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Old 03-11-2008, 04:30 PM   #881
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Default Daniel 1:3

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Originally Posted by ThinkingMan View Post
A short primer on the dating of Daniel: How to pick up a hot Persian chick.

sorry, couldn't resist.
LOL, that might not be a very popular guide since it's up to debate if Daniel was made a eunuch! Anyway I'm trying to find out if the following statement is true and would appreciate any feedback.

Source:Introduction to The Book of Daniel
Quote:
Asphenaz, is mentioned in the first chapter of Daniel as master of the Eunuchs. The critics claim no such person ever existed. Recent discoveries again proved the accuracy of the book of Daniel. Asphenaz name has been found on monuments of ancient Babylon which are now in the Berlin Museum. The Babylonian monument had the following statement, “Ashpenaz, master of eunuchs in the time of Nebuchadnezzar”
Quote:
And the king saith, to Ashpenaz master of his eunuchs, to bring in out of the sons of Israel, (even of the royal seed, and of the chiefs,) 4 lads in whom there is no blemish, and of good appearance, and skilful in all wisdom, and possessing knowledge, and teaching thought, and who have ability to stand in the palace of the king, and to teach them the literature and language of the Chaldeans.
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Old 03-11-2008, 04:57 PM   #882
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Is this going to be another case where Christian apologists claim that skeptics think no such person existed until archeology discovered the proof? Do you know of such skeptics? Do you have any more information on this supposed monument?

This is from a Christian site:
Quote:
Verses 3 and 4 explain the reason for the exile of Daniel and his friends. The reading of these verses in the LXX differs considerably from the Massoretic text. We read there: “And the king spoke to Abiesdri, his own chief eunuch to lead to him from the sons of the nobles of Israel, and from the seed royal, and from the choice ones, four young men, without blemish, of goodly appearance, and understanding in all wisdom, and educated, and prudent, and wise, and strong, so that they may be in the house of the king, and may be taught the letters and tongue of the Chaldees.” The words in our text: “Among these were some from Judah” seem to contradict the LXX statement that there were only four young men chosen for the king’s purpose. The change in name of the Babylonian official is of no consequence. “Ashpenaz” is supposedly a Persian word that may mean “eunuch,” indicating rather a position at the court than a personal name.
There is another derivation of the name here.
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Old 03-12-2008, 11:44 AM   #883
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Originally Posted by arnoldo View Post
Anyway I'm trying to find out if the following statement is true and would appreciate any feedback.

Source:Introduction to The Book of Daniel


Quote:
And the king saith, to Ashpenaz master of his eunuchs, to bring in out of the sons of Israel, (even of the royal seed, and of the chiefs,) 4 lads in whom there is no blemish, and of good appearance, and skilful in all wisdom, and possessing knowledge, and teaching thought, and who have ability to stand in the palace of the king, and to teach them the literature and language of the Chaldeans.
I just finished an internet search using Asphenaz/Ashpenaz Berlin Museum. Several sites state that Ashpenaz is on a tablet in the Berlin Museum, but none go beyond that bald statement to any source. One site does give a Berlin Museum index number for a tablet from Nebuchadnezzar's court, but it is an astrology text and does not mention Ashpenaz. I also ran a digital search of the complete Biblical Archaeologist and Biblical Archaeology Review (1977-2005). Considering that such a find could let people jump to a number of enthusiastically unfounded conclusions, I thought surely it would have been referenced there. It wasn't.

The Noble Lie has seen a lot of use since Plato's day.
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Old 03-12-2008, 05:24 PM   #884
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Originally Posted by arnoldo View Post
Anyway I'm trying to find out if the following statement is true and would appreciate any feedback.

Source:Introduction to The Book of Daniel

I just finished an internet search using Asphenaz/Ashpenaz Berlin Museum. Several sites state that Ashpenaz is on a tablet in the Berlin Museum, but none go beyond that bald statement to any source. One site does give a Berlin Museum index number for a tablet from Nebuchadnezzar's court, but it is an astrology text and does not mention Ashpenaz. I also ran a digital search of the complete Biblical Archaeologist and Biblical Archaeology Review (1977-2005). Considering that such a find could let people jump to a number of enthusiastically unfounded conclusions, I thought surely it would have been referenced there. It wasn't.

The Noble Lie has seen a lot of use since Plato's day.
Thanks, Ashpenaz seemed to be a title of some sort and it will be interesting if that title is eventually found written in some ruins. In the meantime the British Museum has archaelogical evidence that the events/persons named in the bible were real.

Neo-Babylonian, about 550-400 BC
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Old 03-12-2008, 05:42 PM   #885
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Quote:
Originally Posted by arnoldo
Thanks, Ashpenaz seemed to be a title of some sort and it will be interesting if that title is eventually found written in some ruins. In the meantime the British Museum has archaelogical evidence that the events/persons named in the Bible were real.

Neo-Babylonian, about 550-400 B.C.
That is not surprising since many religious and secular books mention real events and people. As far as know, all historians believe that King Nebuchadnezzar was a real person.

If a God exists, and wanted to convince people to believe that he exists, he would easily be able to do a much better job of that than Chrisitians ever could.
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Old 03-13-2008, 02:25 PM   #886
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Thanks, Ashpenaz seemed to be a title of some sort
There is no evidence of that.

In fact, no evidence of the name or title at all, outside of the Daniel reference.

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In the meantime the British Museum has archaelogical evidence that the events/persons named in the bible were real.
And as usual, your source doesn't prove what you claim it does.
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Old 03-13-2008, 06:31 PM   #887
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Quote:
Originally Posted by arnoldo View Post
Thanks, Ashpenaz seemed to be a title of some sort
There is no evidence of that.

In fact, no evidence of the name or title at all, outside of the Daniel reference.

Quote:
In the meantime the British Museum has archaelogical evidence that the events/persons named in the bible were real.
And as usual, your source doesn't prove what you claim it does.
Uhhh... read the source again (I'll quote it for you)
Source: The British Museum

Quote:
After re-equipping his army, Nebuchadnezzar marched to Syria in 599 BC. He marched westwards again, in December 598 BC, as Jehoiakim, the king of Judah, had ceased to pay tribute. Nebuchadnezzar's army besieged Jerusalem and captured it on 15/16th March 597 BC. The new king of Judah, Jehoiachin, was captured and carried off to Babylon.
A museum in Istanbul is alleged to have the following information according to this source: Was Daniel an Eyewitness of 6th-Century B. C. Events Part Two by Everette Hatcher III

Quote:
8. If Shadrach, Meshach and Abednego were appointed over the affairs of the province of Babylon (Daniel 2:49), then why haven't their names been found in the Babylonian archives?

Till asks this question (TSR, Vol. 9.6, p.1, Column 2), and the answer can be found on a 5-sided clay prism found in Babylon, now on display at the Istanbul Museum. Dr. William Shea has identified these three Jews in this list of more than fifty government officials (W.H. Shea, “Daniel 3: Extra-Biblical Texts and the Convocation on the Plain of Dura,” Andrews University Seminary Studies, Vol. 20 [1982]: pp. 37-50; A. L. Oppenheim's English Translation of the Babylonian text may be found in Ancient Near Eastern Texts, J. B. Pritchard, ed, pp. 307-308). Hananiah is Hanunu (“chief of the royal merchants”); Abednego is Aridi-Nabu (“secretary of the crown prince [i.e., Amel- Marduk]”); and Mishael is Mushallim-Marduk (one of the “overseers of the slave girls”).
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Old 03-13-2008, 08:42 PM   #888
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Sheshonq View Post
There is no evidence of that.

In fact, no evidence of the name or title at all, outside of the Daniel reference.


And as usual, your source doesn't prove what you claim it does.
Uhhh... read the source again (I'll quote it for you)
Don't bother; I know far more about it than you'll ever come to know in your entire life. Let me quote Johnny here though, to make the point:

That is not surprising since many religious and secular books mention real events and people. As far as know, all historians believe that King Nebuchadnezzar was a real person.

Mentioning people isn't what you claimed. Go back and try again.
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Old 03-15-2008, 01:50 AM   #889
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Quote:
Originally Posted by arnoldo View Post

Uhhh... read the source again (I'll quote it for you)
Don't bother;
How cruel! But then the stuff is worth a laugh. Here it is anyway:

Quote:
8. If Shadrach, Meshach and Abednego were appointed over the affairs of the province of Babylon (Daniel 2:49), then why haven't their names been found in the Babylonian archives?

Till asks this question (TSR, Vol. 9.6, p.1, Column 2), and the answer can be found on a 5-sided clay prism found in Babylon, now on display at the Istanbul Museum. Dr. William Shea has identified these three Jews in this list of more than fifty government officials (W.H. Shea, “Daniel 3: Extra-Biblical Texts and the Convocation on the Plain of Dura,” Andrews University Seminary Studies, Vol. 20 [1982]: pp. 37-50; A. L. Oppenheim's English Translation of the Babylonian text may be found in Ancient Near Eastern Texts, J. B. Pritchard, ed, pp. 307-308). Hananiah is Hanunu (“chief of the royal merchants”); Abednego is Aridi-Nabu (“secretary of the crown prince [i.e., Amel- Marduk]”); and Mishael is Mushallim-Marduk (one of the “overseers of the slave girls”).
Everette Hatcher, who was shredded by Farrell Till long ago, should have thought just a bit and then decided not to cite this schlock. I mean just think about it...

Daniel tells us that Hananiah, Mishael and Azariah were their Jewish names, though they were given Babylonian names, presumably so they would be able to be referred to more easily by the local potentates, Shadrach, Meshach and Abednego and we would expect, if W.H. Shea's premise were correct, that we find these latter names in official documents, yet what Shea provides us with are two forms he likens with the Hebrew names (contradicting his own implied logic) and one which is vaguely like the Babylonian name. Hanunu, supposedly Hananiah, is a common Semitic name, eg there was a king of Gaza with that name. Mushallam-Marduk, supposedly Mishael (though Hebrew actually has Meshallam), is only vaguely like Shea's claimed source. But worst is Aridi-Nabu, for the first part is almost nothing like Shea's claimed source and Nabu was a popular deity. Why could Abd-Nabu have not been preserved? It's simple enough, the "servant of Nabu". What we see here with Shea is another apologist shoehorning his wayward biblical data into a historical source, which shouldn't really be too hard -- he did after all have fifty names in the source to choose from and then he played mix and match with the biblical text's names, two of the Hebrew names and one Babylonian, but he did find three lookalikes -- sort of. What a dismal effort. Why are apologists so hopeless at their self-appointed task?


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Old 03-15-2008, 08:27 AM   #890
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*Sigh*, I guess if the book of Daniel is accurate in naming/alluding to any historical persons, such as Alexander the Great, it is only proof that is was written after the fact, right? :huh:

The reference to Alexander the Great was given in the following post: Alexander the Great with horns
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