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07-17-2005, 06:33 AM | #21 |
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Sauron: Which is irrelevant, since Babylon continued as a city and a place of habitation for 14 centuries after the prophecy in question was uttered.
Lee Merril: I don't mind if the complete fulfillment took a very long time. That makes it more improbable that it was chance! Fascinating stuff. I could take any modern city, New York, London, Paris and predict that it will be gone within 1,400 years with very good statistical chance of being correct. AVERAGE lifetime of cities is far shorter than 1,400 years, is it Merril's contention that Babylon lasted THIS LONG due to the prophecy? . |
07-17-2005, 07:15 AM | #22 | |
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07-17-2005, 11:30 AM | #23 | ||||
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Hi everyone,
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But improbable or not, all you have to do is rebuild it, to discredit Scripture in a dramatic way! Why is there such reluctance to attempt this? That is what I wonder... Regards, Lee |
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07-17-2005, 03:11 PM | #24 | |
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The Babylon prophecy
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07-17-2005, 06:30 PM | #25 | |
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07-17-2005, 07:20 PM | #26 | ||
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Lee cannot possibly win this debate. There is no evidence that any ancient Babylonians knew about the prophecy, and even if they did, it is highly unlikely that discrediting a single Jewish prophecy would have been on their agenda. To the Babylonians, the best way to discredit Jews was to beat them up, and there was a whole lot of that going on. If Babylon had been rebuilt, would the majority of Jews have given up Judaism? Of course not. Since it is complicated for us to figure out the prophecy even today, few if any ancient Jews would have been able to figure it out. Given a choice between discrediting a single Jewish prophecy and beating up on Jews, which would the Babylonians have chosen to do? Beating up on Jews of course. Nebuchadnezzar II did plenty of that. |
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07-18-2005, 08:45 AM | #27 | ||||||||||||||||||||||
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2. Capture of the city starts the desolation - "he" does not imply that; Isaiah implies that: Quote:
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2. You have presented no evidence that the army came from that direction, so tossing it out as a convenient "what if" isn't going to work. 3. Moreover, the Medeans didn't take Babylon anyhow; it was the Persians, who cannot in any way be described as being "north" of Babylon. Quote:
2. Speculating about a "desire to return" doesn't cut it - what you need is proof that this part of the prophecy came true; 3. If you think there are indications of such a return connected to this Babylon event in any of the prophetic books, then cite chapter and verse. Do some actual *work*, lee_merrill. Quote:
You tried this same trick in the Tyre prophecy; it didn't work there, either. Let's refresh your memory. Ezekiel clearly and plainly lays out in Ch 26 that this is God's punishment, but that God is using Nebuchadnezzar to carry it out for him. It is as if Ezekiel were painting God as the general, sending his captain, Nebuchadnezzar, to carry out his military orders. In such a scenario, it's perfectly reasonable for the general to say "I did such-and-such", because he gave the order. And it's also reasonable for the captain to say "I did such-and-such", because the captain actually carried it out. Same principle applies here. Quote:
1. Regardless of size, this refutes the "uninhabited" part; 2. I saw no evidence from you that this was a "desert camp" anyhow Quote:
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2. Moreover, there were people living there for fifteen centuries after the prophecy said that it would be uninhabited. Quote:
2. You don't get to presume your conclusions around here anyhow. Quote:
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So your claims about the walls, gardens, palaces etc. not being present when Alexander conquered the city are just more asserted bullshit on your part, lee. PS - I have a 93 page document dedicated to the flaws in the Babylon prophecy. No - you may not read it. But you should be aware that I have already researched this thoroughly. :rolling: :rolling: :rolling: Quote:
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And since the prophecy indicates that the lack of habitation is occurring as a result of the invasion, I *do* mind that the alleged fulfillment took 14 centuries. Quote:
No, the point is clear: the job of proving the prophecy is on your back, not on the back of skeptics. Quote:
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07-18-2005, 09:00 AM | #28 | ||
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1. Lee, demonstrate that the destruction of cities is "usually quicker." Asserting it will not suffice. 2. Since all cities eventually fall, then the longer a city lasts, the more likely it is that it will fall. The longer a person lives, the greater their chances of dying, since all people eventually die. A person who is 95 years old has a greater chance of dying than someone who is 12 years old. Since the fall of Babylon was inevitable, predicting the obvious about Babylon is not prophecy. Quote:
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07-18-2005, 09:25 PM | #29 | ||||||||||||||||||
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Hi everyone,
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Sauron: "What leads you to think that Babylon was underwater - other than an absurd fascination with cities sinking underwater?" Sauron said so! Maybe you will believe Sauron. Quote:
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"The towering burned brick ramparts, though now old and crumbling, still 'gleamed like burnished bronze' in the autumn sunlight..." Implying rebuilding was needed. And this part: "Some landmarks were crumbling after the Persian occupation: the great temple Etemenanki (where the Amran shrine stands today in a walled garden) was decrepit and in need of renovation." Implying rebuilding was needed! And the MSN Encarta reference (which was somehow skipped in your response) said Alex embarked on ... rebuilding! Quote:
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By the way, you can also rebuild Petra! That would also be as clear a refutation as rebuilding Babylon. And if you don't want to be involved, just mention this to other people such as the Muslims. I think I will do this myself. I expect they would be glad of the opportunity... Regards, Lee |
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07-19-2005, 12:34 AM | #30 | |
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You said "The point at issue is the validity of the prophecy." I will agree with you for the sake of argument that the prophecy came true, but that doesn't help your arguments at all. Without any divine inspiration at all, people could have predicted that any particular ancient city would never be rebuilt, and a good deal of the time they would have been right. Surely you must know that there are plenty of existing ruins besides the ruins of ancient Babylon. Visiting various ancient ruins is quite popular in many parts of the world. |
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