

Astronomy Dates Biblical Events
Validity of Astronomical Dating
The Year of Jubilee
Evidence of The Resurrection
Experiences With God
Nostradamus Astrology Numerology
Elephantine Papyri ...Solar Eclipse
Beyond 2005
Conclusions
New Book: 2005
Popular Questions
Send Us Your Comments
"Spiritual Technology"
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Validity of Using Astronomy to Scientifically Date Biblical Events |
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Can the Bible be scientifically evaluated using astronomy? Is
this approach scientific or religious hogwash? Consider that the
astronomical positions of the earth, sun and moon are mathematically
calculated and can be used to scientifically date both religious and
secular events in ancient history. However, only portions of
Zachary's approach to analyzing Scripture are truly scientific. This
analysis categorically shows what parts of Zachary's research are
scientific versus the non-scientific and reveals one of many links between
science and faith.
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Scientific
Portions of Zachary's Research
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Two principles are used to scientifically date biblical events:
- Astronomical positions of the sun, moon and earth.
- Secular references of the biblical events.
First and most importantly, I must stress I am surveying
Scripture with science. For
example, I show how I used astronomy to resolve the date of the
temple's destruction by Rome in AD 70. Scripture and science
naturally bond together using this approach.
Second is the principle of using the evidence of secular
(non-Christian) people. For instance, Josephus, a secular historian,
recorded Jerusalem's sacking in A.D. 70. The link between science
and the Bible is that Daniel, a biblical prophet, foretold of
Jerusalem's destruction that occurred in A.D. 70 of which Josephus,
a secular historian, witnessed.
Related to the principle of using the evidence of secular history
is the use of archaeological discoveries that link ancient human
events to astronomical positions of the sun, moon and earth. This
approach yields the scientific date for rebuilding Jerusalem in 445
BC. The website now includes eleven scientifically dated Elephantine papyri that were written during the reign of King Artaxerxes. Since the papyri are interconnected to the astronomical positions of the earth, sun, and the moon, we have high confidence in the scientific dates that are evolved. The error is less than 3 days for each scientifically dated papyri in the 5th century BC.
The result is that by using astronomy and secular writings, I can
scientifically date two events in Daniel's "time-oriented"
prophecy of the seventy weeks. The two dates charted below set up
scientific limits for a portion of Daniel's prophecy, which show
design by counting the days between the two events.
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Scientific Limits for Daniel's "Time-Oriented"
Prophecy
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The time between these two events, fixed by scientific dating, is
set at 187,880 days. The result is that scientific limits have been
applied to Daniel's "time-oriented" prophecy.
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Non-Scientific
Portions of Zachary's Research
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I cannot figure out the dates of all biblical events using
science. For instance, Daniel's time line pointed to the suffering
Messiah. Figuring out the date of the crucifixion requires
astronomy, a secular reference, and the Bible.
However, by applying the calculated dates of Christ's entry into
Jerusalem and the crucifixion, the scientific limits in the chart
above are split in a way that reveals supernatural design and
control of human events in ancient history as follows:

The center of the chart shows when Jesus rode into Jerusalem with
crowds proclaiming him as Messiah. This divides the 187,880 days in
the first chart to reveal a time length the 14,000 days hidden in
Daniel's "time-oriented" prophecy.
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Application to the
20th and 21st Centuries
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The
14,000 day design uncovered in the 1st century has a natural link to
the 20th and 21st centuries. Daniel's "time-oriented"
prophecy foretold that Jerusalem would be destroyed after the
Messiah was destroyed. Daniel wrote: "The
Messiah will be cut off and have nothing, and the people of the
prince who is to come will destroy the city [Jerusalem]
and the sanctuary [Temple]" (Dan
9:26). Daniel's prophecy was
fulfilled by the Roman General Titus who destroyed Jerusalem in AD
70.
Jesus, like Daniel, also foretold of Jerusalem's destruction that
occurred in AD 70. However, Jesus' words bring us into the 20th
century since he foretold that after Jerusalem was destroyed,
Gentile nations would control the city until the generation in which
he would return to earth. Consider Jesus' words about Jerusalem's
future, "Jerusalem will be trampled on
by the Gentiles [Beginning
with the Romans on August 5, AD 70] until
the times of the Gentiles are fulfilled [Literally
fulfilled on June 7, 1967 when Israel regained control of Jerusalem
from Jordan in the Six-Day War]" (Luke
21:24b). Consider how the 14,000 days uncovered in the 1st
century A.D. fit perfectly into the 20th & 21st centuries based
on Jesus' words as follows:

The 14,000 days hidden in Daniel's "time-oriented"
prophecy in the 1st century A.D. find a perfect fit in the 20th
& 21st centuries, counted from Israeli conquest of Jerusalem in
1967 to the "Feast of Trumpets on October 4, 2005."
REFERENCES WITHIN THE GRAPHS:
- Dan. 9:24-25 & Neh. 2:1-6
- Dan. 9:26 & Luke 21:20-24
- Dan. 9:25-26 & Luke 19:29-40
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