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STUDY II
BIBLE CHRONOLOGY
Chronology Necessary to an Understanding of Prophecy--Indispensable
Data Furnished in the Bible--From the Creation of Adam to A.D. 1873
was Six Thousand Years--A Statement of Bible Chronology in Great
Periods--Its Examination in Detail--From Creation to the Day the
Flood was Dried Up--To the Abrahamic Covenant--To the Giving of
the Law--To the Division of Canaan among the Tribes--The Period of
the Judges--The Period of the Kings--The Period of the Desolation
--To A.D. 1873--Wherein this Chronology Differs from that
of Bishop Usher, Noted in our English Bibles--The True Date of our
Lord's Birth.
IN this chapter we present the Bible evidence which indicates
that six thousand years from the creation of Adam
were complete with A.D. 1872; and hence that, since 1872
A.D., we are chronologically entered upon the seventh
thousand or the Millennium--the forepart of which, the
"Day of the Lord," the "day of trouble," is to witness the
breaking into pieces of the kingdoms of this world and the
establishment of the Kingdom of God under the whole
heavens.
Chronology is necessary, too, as a basis for the examination
of the prophetic periods. We must ascertain first of
all where we are on the stream of time; and to do this, we
must have reliable dates for the calculation; hence we take
up the subject of chronology first in order. And a complete
chronology of human history must of necessity begin with
the creation of man.
The length of time since the creation of man is variously
estimated. Among those who accept the Bible record, there
can be but little difference of opinion; but among those
who reject it, the differences are enormous, varying all the
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way from ten thousand to hundreds of thousands of years.
These suppositions are based upon facts which afford but
slight ground for such extravagant and reckless conclusions.
For instance, the finding of flint arrowheads in the
peat bogs of Switzerland and Ireland, at a considerable
depth below the surface, is taken as a proof that their level
was once the surface, and that the peat mosses gradually
grew up around and above them; and the time necessary
for such a growth is calculated from the present rate of
growth per century, which is very slight. If their premises
were true, of course it would prove that man had lived hundreds
of thousands of years ago. But other geologists will
show, and with good reason, that these peat bogs were once
so soft that a flint arrowhead might easily sink to a great
depth gradually, during a few centuries.
Another instance we quote: "In making soundings in the
slimy soil of the Nile valley two baked bricks were discovered,
one at a depth of twenty, the other of twenty-four
yards. If we estimate the thickness of the annual deposit
formed by the river at eight inches a century, we must assign
to the first of these bricks an age of 12,000 years and to
the second that of 14,000. By means of analogous calculations,
Burmeister [a celebrated geologist] supposes seventy-two
thousand years to have elapsed since the first appearance of
man upon the soil of Egypt; and Draper [another noted geologist]
attributes to the European man who witnessed the
last glacial epoch an antiquity of more than 250,000
years."*
*Prof. N. Joly, in "Man Before Metals," page 183.
Of course "if we estimate" just as these great men do,
we
should reach the same great conclusions. But some of us are
unscientific enough to inquire, whether it is not more than
probable that the slime deposits of the Nile river have been
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very irregular, as of other rivers, which sometimes shift their
beds and wash away their banks wonderfully in a single
freshet. Again, we remember the Flood of Noah's day, not
only particularly mentioned in the Bible, but preserved in
the oldest traditions of the heathen nations, and we wonder
how much slime and debris that caused, over and above the
eight inches a century. We wonder, too, why it has not occurred
to these great minds, as it naturally does to some not
too great, that two bricks thrown into that "slimy
soil," at a
time when it was covered with water and very soft, would
sink quite a distance by their own weight, being so much
more dense than the slimy soil. As for the difference in
depth of the two bricks, it would seem to an unscientific mind
much more reasonable to suppose that the one fell into the
slime edge-wise, or end-wise, while the other, falling flat,
would sink more slowly, than to suppose that men living
two thousand years apart made two bricks exactly alike.
It is not many years since the skeleton of a man was
found in a former bed of the Mississippi river, and some geologists
began to calculate how many thousands of years
might be indicated by the many feet of silt, slime, etc., covering
the skeleton, and fancied they had a very valuable
sample of prehistoric man. But finding later, several feet
below the skeleton, parts of a "flat boat," such as was in use
on the Mississippi less than fifty years ago, it completely upset
the calculations, and relieved mankind of "another
proof" that the world is hundreds of thousands of years older
than the Bible teaches.
Leaving the discordant and wholly unreliable guessing
of some geologists on this subject of chronology, we appeal
to human history for information. And what do we find?
The history of the oldest of the Gentile nations can be
traced back clearly and distinctly less than three thousand
years. Back of that all is dark, uncertain, mythical, fabulous,
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and untrustworthy tradition. Roman history does not
extend so far back, as it is only twenty-seven hundred years
since Rome was founded, and then its first centuries are
wrapped in uncertain tradition. Three thousand years back
in the Babylonian, Syrian, and Egyptian histories bring us
to a period where their records are fragmentary and involved
in great obscurity. In the history of China, it brings
us to the Tchou dynasty, where the events of Chinese history
"begin to be more trustworthy." In Greece, noted for its
scholarship in the past three thousand years, with whom
above all nations we might expect to find accurate history,
what do we find? We find its dates accurate for the last
twenty-six hundred years, but no farther back. Back of
that, we come to what is known as the "fabulous, mythical
or prehistoric age" of Greece. The only reasonable and connected
account of the first three thousand years of man
on the earth is found in the Bible; and this fact is surely in
harmony with its claim to divine origin, direction and
preservation.
As with history, so with dates: the world has, aside from
the Bible, no means of tracing its chronology farther back
than B.C. 776. On this subject we quote Prof. Fisher, of Yale
College. He says: "An exact method of establishing dates
was slowly reached. The invention of eras was indispensable
to this end. The earliest definite time for the dating
of events was established in Babylon--the era of Nabonassar,
747 B.C. The Greeks (from about 300 B.C.) dated
events from the first recorded victory at the Olympic
games, 776 B.C. These games occurred every fourth year.
Each Olympiad was thus a period of four years. The Romans,
though not for some centuries after the founding of
Rome, dated from that event; i.e., from 753 B.C."
In further evidence that the many so-called histories of
the remote past so abound with vagaries and mythical traditions
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as to make them valueless as to chronological data,
and wholly unworthy of consideration, we quote as follows
from the American Cyclopedia, under the caption,
Chronology:
"The history of ancient nations, unless we make an exception
in the case of the Hebrews, goes back into mythical
periods of thousands or millions of years; and even after the
records begin to assume a historical aspect, the discrepancies
are very great....The Assyrian, Babylonian
and Egyptian inscriptions are in extinct languages, and in
characters long obsolete....Greek and Roman dates are
generally well authenticated to the first Olympiad, B.C.
776, and the establishment of the Consulate, B.C. 510, previous
to which they are mainly traditional or legendary.
Herodotus is valuable only as to events of his own time,
about 450 B.C., and those of a century or two earlier."
Clinton in his work on Grecian Chronology (page 283)
says, "The history contained in the Hebrew Scriptures presents
a remarkable and pleasing contrast to the early accounts
of the Greeks. In the latter we trace with difficulty a
few obscure facts preserved to us by the poets, who transmitted,
with all the embellishments of poetry and fable,
what they had received from oral tradition. In the annals of
the Hebrew nation, we have authentic narratives written
by contemporaries under the guidance of inspiration. What
they have delivered to us comes accordingly under a double
sanction. They were aided by divine inspiration, in recording
facts upon which, as mere human witnesses, their evidence
would be valid."
The Bible, our God-provided history of the first three
thousand years, is the only work in the world which--beginning
with Adam, the first man mentioned in history, monument
or inscription, whose name, the time of his creation
and death are recorded, and from whom his descendants
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can be traced by name and age in successive links for nearly
four thousand years--furnishes us a clear and connected
history down to a period where secular history is well authenticated.
As we shall see, the Bible record extends to the
first year of Cyrus, B.C. 536, a well established and generally
accepted date. There the thread of Bible chronology is
dropped--at a point where secular history is reliable. God
has thus provided for his children a clear and connected
record down to the present time. The Bible by its prophecies
even supplements history, down to the consummation
of "the restitution of all things," in the end of the seventh
millennium, whence the new era of eternal blessedness will
begin to date. The Bible is therefore the only record in the
world which furnishes a view of human history as a whole. It
carries us from the lost paradise of Genesis to the restored
paradise of Revelation, tracing the pathway of humanity
into eternity. Taken together, the history and prophecy of
the Bible afford a panoramic view of the whole course of
events from the creation and fall of man to his reconciliation
and restitution. The Bible, therefore, is the chart of all
history. Without it, as has been truly said, history would
be "like rivers flowing from unknown sources to unknown
seas"; but under its guidance we may trace these rivers to
their springs, yea, and see their glorious ending in the ocean
of eternity.
In the Bible alone, therefore, we may expect to find a
record which will order aright the inharmonious periods
and chronological irregularities which the annals of human
history at first sight present--into harmony with each other
and with the periods of nature.
In starting with the question, How long is it since man's
creation? we should and do feel confident that he who gave
the prophecies, and said that in the time of the end they
should be understood, has provided in his Word the data
necessary to enable us accurately to locate those prophecies.
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However, any who expect to find these matters so plainly
stated as to be convincing to the mere surface reader, or the
insincere skeptic, will be disappointed. God's times and seasons
are given in such a way as to be convincing, at this
time, only to those who, by acquaintance with God, are
able to recognize his characteristic methods. The evidence
is given "that the man of God may be thoroughly furnished."
(2 Tim. 3:17) These well know that in all the paths by
which their Father leads they must walk by faith and not
by sight. To all who are prepared to walk thus, we expect to
be able to point out, at every step, solid statements of God's
Word--a sure foundation for reasonable faith.
We will not here discuss the merits of the Septuagint and
Hebrew versions of the Old Testament Scriptures, their
difference in chronological data, etc., but will satisfy ourselves,
and we trust the reader, with the statement that the
former was a translation by Egyptians, while the latter is
the original Hebrew record; which facts, taken in connection
with the almost superstitious veneration with
which the Hebrews guarded every jot and tittle of those sacred
writings, is strong evidence of the reliability of the
Hebrew version. Its acceptance by scholars is quite general,
and in this volume we follow its dates, etc.
Here we furnish the evidence that from the creation of
Adam to A.D. 1873 was six thousand years. And though the
Bible contains no direct statement that the seventh thousand
will be the epoch of Christ's reign, the great Sabbath
Day of restitution to the world, yet the venerable tradition
is not without a reasonable foundation. The law given to
Israel, the typical people, appointing that six days of labor
and weariness should be followed by one of refreshment
and rest from their own works, seems fitly to illustrate the
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six thousand years in which the whole creation labors and
groans under the bondage of sin and death (Rom. 8:22) in a
vain endeavor to extricate itself, and the grand Millennial
Day in which the weary and heavy laden may come to
Christ Jesus, the shepherd and bishop of their souls, and
through him find rest, refreshment and restitution--in
which, through the merits of his precious blood, they may
find repentance and remission of sins. On the typical seventh
day he inquired of the impotent man, "Wilt thou be
made whole?" and in answer to his faith and obedience
gave him strength to take up his bed and walk. (See John 5:6-9;
also Matt. 12:10,13; John 7:23; Luke 13:11-16; 14:1-5.)
So, during the antitypical Sabbath, the Millennium,
it will be declared to all the world that "whosoever
will" may have life and health eternal if he will take the
steps of faith and obedience.
We must not overlook the fact already noted (Vol. I,
Chap. VIII), that the term day is indefinite, and signifies
merely a period of time, whether of long or of short duration.
The Apostle Peter intimated that the seventh thousand-year
period of the world's history would be the
seventh day in God's reckoning, saying, "Beloved, be not
ignorant of this one thing, that one day is with the Lord as a
thousand years, and a thousand years as one day....The
day of the Lord will come," etc. 2 Pet. 3:8,10
If, then, the seventh thousand-year period of earth's history
be an epoch specially noted as the period of Christ's
reign, we shall, by showing that it began in A.D. 1873, be
proving that we are already in it. This calls to mind what we
have already noted in the preceding volume, that the Scriptures
indicate that the dawn of the Millennium, or Day of
the Lord, will be dark and stormy, and full of trouble upon
the world and upon the nominal church, though its earliest
dawning light will be full of comfort and cheer to the saints,
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who draw their comfort and peace from the hope set before
them in the gospel, which, as an anchor, enters beyond the
time of trouble, and fastens in the precious promises of the
Millennial sunrise and glory: they see, beyond the time of
trouble, the glorious reign and blessings promised.
The general condition of the world today, and the rapid
development since 1873 of Socialism, Nihilism and Communism,
whose avowed object is the overturning of the
powers that be, and the redistribution of the wealth of the
world, are certainly not out of harmony with what we
should expect, however much, in some respects, these things
may be deprecated by those who love law and order and
peace. Only those who see that the coming anarchy and
trouble are God's agencies for the establishment of a yet
more complete law and order, and a more lasting peace,
will be relieved from overwhelming fear as they pass
through it.
Nor is this pointing out of the seventh epoch, or Millennium,
the only value of chronology; for while we shall present
several lines of prophecy entirely independent of chronology,
it is the measure by which several lines of prophecy
are established. The perfect agreement between these
two classes of prophetic teaching, some dependent on, and
some independent of, chronology, is very strong proof, not
only of the correctness of those applications, but also of the
correctness of the chronology which shows this harmony;
on the same principle that a key which will unlock a
treasure-casket difficult to open is evidently the true key.
The chronology given below harmonizes the various prophetic
statements relating to Christ's Kingdom and its establishment,
by showing their relative order and time.
Chronology is the stem or handle by which all the prophetic
time-proofs, as notches or wards of the key, are held
together and operated.
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A CONDENSED STATEMENT OF
CHRONOLOGY TO THE YEAR A.M. 6000
The following condensed statement of chronological periods
may properly be termed Bible chronology, because
the Bible record alone is followed down to the first year of
Cyrus, B.C. 536, a date well authenticated and generally
accepted by scholars. Here the thread of Bible chronology
ends--a little beyond the period where secular history begins
to be reliable. This, in itself, is a marked evidence of
divine direction and oversight, in helping us only where we
are unable to help ourselves.
From the Creation of Adam
To the end of the flood..........................1656 years
Thence to the covenant with Abraham.............. 427 "
Thence to the Exodus and the giving of the Law... 430 "
Thence to the division of Canaan................. 46 "
The period of the Judges......................... 450 "
The period of the Kings.......................... 513 "
The period of the desolation..................... 70 "
Thence to A.D. 1................................. 536 "
Thence to A.D. 1873..............................1872 "
----
Total..................................6000 years
As we consider particularly each of these periods, let the
reader figure it out for himself, and see how firm a foundation
for our faith is laid in God's Word. Two breaks in the
historic narrative of the Old Testament we shall find, yet
when we discover that in the New Testament God has provided
bridges to span these two chasms, it should increase
our confidence that God so arranged the record as to hide
his times and seasons, until his due time for revealing them
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had come--just as he has done with other truths already
noticed.
We will now examine the foregoing periods separately,
and in their order as named above, down to the reign of
Cyrus. Have your Bible at hand and verify every quotation,
that you may receive this as God's Word and not as
man's.
Chronology of the Period from the Creation
of Adam to the Day the Flood was Dried Up
"Adam lived 130 years and begat a son and
called his name Seth." Gen. 5:3.............. 130 years
"Seth lived 105 years and begat Enos."
Gen. 5:6..................................... 105 "
"Enos lived 90 years and begat Cainan."
Gen. 5:9..................................... 90 "
"Cainan lived 70 years and begat Mahalaleel."
Gen. 5:12.................................... 70 "
"Mahalaleel lived 65 years and begat Jared."
Gen. 5:15.................................... 65 "
"Jared lived 162 years and begat Enoch."
Gen. 5:18.................................... 162 "
"Enoch lived 65 years and begat Methuselah."
Gen. 5:21.................................... 65 "
"Methuselah lived 187 years and begat
Lamech." Gen. 5:25........................... 187
"
"Lamech lived 182 years and begat a son and
called his name Noah." Gen. 5:28............. 182
"
"Noah was 600 years old when the flood of
waters was upon the earth." Gen. 7:6......... 600
"
----
Total from the creation of Adam to the day
the flood was dried up. Gen. 8:13............1656 years
Nothing more simple and exact to a day than this could
be asked. Let us now examine the next period.
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The Period from the Flood to the Covenant with
Abraham, at the Death of Terah, his Father
"Shem--begat Arphaxad 2 years after the flood."
Gen. 11:10.................................... 2 years
"Arphaxad lived 35 years and begat Salah."
Gen. 11:12.................................... 35 "
"Salah lived 30 years and begat Eber."
Gen. 11:14.................................... 30 "
"Eber lived 34 years and begat Peleg."
Gen. 11:16.................................... 34 "
"Peleg lived 30 years and begat Reu."
Gen. 11:18.................................... 30 "
"Reu lived 32 years and begat Serug."
Gen. 11:20.................................... 32 "
"Serug lived 30 years and begat Nahor."
Gen. 11:22.................................... 30 "
"Nahor lived 29 years and begat Terah."
Gen. 11:24.................................... 29 "
"The days of Terah were 205 years and he died."
Gen. 11:32....................................205 "
---
Total...................................427 years
This, too, is very simple and exact. But the next period is
not so easily traced; for the direct line of chronology is broken,
until after the exodus of Israel from Egypt. Hence we
would be quite unable to proceed, were it not that Paul and
Stephen, as the mouthpieces of the Spirit, furnish the connecting
link.
The Period from the Covenant with Abraham
to the Giving of the Law
Paul declares that the length of this period was four hundred
and thirty years. (Gal. 3:17) The Covenant included
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the promise of the land of Canaan for an everlasting possession,
and though several times reaffirmed, to Abraham, to
Isaac and to Jacob, it was always the same covenant. (See
Gen. 12:7,8; 13:14-18; 26:3,4; 35:9-12; 46:2-4; 50:24.) As
shown by a comparison of Gen. 12:1-5,7and Acts 7:2-5,
the covenant was made (according to previous promise) as
soon as Abraham had fully complied with the conditions
on which he was to receive it: that was, as soon as he had
entered Canaan, which he did immediately after the decease
of his father, who died in Haran, on the way to Canaan.
Having the date of the covenant--just after Terah's
death--thus established by Stephen's statement, and having
Paul's statement, that the Law was four hundred and
thirty years after the covenant, the break in the Old Testament
chronology is thus bridged by the New. But let us
read the account carefully, and mark the particularity with
which the bridge is constructed:
"Now the Lord had [previously, before he left Mesopotamia,
or Ur of the Chaldees] said unto Abraham, Get thee
out of thy country, and from thy kindred, and from thy father's
house [brethren, etc.] unto a land that I will show
thee; and [if you do so] I will make of thee a great nation,"
etc. (Gen. 12:1,2. Compare Acts 7:2.) This
indicates that
God had proposed the covenant to Abraham before Terah,
his father, died, and before he came to dwell in Haran or
Charran. But there was a stipulation which demanded
Abraham's faith and obedience before the covenant should
be actually made. This stipulation was that he must manifest
faith in the promise that such a covenant would be
made with him, by leaving his native country and kindred
and going to the land to which he was directed. This Abraham
did, and as his wife, his nephew Lot and his aged father
shared his faith and desired to share his fortunes with
him, they were permitted to do so, and the four started for
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the land of promise. His father Terah died on the way, in
Haran, after which Abraham passed over into Canaan,
that there he might secure and bind the covenant. As Stephen
declared to Israel: "When his father was dead, he removed
him into this land wherein ye now dwell." "So
Abraham departed [out of Haran] as the Lord had spoken unto
him." (Acts 7:4; Gen. 12:4) And the
covenant was made just
after he entered the land. (See Gen. 12:5-7.) Thus we have
the date of the covenant, and the beginning of the four
hundred and thirty years, fixed as immediately following
Terah's death, and the chain of chronology complete to the
giving of the Law. The first feature of the Law was the Passover,
which was instituted the same day that Israel left
Egypt. Exod. 12:41-43,47,50,51
In harmony with this we read: "Now the sojourning of
the children of Israel who dwelt in Egypt was four hundred
and thirty years; and it came to pass at the end of the four
hundred and thirty years, even the self-same day it came to
pass, that all the hosts of the Lord went out from the land of
Egypt." Exod. 12:40-42,51
Some may suppose that the statements of Moses and
Paul (Exod. 12:40-42and Gal. 3:17) are not in
harmony,
the one affirming that the sojourning of Israel was four
hundred and thirty years, and the other, that from the covenant
with Abraham to the giving of the Law was four hundred
and thirty years, reasoning that if only four hundred
and thirty years elapsed between Abraham's coming into
Canaan and the giving of the Law, the sojourn of the children
of Israel in Egypt must have been much less. But it
should be observed that the statement is not that Israel sojourned
in Egypt four hundred and thirty years, but that
the whole length of the sojourning of that people who for
some time lived in Egypt lasted four hundred and thirty
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years: "Now the sojourning of the children of Israel who
dwelt in Egypt was four hundred and thirty years." The sojourning
referred to began when Abraham first came into
Canaan. (Heb. 11:8,9) Israel sojourned in Abraham and in
Isaac and in Jacob, even as Levi paid tithes to Melchizedec,
while yet in the loins of his father. Heb. 7:9,10
The covenant with Abraham took effect from the time
that, leaving Haran or Charran, he set foot in Canaan, the
land of promise. From that time, he and all Israel in him,
yet unborn, became heirs of the things promised, and sojourners,
or pilgrims, waiting on God for the fulfilment of the
promise. This sojourning had lasted four hundred and
thirty years, to a day, when Israel left Egypt, and received
that first feature of the Law, the institution of the Passover.
The statements of Moses and Paul, therefore, refer to precisely
the same period, thus giving most positive evidence
that from the covenant with Abraham to the giving of the
Law was four hundred and thirty years. Paul gave special
emphasis to the fact that the Passover must be regarded as
the beginning of the Law (which Moses also shows, Exod. 12:42,43,47,50),
and Moses gave special emphasis to the
exactness of the period, to a day.
Thus we have our third period clearly established. And
when we mark the Lord's particularity to a day, in furnishing
this link in the chain of chronology, it gives us strong
confidence, especially when we consider that such particularity
was probably of no special interest to the Church of
the past, and was given for no other than the present use.
Period from the Exodus to the Division
of Canaan among the Tribes
Israel's forty years, or "day of temptation in the wilderness"
(Deut. 8:2; Psa. 95:8-10; Heb. 3:8,9),
was followed by
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six years of war in Canaan, and the dividing of the land
among the tribes. One year, one month and five days
elapsed from their going out of Egypt to their leaving Sinai
for Paran. (Num. 33:3; 10:11-13) And it was then, from
Kadesh-barnea in the wilderness of Paran, that the spies
were sent. (Num. 13:3-26; 32:8-13) One of these, Caleb,
when applying for his portion at the division of the land
(Joshua 11:23; 10:42), said, "Forty years old was I when
Moses the servant of the Lord sent me from Kadesh-barnea
to espy out the land, and I brought him word again....And
now, behold, the Lord hath kept me alive, as he said, these
forty and five years, even since the Lord spake this word...while
Israel wandered in the wilderness; and now, lo, I am this day
fourscore and five years old." (Joshua 14:7,10) Thus it will
be seen that it was forty-five years from the spying of the
land to its division among the tribes, as affirmed by Joshua,
and a little over a year from the exodus to the sending of the
spies, making forty-six full years and a fraction* from the
exodus to the division of the land. As the first forty years of
this period were passed in the wilderness, as shown by many
scriptures, notably Acts 7:36and Heb. 3:9, the
remaining
six to the division of the land were spent in Canaan, conquering
and taking possession of the land of promise.
*We take account of only the complete years, more accurate account
being impossible. Sometimes, as above, the years are fractionally long.
And again some are short, as in the case of Zedekiah's reign. Zedekiah is
said to have reigned eleven years (2 Chron. 36:11; Jer. 52:1); yet, from
verses 3 to 7of the latter chapter, it is clear that his actual
reign was
ten years four months and nine days. We believe that these fractional parts
of years counterbalance themselves; and that the Lord has thus overruled
and arranged the matter is our confidence, supported by the outcome
and the results deducible from it, and the accuracy to a day, even in large
periods, already noticed. As illustrating God's care and particularity in
this matter, see Gen. 7:11,13; Exod. 12:40,41.
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The Period of the Judges
We come now to the most difficult portion of chronology,
the period from the division of the land to the anointing of
Saul as king. It is usually termed the period of the Judges,
though the Judges did not fill the office continuously. The
record given in the books of Judges and 1 Samuel mentions
nineteen periods, approximating a total of four hundred
and fifty years; but they are disconnected, broken, lapped
and tangled so much that we could arrive at no definite
conclusion from them, and should be obliged to conclude
as others have done, that nothing positive could be known
on the subject, were it not that the New Testament supplies
the deficiency. Paul states that after God divided their land
to them by lot, "He gave unto them Judges about [during]
the space of four hundred and fifty years, until Samuel the
Prophet. Afterward they desired a king, and God gave unto
them Saul." Acts 13:19-21
The Greek word rendered about in the common version is
hos, and has the significance of during, or while. The
same
writer uses the word in three other places where the common
version translates it while, viz.: Acts 1:10; 10:17;
Luke 24:32.
This passage would be better translated, "He gave
unto them Judges during the space of four hundred and fifty
years." The Syriac reads thus--"And for four hundred
and fifty years he gave them Judges, until Samuel the
prophet"--the last of the "Judges."
The statement of the length of this period of the Judges,
by the Apostle, we accept as a specially designed solution of
the problem. In only two instances--the four hundred and
thirty years from the Covenant to the Law, and this period
of the Judges--is there any reasonable uncertainty about
the Old Testament chronology, and both are clearly stated
in the New. Can we suppose that this merely happened so?
[B50]
It is more reasonable to suppose that God first hid the matter,
by leaving the Old Testament record incomplete, and
later supplied the deficiency in the New Testament, so that
in due time, when attention should be called to it, those
having sufficient interest to compare the accounts might
find the missing links supplied in a manner calculated to
teach dependence upon the Great Time-Keeper.
The Period of the Kings
Saul's reign was in or during the space of forty years following
the last Judge, until David was anointed king, as
shown above; and following him, the periods of the kings in
the line of David are easily traced in Chronicles, thus:
Saul's "space"................Acts 13:21..........40
years
David reigned..........1 Chron. 29:27..........40 "
Solomon " ..........2 Chron. 9:30..........40
"
Rehoboam " .......... " "
12:13..........17 "
Abijah " .......... " " 13:2..........
3 "
Asa " .......... " "
16:13..........41 "
Jehoshaphat " .......... " "
20:31..........25 "
Jehoram " .......... " " 21:20..........
8 "
Ahaziah " .......... " " 22:2..........
1 "
Athaliah " .......... " " 22:12..........
6 "
Jehoash " .......... " " 24:1
..........40 "
Amaziah " .......... " " 25:1
..........29 "
Uzziah " .......... " " 26:3
..........52 "
Jotham " .......... " " 27:1
..........16 "
Ahaz " .......... " " 28:1
..........16 "
Hezekiah " .......... " " 29:1
..........29 "
Manasseh " .......... " " 33:1
..........55 "
Amon " .......... " " 33:21..........
2 "
Josiah " .......... " " 34:1
..........31 "
Jehoiakim " .......... " " 36:5
..........11 "
Zedekiah " .......... " "
36:11..........11 "
---
Total.......................................513 years
[B51]
The Seventy Years of Desolation
This brings us to the period of the desolation of the land,
which lasted seventy years, and was ended by the restoration
of its people from Babylon, in the first year of Cyrus,
B.C. 536 (See 2 Chron. 36:20,23), a date well established in
secular history, and beyond which the line of Bible chronology
does not extend.
Period from the Restoration to A.D. 1873
The period from the time of the restoration of the Jews
from Babylon, at the close of the seventy years desolation of
their land, in the first year of Cyrus, down to the date
known as A.D. 1, is not covered by Bible history. But, as before
stated, it is well established by secular history as a period
of 536 years. Ptolemy, a learned Greek-Egyptian, a
geometer and astronomer, has well established these figures.
They are generally accepted by scholars, and known
as Ptolemy's Canon.
Thus we have found a clear and connected line of chronology
from creation to the beginning of the Christian era
(A.D.)--in all, a period of four thousand one hundred and
twenty-eight (4128) years, which, together with eighteen
hundred and seventy-two years of the Christian era, make
six thousand years from creation to the year 1873 A.D.
This and Usher's Chronology Compared
It will be interesting to some to know wherein the above
chronology differs from that inserted in the margin of the
common version of the Bible, known as Usher's Chronology.
The difference between the two, down to the time of
the seventy years of desolation, is one hundred and twenty-four
(124) years. This difference is made up of four periods
of 18,4,2 and 100 years--as follows:
[B52]
Usher dates the seventy years desolation eighteen years earlier
than shown above--i.e., before the dethronement of
Zedekiah, Judah's last king--because he figured the king of
Babylon took many of the people captive at that time.*
(2 Chron. 36:9,10,17; 2 Kings 24:8-16) He evidently
makes the not uncommon mistake of regarding those seventy
years as the period of captivity, whereas the Lord expressly
declares them to be seventy years of desolation of the
land, that the land should lie "desolate, without an inhabitant."
Such was not the case prior to Zedekiah's dethronement.
(2 Kings 24:14) But the desolation which
followed Zedekiah's overthrow was complete; for, though
some of the poor of the land were left to be vine-dressers
and husbandmen (2 Kings 25:12), shortly even these--"all
people, both small and great"--fled to Egypt for fear of the
Chaldees. (Verse 26) There can be no doubt here: and
therefore in reckoning the time to the desolation of the land,
all periods up to the close of Zedekiah's reign should be
counted in, as we have done.
*Note, however, this partial captivity occurred eleven, not eighteen,
years
before the dethronement of King Zedekiah.
The four years difference is in the reign of Jehoram. Usher
gives it as a reign of four years, while the Bible says it was
eight years. 2 Chron. 21:5; 2 Kings 8:17
Of the two years difference, one year is found in the term
of the reign of Ahaz, which Usher gives as fifteen, while the
Bible says it was sixteen years. (2 Chron. 28:1; 2 Kings 16:2)
And the other is in the term of Jehoash, which Usher reckons
as thirty-nine, while the Bible gives it as forty years.
2 Kings 12:1; 2 Chron. 24:1
These differences can be accounted for only by supposing
that Usher followed, or attempted to follow, Josephus, a
Jewish historian whose chronological dates are now generally
recognized as reckless and faulty. We rely on the Bible
alone, believing that God is his own interpreter.
Aside from these twenty-four years difference in the period
[B53]
of the Kings, there is another variance between the
above Bible chronology and that of Usher, namely, one hundred
years in the period of the Judges. Here Usher is misled
by the evident error of 1 Kings 6:1, which says that the
fourth year of Solomon's reign was the four-hundred-and-eightieth
year from the coming out of Egypt. It evidently
should read the five-hundred-and-eightieth year, and was
possibly an error in transcribing; for if to Solomon's four
years we add David's forty, and Saul's space of forty, and
the forty-six years from leaving Egypt to the division of the
land, we have one hundred and thirty years, which deducted
from four hundred and eighty would leave only
three hundred and fifty years for the period of the Judges,
instead of the four hundred and fifty years mentioned in the
Book of Judges, and by Paul, as heretofore shown. The
Hebrew character "daleth" (4) very much resembles the
character "hay" (5), and it is supposed that in this way the
error has occurred, possibly the mistake of a transcriber.
1 Kings 6:1, then, should read five hundred and eighty, and
thus be in perfect harmony with the other statements.
Thus the Word of God corrects the few slight errors
which have crept into it by any means.* And remember
that those breaks occur in the period bridged effectually by
the inspired testimony of the New Testament.
*A similar discrepancy will be noticed in comparing 2 Chron. 36:9
with
2 Kings 24:8, the one giving eighteen years and the other,
evidently
incorrect, giving eight years as the age of Jehoiachin, who reigned three
months, and did evil in the sight of the Lord, and was punished by captivity,
etc. Such a mistake could easily occur, but God has so guarded his
Word that the few trivial errors of copyists are made very manifest, and
the full harmony of his Word gives ample foundation for faith.
So, then, whereas Usher dates A.D. 1 as the year 4005
from the creation of Adam, it really was, as we have shown,
[B54]
the year 4129, according to the Bible record, thus showing
the year 1872 A.D. to be the year of the world 6000, and
1873 A.D. the commencement of the seventh thousand-year
period, the seventh millennium, or thousand-year day
of earth's history.
Thus chronology as gathered from the Bible alone, from
creation down to well authenticated secular history, is clear
and strong, bearing evidence, too, of the peculiar methods
of divine providence in its record, in its concealing and in
its gradual unfolding in due time. And this, together with
the reliable dates of the Christian era and the several centuries
before it at hand, enables us to locate ourselves accurately
on the stream of time. And we begin hopefully to lift
up our heads and rejoice, as we realize that we are actually
sweeping into the glorious age of the seventh millennium--
even though we recognize that its beginning is to be dark
and full of trouble, as foretold by the prophets, and that the
storm-clouds are already gathering and growing darker.
THE DATE OF OUR LORD'S BIRTH
In the sixth century the Church began to reckon time
from the birth of our Lord, and fixed the date A.D. as it
now stands; namely, 536 years after the first year of Cyrus,
king of Persia.* Whether they placed it correctly or not does
not affect the chronology as just given, which shows that
the six thousand years from the creation of Adam ended
with A.D. 1872; because it is eighteen hundred and seventy-two
years since the year designated A.D., and the first
[B55]
year of Cyrus was five hundred and thirty-six years before
that year (A.D.), whether it was the year of our Lord's birth
or not.
*The year A.D. was fixed upon as early as the sixth century by Dionysius
Exiguus, and other scholars of that period, though it did not come into
general use until two centuries later.
We cannot, perhaps, explain this better than by the
time-worn illustration of a line with a star upon it--thus:
B.C._____________________*____________________A.D.
Let the line represent the six thousand years of earth's history from
the creation of Adam to 1873 A.D.; and let the star represent
the turning point between B.C. and A.D. To move that
point either way would not alter the length of the entire
period, though it would alter the names of the years. To
move the A.D. point backward one year would make the
B.C. period one year less, and the A.D. period one year
more, but the sum of the B.C. and A.D. years would still be
the same; for the amount taken from the one is always an
addition to the other. Nevertheless, let us briefly examine
the date of our Lord's birth, as it will be found useful in our
subsequent studies.
It has become customary among scholars to concede that
our commonly accepted A.D. is incorrect to the amount of
four years--that our Lord was born four years previous to
the year designated A.D., that is, in the year B.C. 4. And
this theory has been followed by the publishers of the common
version of the Bible. We cannot agree that B.C. 4 was
the true date of our Lord's birth. On the contrary, we find
that he was born only one year and three months before our
common era, A.D., namely, in October of B.C. 2.
The general reason with most of those who claim that
A.D. should have been placed four years earlier to correctly
mark the Savior's birth, is a desire to harmonize it with certain
statements of the Jewish historian Josephus, relative to
the length of the reign of Herod the Great. According to
one of his statements, it would appear that Herod died
three years before the year reckoned A.D. If this were true,
[B56]
it would certainly prove that our Lord was born in the year
B.C. 4; for it was this Herod, that issued the decree for the
slaying of the babes of Bethlehem, from whom the infant
Jesus was delivered. (Matt. 2:14-16) But is this statement of
Josephus reliable? Is it true that Herod died four years before
the year A.D.? No, we answer: Josephus alone is not
sufficient authority for such a decision, as he is known and
admitted to be inaccurate in his record of dates.
But this notion has prevailed: the date B.C. 4 has been
generally accepted, and historical events and dates have
been somewhat bent to fit and support this theory. Among
other supposed proofs that B.C. 4 was the proper date, was
an eclipse of the moon, said by Josephus to have occurred a
short time before the death of Herod. All that is known of
that eclipse is as follows: Herod had placed a large golden
eagle over the gate of the Temple. Two notable Jews,
named Matthias and Judas, persuaded some young men to
pull it down. They did so, were arrested and executed. To
make the matter clear, Josephus relates that there was at
that time another Matthias, a high priest, who was not concerned
in the sedition. He then adds: "But Herod deprived
this Matthias of his high priesthood, and burnt the other
Matthias who had raised the sedition, with his companions,
alive, and that very night there was an eclipse of the moon."
This is recorded as one of the last prominent acts of Herod,
and is given a date which might correspond with B.C. 4 by
Josephus, who marks the date by the eclipse mentioned.
But since at times as many as four eclipses of the moon
occur in one year, it is evident that except under very peculiar
circumstances the record of such an occurrence proves
nothing. Where the time of the night, the time of the year
and the amount of obscuration are all given, as has been
done in several instances, the record is of great value in fixing
dates; but in the case under consideration, there is nothing
[B57]
of the kind; hence absolutely nothing is proved by the
record, so far as chronology is concerned. Josephus does
mention a fast, as having been kept before the event, but
what fast, or how long before, is not stated.
As it happens, there was only one eclipse of the moon in
B.C. 4, while in B.C. 1 there were three. The eclipse of B.C.
4 was only partial (six digits, or only one-half of the moon
being obscured), while all three in B.C. 1 were total
eclipses--the entire moon was obscured, and of course for a
longer time causing the event to be much more noticeable.
Hence if the eclipse theory has any weight it certainly is not
in favor of the earlier date, B.C. 4.
Unfortunately, the time of Herod's death is not given by
a reliable historian. Josephus gives some important periods
in his history and the dates of some events, but these dates
are not trustworthy. Some of them would teach that Herod
died B.C. 4, but others cannot be reconciled with that date.
For instance, his death is said to have been at the age of seventy.
He was made governor of Galilee B.C. 47, at which
time Josephus says he was twenty-five years of age. (Ant.
14:9:2) This would date his birth B.C. 72 (47 plus 25). His
death at seventy would then be B.C. 2 instead of B.C. 4.
In this connection it may be well to note the conflict of
opinion among learned men, relative to the exact date of
Herod's death, that thus it may be apparent to all that
there is no well founded reason for accepting B.C. 4 as the
only date in harmony with Matt. 2:14-16. Faussett's Bible
Encyclopedia gives Herod's age when made governor at
about twenty years. This would make his death, at seventy
years, A.D. 2. Chambers' Cyclopedia and Smith's Bible
Dictionary give his age at that time as fifteen years, which
would place his death A.D. 7. Appleton's Cyclopedia, article
Chronology, says: "Josephus also gives dates, but he is
altogether too careless to be taken into account."
[B58]
We now proceed to offer the Scriptural evidence relating
to this subject, which more nearly agrees with the common
era, and shows that our Lord's birth occurred only one year
and three months prior to January, A.D. 1. It is as
follows:
Our Lord's ministry lasted three and a half years. The
sixty-nine symbolic weeks of years (Dan. 9:24-27) reached
to his baptism and anointing as Messiah, and there the last
or seventieth week (seven years) of Israel's favor began. He
was cut off [in death] in the middle of that seventieth week--
three and a half years from the beginning of his ministry.
He was crucified, we know, at the time of the Passover,
about April 1st, whatever the year. The three and a half
years of his ministry, which ended in April, must consequently
have begun about October, whatever the year.
And October of some year must have been the true month
of his birth, because he delayed not to begin his ministry as
soon as he was thirty, and could not, according to the Law
(under which he was born and which he obeyed), begin before
he was thirty. As we read, "Now when Jesus began to be
about thirty years of age he cometh" etc.
John the Baptist was six months older than our Lord
(Luke 1:26,36), hence he was of age (thirty years, according
to the Law--Num. 4:3; Luke 3:23, etc.) and began to
preach six months before our Lord became of age and began
his ministry. The date of the beginning of John's ministry
is clearly stated to have been the "fifteenth year of the
reign of Tiberius Caesar," the third emperor of Rome.
(Luke 3:1) This is a clearly fixed date of which there can be
no reasonable doubt. Tiberius became emperor at the
death of Augustus Caesar, in the year of Rome 767, which
was the year A.D. 14.
But those misled by the inaccurate statements of Josephus
relative to Herod, and who place the birth of Jesus
[B59]
at B.C. 4, in order to harmonize with him, run across a difficulty
in this clearly stated date given by Luke, and endeavor
to make it also harmonize with their B.C. 4 theory.
To accomplish this end they make the claim that Tiberius
began to exercise authority some three or four years before
Augustus died, and before he was fully constituted emperor.
They claim that possibly his rule might have been
reckoned from that date.
But such suppositions will be found baseless, by any who
will investigate the matter on the pages of history. It is true
that Tiberius was exalted to a very important position by
Augustus, but it was not four years before Augustus' death,
as their theory would demand, but ten years before, in A.D.
4. But the power then conferred upon him was only such as
had been enjoyed by others before his day. It was in no
sense of the word imperial power, and in no sense of the
word can his "reign" be said to have begun there: he was
only the heir-apparent. Even in the most exaggerated use of
language, his "reign" could not be said to have commenced
before Augustus' death and his own investiture in office at
the hands of the Roman Senate, A.D. 14.
History says, "The Emperor, whose declining age needed
an associate, adopted Tiberius A.D. 4, renewing his tribunian
power." Article TIBERIUS, Rees' Cyclopedia.
"He [Augustus] determined accordingly to devolve upon
him [Tiberius] a share in the government....This formal
investiture placed him on the same footing as that enjoyed
by the veteran Agrippa during his later years, and there can
be no doubt that it was universally regarded as an introduction
to the first place in the empire....The programme
for the succession was significantly shadowed out:
Tiberius had been ordered to assume his place at the head
of the Senate, the people, and the army....The adoption,
which took place at the same time, is dated June 27
[B60]
(A.U.C. 757)--A.D. 4." Merivale's History of the Romans
(Appleton's), Vol. IV, pp. 220,221
Thus there is conclusive proof that the first year of the
reign of Tiberius Caesar was not three or four years before
Augustus died; and that the honors referred to as conferred
during Augustus' reign were conferred ten, and not four,
years before Augustus' death, and then were in no sense
imperial honors.
We may, therefore, consider the date of Luke 3:1not
merely the only one furnished in the New Testament, but
an unequivocal one. There can be no doubt about it in the
minds of any who have investigated it. Tiberius began to
reign in A.D. 14. The fifteenth year of his reign, would
therefore be the year A.D. 29, in which year, Luke states
(3:1-3), John began his ministry. Since our Lord's thirtieth
birthday and the beginning of his ministry were in October,
and since John's birthday and the beginning of his
ministry were just six months earlier, it follows that John
began his ministry in the spring, about April first--just as
soon as he was of age; for God's plans are always carried out
on exact time. So, then, John was thirty years old in A.D.
29, about April first, consequently he was born B.C. 2*,
about April first. And Jesus' birth, six months later, must
have been B.C. 2, about October first.
*For the benefit of readers not much accustomed to calculating dates, we
call attention to the fact that in the beginning of the year A.D. 29, only 28
full years had elapsed: the twenty-ninth was only beginning.
Again, there is clear, strong evidence that Jesus was crucified
on Friday, April 3rd, A.D. 33. The fact that his crucifixion
occurred at the close of the fourteenth day of the
month Nisan, and that this date rarely falls on Friday, but
did so in the year A.D. 33, substantiates that date so thoroughly
[B61]
that even Usher, who adopted B.C. 4 as the date of
Jesus' birth was forced to admit that his crucifixion was
A.D. 33. Compare Usher's dates in the margin of the common
version Bible at Luke 2:21and Matt. 2:1with those
at
Matthew 27and Luke 23. The date of the crucifixion
being
A.D. 33, it follows that if Jesus had been born B.C. 4, he
would have been 36 years old when he died; and his ministry
from his thirtieth to his thirty-sixth year would have
been six years. But it is clear that our Lord's ministry was
three and a half years only. And this generally conceded
fact is proved by Daniel's prophecy concerning Messiah's
cutting off in the middle of the seventieth week of Israel's
favor.
Thus, it is again proven that Jesus' birth was about one
year and three months before our common era, A.D. 1; for,
his ministry ending when he was thirty-three and a half
years old, April 3rd, A.D. 33, the date of his birth may be
readily found by measuring backward to a date thirty-three
and a half years prior to April 3rd, A.D. 33. Thirty-two
years and three months before April A.D. 33 would be
January 3rd, A.D. 1, and one year and three months further
back would bring us to October 3rd, B.C. 2, as the date
of our Lord's birth at Bethlehem. The difference between
lunar time, used by the Jews, and solar time, now in common
use, would be a few days, so that we could not be certain
that the exact day might not be in September about
the 27th, but October 1st, B.C. 2, is about correct. Nine
months back of that date would bring us to about Christmas
time, B.C. 3, as the date at which our Lord laid aside
the glory which he had with the Father before the world
was [made] and the taking of or changing to human nature
began. It seems probable that this was the origin of the celebration
of December 25th as Christmas Day. Some writers
on Church history claim, even, that Christmas Day was
originally celebrated as the date of the annunciation by Gabriel
[B62]
to the virgin Mary. (Luke 1:26) Certain it is that a
midwinter date does not well agree with the declaration of
Scripture, that at the time of our Lord's birth the shepherds
were in the fields with their flocks.
"Lift up your heads, desponding pilgrims;
Give to the winds your needless fears;
He who has died on Calvary's mountain
Soon is to reign a thousand years.
"A thousand years! earth's coming glory--
'Tis the glad day so long foretold:
'Tis the bright morn of Zion's glory,
Prophets foresaw in times of old.
"Tell the whole world these blessed tidings;
Speak of the time of rest that nears;
Tell the oppressed of every nation,
Jubilee lasts a thousand years.
"What if the clouds do for a moment
Hide the blue sky where morn appears?
Soon the glad sun of promise given
Rises to shine a thousand years."
--Bonar
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