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Old 03-22-2009, 10:54 PM   #191
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The Lunar calendar was wrong, when a calendar is based only on the lunar. Both the Lunar/Solar calendar, and Monotheism, never came from Sumer or Babylon. You are confusing a correction of wrongs, as a copy of the wrongs. Anyone can copy Einstein's MC2 - but how many can edit and correct it?
The Hebrew calendar is a lunar calendar...

The other variant is the solar calendar which follows the yearly cycles. It is the calendar we use today, and is the one used by many other old civilizations. I still fail to see the relevance in this discussion about calendars.

The Quran, according to my understanbding, is strictly lunar. The Hebrew is lunar/solar, and regarded the oldest and most accurate in existence.
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Old 03-22-2009, 11:06 PM   #192
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No, writings about rivers and mountains do not make writings about talking snakes and donkeys,
True, as you say this here in 2009. But show me a writings of this stat predating the Hebrew? Therein is the rub. :wave:


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or a god who wrestles with people or lives in a burning bush even slightly credible.
We wrestle with the Creator every day - even in forum debates! The correct term is 'STRIVE' [Yisrah/Israel/Strives].

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Few here will agree with you that the Jewish texts are the first to discuss rivers and mountains. But supposing for a moment that they were? So what!? These are ordinary things.
I think you have a problem that an ordinary, historical river and mountain is not seen in a single writings prior to the Hebrew. So what! :wave:


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The Jewish texts are not the oldest historical documents, and the earth is much older than 6000 years. Let me guess. You were arguing the earth was 6000 years old a year ago too, weren't you?
Not me! But I can argue about speech being 6000 years old. And you can KO me by mentioning a single NAME older than 6000. Take your time.





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...1 day of rest out of 7 has also failed, if you haven't noticed.
Just like I have not noticed anyone discussing a river before? Your right - I have not noticed it. But I would if you ever get around to putting some proof - then you can legitimately call me blind. :wave:
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Old 03-23-2009, 08:01 AM   #193
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How can you claim they already had that law when this is the earliest evidence they practiced a seven day week?
The first temple period was based on the laws of the Mosaic bible - the sabbath was a primal law here. That's how.

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If you are basing this on the idea that moses actually existed and the exodus (and the writing of the law) took place some 7-800 years earlier, you will be hard pressed to prove this.
I am basing this on factual history - namely the first temple period, for which 100s of relics exist of its evidence. You are eronously claiming Moses did not exist - as if you have such evidence. You do not. Also wrong, that Israel begat the Sabaat law from Babylon: they never begat Babylon's paganism!? The difference transcends any similarites. Israel and Babylon went to war over Monotheism in 586 BCE - same with Rome in 70 CE.
Strictly speaking I don't think we know exactly what kind of laws the Israelites followed before the Babylonian exile. We know that later writers and editors wanted to present the pre-exile nation as followers of the Mosaic rules, which may or may not have existed before the 6th C BCE.

If victors write the histories, and the priests were the 'victors' in controlling post-exile Israel, then we might conclude that the perpective in the surviving texts is slanted in favour of the temple cult.

I don't think the Babylonians cared about Israelite monotheism. As always, the Jews were squeezed politically between Egypt and Mesopotamia. If they paid their tribute and didn't cause trouble they generally avoided the worst punishments from the superpowers.
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Old 03-23-2009, 08:28 AM   #194
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No, writings about rivers and mountains do not make writings about talking snakes and donkeys,
True, as you say this here in 2009. But show me a writings of this stat predating the Hebrew? Therein is the rub. :wave:
:banghead:

You've taken an irrational position that the Hebrew writings you worship are the oldest writings on earth. Since the originals do not exist, we can *not* carbon date them, and you've rejected all other dating mechanisms. There is no way through the wall of delusion you've created for yourself, so why should I play your game and present excerpts from writings that archaeologists date as older than your idolized texts? You're position starts off as irrational and unsupportable, and you give undo importance to trivialities, because that's all you've got.

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We wrestle with the Creator every day - even in forum debates! The correct term is 'STRIVE' [Yisrah/Israel/Strives].
This isn't a debate. However, every time I point out an absurdity, you interpret it as metaphorical. Where does the metaphor end? Perhaps the Creator is also a metaphor.

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I think you have a problem that an ordinary, historical river and mountain is not seen in a single writings prior to the Hebrew. So what! :wave:
Since I don't buy into your delusion that the Hebrew writings are the oldest on earth, and since I give no special significance to writings about rivers and mountains, it isn't I with the problem.

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Not me! But I can argue about speech being 6000 years old. And you can KO me by mentioning a single NAME older than 6000. Take your time.
The texts you worship are no more than 3000 years old. The consensus among archaeologists is around the 7th-9th century BCE for the oldest portions. The epic of Gilgamesh is older. Consider yourself KOd.

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...1 day of rest out of 7 has also failed, if you haven't noticed.
Just like I have not noticed anyone discussing a river before? Your right - I have not noticed it. But I would if you ever get around to putting some proof - then you can legitimately call me blind. :wave:
You require proof that weekends last 2 days? :constern02:
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Old 03-23-2009, 08:32 AM   #195
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Depends which part you want a source for.
You've got to be kidding!! :banghead:

It is painfully obvious that I have been asking for your source for the large block of quoted text you posted and which you indicated was "more than 15 years old". If they are your words from some 15+ year-old internet discussion, then just say so.
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Old 03-23-2009, 11:54 AM   #196
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The Hebrew calendar is a lunar calendar...

The other variant is the solar calendar which follows the yearly cycles. It is the calendar we use today, and is the one used by many other old civilizations. I still fail to see the relevance in this discussion about calendars.
The Quran, according to my understanbding, is strictly lunar. The Hebrew is lunar/solar, and regarded the oldest and most accurate in existence.
The Hebrew calendar was a lunisolar calendar which used lunar months that were corrected to match the seasons in leap-years. Muslim calendar is lunar, and ours is solar.

In any case this is beside the point. I believe your original claim was that the 7 day week was invented by the Hebrews, which is yet to be proven. In either case they were not the only ones inventing it.
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Old 03-23-2009, 12:01 PM   #197
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If you are basing this on the idea that moses actually existed and the exodus (and the writing of the law) took place some 7-800 years earlier, you will be hard pressed to prove this.
I am basing this on factual history - namely the first temple period, for which 100s of relics exist of its evidence. You are eronously claiming Moses did not exist - as if you have such evidence. You do not. Also wrong, that Israel begat the Sabaat law from Babylon: they never begat Babylon's paganism!? The difference transcends any similarites. Israel and Babylon went to war over Monotheism in 586 BCE - same with Rome in 70 CE.
No, you cannot turn this on its head. I am not claiming Moses did not exist, I am claiming there is no evidence he did exist, and there is plenty of reason to argue that the part of the Bible leading up to the captivity is in large parts myth. Moses is no different in Judaism than Hercules is in Greek mythology.
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Old 03-23-2009, 12:40 PM   #198
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JosephIam
And you can KO me by mentioning a single NAME older than 6000. Take your time.
Playing Rumpelstiltskin are we? The name above all names. Are you looking for Christ? Or, are you looking to see a star? Let me enlighten you, I like sparkly stuff. :wave:

Can't tell time without light.

The girl's name Shushana \sh(u)-sha-na\ is a variant of Susan (Hebrew), and the meaning of Shushana is "lily".
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Old 03-23-2009, 02:10 PM   #199
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I am basing this on factual history - namely the first temple period, for which 100s of relics exist of its evidence. You are eronously claiming Moses did not exist - as if you have such evidence. You do not. Also wrong, that Israel begat the Sabaat law from Babylon: they never begat Babylon's paganism!? The difference transcends any similarites. Israel and Babylon went to war over Monotheism in 586 BCE - same with Rome in 70 CE.
No, you cannot turn this on its head. I am not claiming Moses did not exist, I am claiming there is no evidence he did exist, and there is plenty of reason to argue that the part of the Bible leading up to the captivity is in large parts myth. Moses is no different in Judaism than Hercules is in Greek mythology.
Clivedurdle on here has argued an extreme minimalist position, and frankly I've been wondering if he's right. This would imply no exile followed by Ezra's redaction. If there was an exile, it certainly did not involve a large percentage of the people; priests and nobles and scum like that.

The wars with Babylon and Rome were about monotheism? I think you're confusing them with world war I.
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Old 03-23-2009, 02:20 PM   #200
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There is a major difference between celebrating the 7th, 14th, 21st and 28th day of a month and celebrating every 7th day.

With a 30 day month
The first goes ... 7 14 21 28 37 44 51 58 67 74 81 88
The second goes 7 14 21 28 35 42 49 56 63 70 77 84

IE since months are not a multiple of seven days in length the two patterns rapidly diverge.

Andrew Criddle
It depends on what kind of calendar you have doesn't it? The Babylonians had a calendar where each month started on the new moon.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Babylonian_calendar
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The Babylonian calendar was a lunisolar calendar with years consisting of 12 lunar months, each beginning when a new crescent moon was first sighted low on the western horizon at sunset, plus an intercalary month inserted as needed by decree. The calendar is based on a Sumerian (Ur III) precedecessor preserved in the Umma calendar of Shulgi (ca. 21st century BC).
But as you are a Christian I don't expect you to be skeptical about anything that has to do with Judeo-Christianity.
A calendar with months starting on the new moon will typically have some months with 29 days and some with 30 days. Neither 29 or 30 is a multiple of 7. Hence the 7th 14th 21st and 28th days of such months will not produce a continuous seven day cycle.

Regarding seven as a special number and the seventh day as a special day is found in several cultures and trafitions. What is much more unusual is a continual seven day cycle, independent of month or year.

A continual seven day cycle appears to have arisen more or less independently twice in Ancient Europe and Asia. The Hebrew Week and the Hellenistic Astrological Week. The Hebrew Week is substantially older than the Hellenistic Astrological Week.

Andrew Criddle
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