharks will feed on you.

i can't believe the moderators are allowing you to get away with this but as long as they do, i'll respond.
1. i have already been in that forum.
2. certainly, you are aware that there are biologists and other scientists who oppose darwinian evolution. i am not saying that evolution is true or false. i am saying that the scientific community is not of one mind on the issue, at least not yet. it may happen in the future, but you are grossly misrepresenting the issue by stating it is a fact.
The "scientific community" IS of one mind. That's precisely why the ID movement lost at Dover. ID is not science: this has been determined by scientists and confirmed in a court of law. And Genesis creationism is in a much worse situation than ID, having been abandoned by the scientific community two centuries ago because of the overwhelming evidence against it.
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Old 06-14-2006, 08:51 AM   #664
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At the risk of perpetuating a derailment:
Quote:
Originally Posted by bfniii
2. certainly, you are aware that there are biologists and other scientists who oppose darwinian evolution. i am not saying that evolution is true or false. i am saying that the scientific community is not of one mind on the issue, at least not yet. it may happen in the future, but you are grossly misrepresenting the issue by stating it is a fact.
Your last post in E/C was in April of last year. You stated here (with regard to the fossil record):
Quote:
Originally Posted by bfniii
i am disagreeing that it supports common descent.
You neglected to mention that the reason you disgree is purely religious: you would prefer to believe that it "doesn't support common descent", because your religion dictates that common descent never occurred.

When challenged on this by numerous posters (including myself), you clammed up.

It's a familiar pattern: wishful thinking asserted as if it were fact.
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Old 06-16-2006, 06:10 AM   #665
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Default response to post #631

Quote:
Originally Posted by Jack the Bodiless
Why should we NOT think otherwise?
what of tyre existed after alexander?



Quote:
Originally Posted by Jack the Bodiless
With regard to the "prophecy": it is a fantasy that Ezekiel was referring to the daughter villages in 26:8-12 (other than the passing reference at the beginning of 26:8). It is a fantasy that 26:14 (and various subsequent verses) doesn't refer to physical destruction. It is a fantasy that Ezekiel foresaw Alexander (or indeed any other conqueror besides Nebuchadrezzar and his army of "many nations").
i understand that that is your opinion. i disagree with it.



Quote:
Originally Posted by Jack the Bodiless
With regard to "history": it is a fantasy that the "daughter villages" had defensive walls and towers etc.
source?



Quote:
Originally Posted by Jack the Bodiless
It is a fantasy that Alexander later waged war against an "independent kingdom of Tyre".
i have not said that he did. alexander was part of the overall destruction of tyre. he did his part.


Quote:
Originally Posted by Jack the Bodiless
It is a fantasy that Alexander destroyed the city.
wow. i would definitely like to see your source on that.



Quote:
Originally Posted by Jack the Bodiless
It is a fantasy that Alexander exterminated the Tyrians.
i didn't say he did. according to some accounts, some tyrians were sold into slavery.



Quote:
Originally Posted by Jack the Bodiless
It is a fantasy that the population was replaced by Greek colonists.
tell us what you think happened after alexander attacked the island? i sure hope you don't refer back to QCR



Quote:
Originally Posted by Jack the Bodiless
It is a fantasy that the "independent kingdom of Tyre" never arose again.
that is a fact, jack. i have made a case for precisely that and you don't refute it at all with this response.



Quote:
Originally Posted by Jack the Bodiless
In general: it is a fantasy that what Ezekiel envisaged as "Tyre" no longer exists, and it is a fantasy that Ezekiel was an actual "prophet".
ezekiel wasn't a prophet? i wonder what the jews think of that.



Quote:
Originally Posted by Jack the Bodiless
Now, each of these individual fantasies is at best entirely unsupported: and, in most cases, they are demostrably false (and such demonstrations have been provided many times). So, why should you expect us to be impressed by any correlation between your personal non-Biblical "prophecy" fantasy and your personal non-historical "historical" fantasy?
all of the statements you provided above are either false or just your opinion. but you don't state them that way. you seem to think your opinion is fact.



Quote:
Originally Posted by Jack the Bodiless
(...even if they were consistent: but you can't even manage THAT much, as your "the island is part of tyre / no, it didn't have to include the island" contradiction, from posts #621 and #600, demonstrates).
i demonstrated a response that showed you completely mangled my position.
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Old 06-16-2006, 06:21 AM   #666
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Default A simple invalidation of the Tyre prophecy

Quote:
Originally Posted by Johnny Skeptic
.......and [there is not any credible evidence] that the version of the prophecy that we have today is the same as the original.
Quote:
Originally Posted by bfniii
Do we have a reason to believe that it has been altered?
Do we have a reason to believe that it has not been altered? Please do not refer to truth by association with other Scriptures. I once asked you if the Tyre prophecy could stand on its own merit without you referring to other Scriptures, and you said that it could.

Since God has allowed hundreds of millions of people to die without ever having heard the Gospel message, why in the world would he be interested in preserving the Bible without revisions? Surely an unaltered Bible is not any better than no Bible at all as far as those hundreds of mililions of people were concerned.
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Old 06-16-2006, 06:50 AM   #667
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bfniii:
Quote:
Why should we NOT think otherwise?

what of tyre existed after alexander?
All of it. Tyre made a complete recovery.
Quote:
With regard to the "prophecy": it is a fantasy that Ezekiel was referring to the daughter villages in 26:8-12 (other than the passing reference at the beginning of 26:8). It is a fantasy that 26:14 (and various subsequent verses) doesn't refer to physical destruction. It is a fantasy that Ezekiel foresaw Alexander (or indeed any other conqueror besides Nebuchadrezzar and his army of "many nations").

i understand that that is your opinion. i disagree with it.
Yes, and that is your fantasy. It has no Biblical basis.
Quote:
With regard to "history": it is a fantasy that the "daughter villages" had defensive walls and towers etc.

source?
..Hey, it's YOUR fantasy. If you want to assert it as fact: YOU should be providing a source.

Of course, Ezekiel doesn't mention these things anyhow, as he isn't referring to the "daughter villages" in the relevant verses.
Quote:
It is a fantasy that Alexander destroyed the city.

wow. i would definitely like to see your source on that.
Have you not bothered to read ANY of the links provided, in ANY of the various Tyre threads?

Alexander damaged the city. He is described as destroying "half" the city. Why are you now saying that you'd "definitely like to see" sources that you've ignored in the past?
Quote:
It is a fantasy that Alexander exterminated the Tyrians.

i didn't say he did. according to some accounts, some tyrians were sold into slavery.

It is a fantasy that the population was replaced by Greek colonists.

tell us what you think happened after alexander attacked the island? i sure hope you don't refer back to QCR
It is a fantasy that no Tyrians escaped, a fantasy that Quintus Curtius Rufus was a liar, a fantasy that all the Tyrians were in the city when Alex beseiged it, and a fantasy that it was repopulated from distant Greece rather than the surrounding countryside. Combining all that lot makes for a very elaborate fantasy indeed!
Quote:
It is a fantasy that the "independent kingdom of Tyre" never arose again.

that is a fact, jack. i have made a case for precisely that and you don't refute it at all with this response.
No, it is a falsehood.
Quote:
In general: it is a fantasy that what Ezekiel envisaged as "Tyre" no longer exists, and it is a fantasy that Ezekiel was an actual "prophet".

ezekiel wasn't a prophet? i wonder what the jews think of that.
Which "Jews" are you referring to? I'm sure many people of Jewish ethnicity, and an unknown number of those of the Jewish religion too, accept it (and you're also forgetting that predicting the future was NOT the primary function of a "navi" anyhow).
Quote:
Now, each of these individual fantasies is at best entirely unsupported: and, in most cases, they are demostrably false (and such demonstrations have been provided many times). So, why should you expect us to be impressed by any correlation between your personal non-Biblical "prophecy" fantasy and your personal non-historical "historical" fantasy?

all of the statements you provided above are either false or just your opinion. but you don't state them that way. you seem to think your opinion is fact.
None of my statements were false. But YOU have no hesitation in stating your opinion as fact. I'm wondering why you still apparently expect us to regard your unsupported opinion as authoritative.
Quote:
(...even if they were consistent: but you can't even manage THAT much, as your "the island is part of tyre / no, it didn't have to include the island" contradiction, from posts #621 and #600, demonstrates).

i demonstrated a response that showed you completely mangled my position.
Your "position" directly contradicts the text of the Book of Ezekiel (as I have demonstrated).
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Old 06-16-2006, 07:00 AM   #668
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Default response to post #632

Quote:
Originally Posted by dongiovanni1976x
Tell me what “seeds” were sown by Nebuchadnezzar?
i was making the point that tyre and rome weren't analogous. therefore, tyre didn't have to have had seeds of demise planted over long periods of time.



Quote:
Originally Posted by dongiovanni1976x
Tyre wealth was intact,
source?



Quote:
Originally Posted by dongiovanni1976x
its religious and administrative centers were untouched and it continued to flourished for centuries.
are you talking about after nebuchadnezzar or after alexander?



Quote:
Originally Posted by dongiovanni1976x
It’s downfall was abrupt and devastating and completely brought about by Alexander.
this is not at all true. it started with nebuchadnezzar.



Quote:
Originally Posted by dongiovanni1976x
But even Alexander did not completely destroy the city as it flourished for over 1500 years until 1291 CE.
he "destroyed" it enough that tyre was finished both physically and politically. whatever happened after that was under the auspices of grecian authority, not tyrian.



Quote:
Originally Posted by dongiovanni1976x
Rome by contrast had a very lengthy “fall” if it is acceptable to call it such.

This event was more symbolic than anything else and yes, Rome had many “problems” before this event, but in the mind of Roman and barbarian alike, this event shattered the concept of the invincible Roman empire. For this reason I used it analogously.
you go to the trouble of chronicling the complex political difficulties that rome experienced over a long period of time, suggesting erosion on many fronts, but then try to equate the sacking of alaric with the "downfall of rome". that's contradictory. that one event may have had a profound psychological impact, but only within the context of the romans not realizing the gravity of the slow, steady decline of the empire. i can't see how the two are analogous. rome's demise was self-inflicted in several ways. it doesn't seem that tyre has any parallel.



Quote:
Originally Posted by dongiovanni1976x
Either Alexander was specified or he was not. He was not therefore by definition this prophecy is unspecific with regards to who would putatively fulfill the prophecy.
this response does not refute my point. is there, or is there not, more than one way to refer to someone? the answer is yes. therefore, alexander could have been referred to by ezekiel just as daniel referred to the different nations in the vision of the statue.



Quote:
Originally Posted by dongiovanni1976x
By this logic so could Farvaix III, commander of the the Aguinor Union from Alpha Centauri. IT is so utterly vague ANYONE could be. WOW! How specific!
just above you stated that alexander could not have been part of the prophecy because he wasn't referred to and here you are saying he could have. which is it?

besides, if "they" are predicted to do something and someone comes along who fits right in to that scheme, then it would be reasonable to include that person in the "they".

you can pick any one part of a prophecy and show that it isn't specific because something similar has happened in this existence at some point. but at what point do all of these little things add up to something specific?

this is all beside the point of the overall picture anyway. the prophecy is about control and retribution. alexander was a part of the tyrians losing the control over their destiny and retribution for past offences.



Quote:
Originally Posted by dongiovanni1976x
And the “details” you are referring to “horses trampling on streets,” “plundering riches,” “destroying houses,” “breaking down walls,” are completely common to cities being sacked.
those aren't the only details. but nice try at a strawman



Quote:
Originally Posted by dongiovanni1976x
The only significant aspects are that the city would be so utterly destroyed that its timber would be cast into the sea, though this would not seem unlikely to an enraged army that has put up with harassment from the defenders for so long and also as a way of humbling the proud city much like Virgil poetically called the Romans to do to others. (parcere subiectis et debellare superbos)
the words "the only significant" are the key words in this response. what makes you think it is the only significant aspect? aren't they all significant?



Quote:
Originally Posted by dongiovanni1976x
And the most significant, unlike the symbolic rubbing of salt into Carthage, being that Tyre would NEVER be rebuilt- you want to exclude altogether (for obvious reasons I may add).
exclude? i haven't once excluded that despite your strawman attempts to claim that i have.



Quote:
Originally Posted by dongiovanni1976x
What aspects were NOT common place in your interpretation. You have removed all the significance.
this is red-herring. stating that it is common for cities/nations to fall is only part of the equation. what you would have to first show is that it is common that prophets predict the demise of a city and the prohecies were fulfilled. then we'll go from there.



Quote:
Originally Posted by dongiovanni1976x
The prophecy NEVER said that the NATION of TYRE would never be rebuilt, it said Tyre would never be rebuilt. It said “O city renown,” “when I[God] make you a city laid waste, like cities that are uninhabited” etc etc…Your arbitrary back and forth case
ah, arbitrary. is this the best response you have for the analysis i provided? i examined the original language of the text and supported the case from history and precedent and all you can say is arbitrary? how is that a refutation?



Quote:
Originally Posted by dongiovanni1976x
Perhaps in your mind alone.
my point was that it is presumptuous for you to conclude that your points are correct when the issue is still being debated and you haven't provided refutations for my points. you merely state they are incorrect without supporting your statement.



Quote:
Originally Posted by dongiovanni1976x
First of all they were Ptolemy’s people by your logic but they were every much Tyrian’s as citizens of Athens were Athenians while being ruled by Casander.

Nation comes from the Latin for “birth” (i.e nasci, where we get neo-NATAL from). An illegal immigrant from Mexico can have a child born in American and they are recognized as being American citizens. The idea of a Polis is of Greek origin but was used in many other places as well as the origin of the individual (tied to their place of birth). A Child born after 332 BC in Tyre was called a Tyrian and it wasn’t just out of convenience. We have many examples that are post-Alexander, (i.e. like William of Tyre etc)
while interesting, this doesn't refute my point. my point was that tyre did not pull itself up by it's own bootstraps. it did not rebuild itself. someone external came along, finished off what was left after nebuchadnezzar and reshaped tyre as he saw fit. this is exactly what ezekiel was getting at. tyre would be completely stripped of it's glory. the tyrians, what was left of them, were not in control of their destiny at that point.
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Old 06-16-2006, 07:26 AM   #669
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Default A simple invalidation of the Tyre prophecy

Message to bfniii: In case you did not read my previous post, here it is again:

Quote:
Originally Posted by Johnny Skeptic
.......and [there is not any credible evidence] that the version of the prophecy that we have today is the same as the original.
Quote:
Originally Posted by bfniii
Do we have a reason to believe that it has been altered?
Do we have a reason to believe that it has not been altered? Please do not refer to truth by association with other Scriptures. I once asked you if the Tyre prophecy could stand on its own merit without you referring to other Scriptures, and you said that it could.
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Old 06-16-2006, 08:36 AM   #670
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bfniii, why are you continuing as if nothing has happened?

Ezekiel was a false prophet. The "Tyre prophecy" failed in verse 26:11, as I have demonstrated. Therefore there is no reason to imagine that anything which follows "was accomplished by Alexander" (especially as there is no reason whatsoever to suppose that Ezekiel was aware of Alexander, whom he never mentions or alludes to).

You have failed to refute my post #618, and my further clarification of your error in post #663 (and I note that post #651, your alleged "response to post #618", doesn't even quote or address the detailed breakdown of Ezekiel 26:7-11 that I provided for you).

So it's over.
Jack the Bodiless is offline  
 

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