Questioning the Hellenistic Date for the Hebrew Bible: Circular Argument
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by Neil Godfrey
8h ago
So let’s resume my specific responses to criticisms raised on the earlywritings forum over the question of the Hellenistic era being the earliest setting for the Pentateuch and other books of the Bible. (I am posting my responses here after discovering that on that forum some of my responses were being removed without notice or ..read more
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Origin of the Cyrus-Messiah Myth
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by Neil Godfrey
8h ago
The Cyrus Cylinder is not evidence that the Persian king Cyrus commissioned a return of Judeans to restore their temple (as explained in the previous post) but it does show us why the biblical authors proclaimed Cyrus to be the “anointed one” as their central character in their mythical narrative of that return. In the ..read more
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No Evidence Cyrus allowed the Jews to Return
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by Neil Godfrey
2d ago
In my book collection I have a massive (both in size and weight) Reader’s Digest 1971 version of the King James 1611 translation of the Bible. On page 377, the second page into the Book of Ezra, is this image and caption: The page has other images and captions: King Cyrus of Persia proved to ..read more
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Comparing Samaria and Judah/Yehud – and their religion – in Persian Times
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by Neil Godfrey
5d ago
Recent posts have focussed on the case for the earliest books of the Bible being composed as late as the Hellenistic era, that is less than 300 years before Christ. The longstanding conventional wisdom has understood the first biblical narratives go back to the time of King David (around 1000 BCE) or at least to ..read more
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Samaria in the Persian Period
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by Neil Godfrey
1w ago
Our quest is to test the thesis that the earliest books of the Bible were written or at least heavily redacted and supplemented in the Persian period. To that end we have trying to understand what Persian era candidate “biblical” societies were like. We’ve looked at Judeans in Persian times according to the evidence in ..read more
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Questioning the Hellenistic Date for the Hebrew Bible — continuing
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by Neil Godfrey
2w ago
I am continuing here with my responses to criticisms raised on the earlywritings forum. The next objection raised was: I can’t help feeling that proponents of a Hellenistic origin of the Old Testament must postulate conditions in the early Hellenistic period for which (at least IMO) we have no direct evidence and which (at least IMO ..read more
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Judah and Samaria in Persian Times — the Evidence (and a way out of a quandary)
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by Neil Godfrey
2w ago
Having surveyed what the archaeological evidence tells us about religious practices of the Judeans in Elephantine (see the previous post) let’s now compare the evidence for Judah and Samaria in the same period. This time I am quoting only two sources, a chapter by Reinhard G. Kratz in A Companion to the Achaemenid Empire and ..read more
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Questioning the Hellenistic Date for the Hebrew Bible: Elephantine ‘Jews’
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by Neil Godfrey
2w ago
I am continuing here with my responses to criticisms raised on the earlywritings forum against the proposal that the first biblical texts were composed as late as around 270 years before Christ. (I had looked forward to continuing the discussion on that forum until I lost confidence in the sub-forum’s promise to be an “academic ..read more
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Brisbane March for Palestine
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by Neil Godfrey
2w ago
Several hundred, young and old, held a public rally and march today calling for federal, state and local governments to cut direct support for Israel and businesses doing business with Israel at this time. Not many by a long shot, and of course it was ignored even by the local TV news media. Among the ..read more
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Why Bible Authors Wrote Anonymously and with Contradictions
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by Neil Godfrey
2w ago
My title refers to the anonymous texts in both the Old and New Testaments and why among those anonymous works we encounter numerous contradictions, even within the same works. I came across one of the clearest explanations to this question in David’s Secret Demons by Baruch Halpern. Halpern explains why “Near Eastern” writing is so ..read more
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