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Aelred of Rievaulx

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How do you know it wasn't?

Perhaps Jeroboam kept a diary?
The author of Kings, usually referred to as the Deuteronomistic historian, may have used some sources like annals but this still doesn't fit as an answer to the question. One can be suspicious enough, given that the author of the text lived long after Josiah, that it may have been a prophecy written into the history.
 
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AV1611VET

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I'm sure God preserved the Source Documents for a time.

When their time was up, He made sure they were copied correctly.

Anyone can copy the U.S. Constitution, then put a line or two in the copy and call it authentic.

But a comparison of the copy with the original will expose it.
 
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Aelred of Rievaulx

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Yes, but the OP asked if there were prophecies which predicted things ahead of time and that this could be more empirically proven. You said Kings, I said Kings was written in the Exile (at the least). If there was a document and God preserved it, and it formed part of Kings which recorded a specific prophecy about Josiah then one could still make the case that the author, writing during the Exilic period (again, at the least), may have just painted history however he wanted, inserting a prediction when he saw fit.

I hate it when the US Constitution gets compared to the bible. I'm not American and don't really like America. I don't care if there are forgeries of the US Constitution because I don't think the original is all that interesting anyway.
 
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AV1611VET

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Did you read Adam Clarke's commentary?

Here it is again, with some highlights:
If the Jews couldn't do it, I'm sure no Internet poster is going to do it.
Aelred of Rievaulx said:
I hate it when the US Constitution gets compared to the bible. I'm not American and don't really like America. I don't care if there are forgeries of the US Constitution because I don't think the original is all that interesting anyway.
Then use Canadian currency.

Suppose someone put Jack Chick's picture on the Canadian twenty dollar bill?

Or changed BANK OF CANADA to CANADIAN BANK?

Don't you think someone would catch that?

Even if it took 340 years?
 
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Aelred of Rievaulx

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Did you read Adam Clarke's commentary?

Here it is again, with some highlights:

OK... Well, presumably Adam Clarke may have known that the book was written during the Exilic period, so why assume that something is a prediction of future events when the text records both the prediction and the event? It would be like me writing a book about the life of Abraham Lincoln and including a snippet about how someone predicted that he would be assassinated and then recording the assassination. Can't you see that this can be a criticism on what you've said? Don't you want to respond in an apologetics forum with the best and most intelligently construed responses to the query?


I don't like money being compared to sacred scripture either... Sacrilegious...
 
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AV1611VET

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It would be like me writing a book about the life of Abraham Lincoln and including a snippet about how someone predicted that he would be assassinated and then recording the assassination.
Um ... no.

Try this:

"It would be like me writing a book about the life of Abraham Lincoln and including a prophecy that John Booth, a stage actor, would assassinate him."

Remember this part of the prophecy?

1 Kings 13:2 And he cried against the altar in the word of the LORD, and said, O altar, altar, thus saith the LORD; Behold, a child shall be born unto the house of David, Josiah by name; and upon thee shall he offer the priests of the high places that burn incense upon thee, and men's bones shall be burnt upon thee.

House of David, Josiah by name ... John Booth.

Get it?
 
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Aelred of Rievaulx

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So writing a book which includes a statement that Booth would assassinate Lincoln? I was speaking in generalities but sure. The Deuteronomistic "prophecy" could be the same as a contemporary book which says just that.
 
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Hawkins

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Looking forward to your thoughts!

The purpose of the prophecies is for God to show His works to His sheep, such that His sheep can recognize Him and His works.

Now what's your suggestion that what God should do about His prophecies.


Jesus said,

Matthew 13:12 (NIV)
Whoever has will be given more, and he will have an abundance. Whoever does not have, even what he has will be taken from him.
 
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Nihilist Virus

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I would think that catching them in one lie is enough to slant the whole discussion to the point that other passages which appear to be prophetic are in doubt.

So if you read, for example, Matthew 1, you see the "virgin birth" prophecy. Most Bibles will have the footnote showing this is referring to Isaiah 7:14. Read that verse in context, going as far back and as far forward as you like; you will see that the passage is about the king of Judah who is grieved because his city is about to be sacked. Isaiah approaches the king and tells him that Judah will not be sacked, and that the king may ask the Lord a sign. The king refuses, likely out of reverence to Deuteronomy 6:16, and then Isaiah says that one will be given anyway: that a "virgin" (or young woman) will give birth to a child named Emmanuel (this is already not Jesus), and before the child is old enough to understand the difference between good and evil Judah's enemies will be destroyed. So how is it that the birth of a baby by a different name 500 years later is confirmation of this prophecy? Pushing this square peg into the round hole constitutes dishonesty.
 
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Aelred of Rievaulx

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You probably won't find all that many academic scholars who are at all interested in arguing that the ancient prophets wrote predictions about Jesus' life and ministry. Those days are all but gone in critical academia. However, you will find many biblical scholars beginning to engage in what's known as "OT in NT" studies which is an attempt at looking at the biblical writings and their intertextuality. Scholars engaged in this sort of field of inquiry tend to use terms like "tapestry" or "mosaic" when describing the biblical texts and their relationship, they tend to criticise other approaches which attempt to read texts in isolation to one another and they consider the biblical texts to be related as parts of a web. Scholars who approach the texts this way tend to use terms like "allusion", "quotation" and "echo" when referring to the intertextual relationship, they tend to question whether an intertextual relationship is an unconscious echo or a deliberate allusion and they tend to espouse various interpretations of the texts which may suppose either of these possible relationships. A scholar approaching Matthew 1:23 and the usage of Isaiah 7:14 would likely say that the texts can be read intertextually, that the author of Matthew, so immersed within the scriptural traditions of the prophets, would have alluded and quoted them to interpret most everything.
 
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juvenissun

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Unfortunately, there is NO prophecy anywhere at anytime that would meet your requirement. You may as well to delete this word from every dictionary.

In science, there is "prediction" based on past trend and rules of development. That is the closest thing which could match the prophecy you expected. But that is science. You do not expect a person who gave prophecy to be a scientist or does science.

So, by definition, a prophecy SHOULD NOT have the quality of accuracy.

Under these restrictions, do you have a revised set of criteria to identify prophecy?
 
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Athée

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Hey thanks for weighing in I must admit that I am a bit puzzled by your reply. Perhaps you could clarify since eon first reading you seem to be saying that a prophecy should not be accurate. In that case what do you mean by the word prophecy and perhaps more importantly how would you know one was successful if there was no requirement for accuracy? For example if I predict / prophecy that on March 6 2020 at 2pm a Kangaroo would morph into a fully grown elephant in the oval office and this does not come to pass would you still say that what I had said was a prophecy and simply a failed one or would you say that it was never a prophecy to begin with?
Anyway thanks for replying
Peace
 
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juvenissun

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A prophecy could be accurate. But accuracy is not a necessary property for a prophecy. In particular, if a prophecy which would be fulfilled over a period of time, then the time accuracy is beyond the question. The fulfillment of a prophecy could be very subtle and very slow, so that many people wouldn't even notice it.

The Bible (OT) has many prophecies about the Jesus Christ. Did any Jews at Jesus' time aware of them? Since when did Christians start to realize that those prophecies have been fulfilled?
 
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Nihilist Virus

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Everything he says blows my mind. No exception, no joke. My brain is like a trick cigar every time I read what he has to say.
 
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HitchSlap

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Is this the Josiah you're referencing?

"Josiah is only known through biblical texts. No reference to him exists in surviving texts of the period from Egypt or Babylon, and no clear archaeological evidence, such as inscriptions bearing his name, has been found."
 
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AV1611VET

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That would be the man!

Incidentally, who do archaeologists think did reign in Israel 640-631 BC, if not Josiah?
 
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