George:

On Tue, Oct 23, 2012 at 9:52 PM, George Athas <[email protected]>wrote:

>  You've totally misunderstood my argument, Karl (seems to happen often —
> I must be a very poor communicator).
>

It’s more than that—it appears that I’m a poor understander of your
argument.


> I argue that Dan 9 is not simply about the end of exile, but about *
> redefining* exile.
>

That makes no sense to me.


> Dan 9 redefines exile so that it is no longer just about absence from the
> land (the classic understanding from Jeremiah that you seem to be
> employing). Daniel seems to have this understanding at the start of the
> chapter, but this is corrected through the re-interpretation given to him.
> Exile becomes a situation of being under foreign rule, regardless of where
> you are. So even though many people might return physically to the land,
> their exile of 70 weeks of years continues because they are still ruled by
> foreigners.
>

The reason it makes no sense is that during much of the divided kingdom
period, Judea was under foreign rule. From the time of Sesiq (Thutmosis II)
through the Amarna Letters period and later, Judea was under the heel of
Egypt. So being ruled by foreigners was not unique to Daniel’s period.
Therefore this “redefining exile” idea doesn’t make sense.

More importantly, the time period is defined as starting at the time the
command was given to rebuild Jerusalem, given to Nehemiah. That is
specifically stated concerning the starting of the two sub time periods of
7 sevens and 62 sevens (verse 25), and by context for the whole 70 sevens
period.


> And the Antiochene Persecution of the second century BC highlights this
> fact. They're in Jerusalem, but they are still oppressed.
>

See above, not new.

>
>  I also suggest you brush up on some basic history of the Second Temple
> Era, including as it's presented in the biblical literature. Many of your
> counter-arguments are impressively weak.
>

Most of what I know of the second temple period is found in the Bible,
which in Hebrew ends before the Greek period.

But I find your attempt at redefinition of exile even weaker, as the text
in the pre-Second Temple Daniel specifically refers to the rebuilding of
Jerusalem, not just the temple (and some support structures) contained in
Cyrus’ command as reproduced in Tanakh.

>
>
>  *GEORGE ATHAS*
> *Dean of Research,*
> *Moore Theological College *(moore.edu.au)
> *Sydney, Australia*
>


Karl W. Randolph.
_______________________________________________
b-hebrew mailing list
[email protected]
http://lists.ibiblio.org/mailman/listinfo/b-hebrew

Reply via email to