Cyberseeker
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Up till the middle of last century Bible commentaries and footnotes contained the dates of Bishop James Ussher. I have his book, ‘Annals of the World,’ and there can be no doubt it is a great work. However, his dates for the divided Kingdom of Israel didn’t add up. Most people concluded that ancient biblical dates could not be known accurately and we had to be satisfied with “approximate†and/or “gaps†in the record.
So, when Edwin Theile published ‘The Mysterious Numbers of the Hebrew Kings’ in 1951 conservative biblical scholars acclaimed it as a breakthrough and his dates found their way into many study Bibles. If your commentary is a modern one it probably follows Theile’s system. However, Dr. Thiele needed a few tweaks too. Since 1951 followers (notably Leslie McFall) made a few useful refinements to his theories.
Giving credit where credit is due is the least we can do for scholars like these, but Theile made one fatal mistake. He deliberately fudged the period between Jotham and Hezekiah. Why? I’ll get back to this later. In the meanwhile, here is my timeline for the books of the Kings. They are a series of printable charts showing every year from David unto Zedekiah, the last of the southern kingdom.
Anyone interested in this subject, please take the time to check them out with the information found in 1 Kings, 2 Kings and Chronicles. Any feedback would be great too.
THE MIDDLE YEARS - David to Joash
FALL OF SAMARIA AND JERUSALEM - Amaziah to Zedekiah
Cyberseeker
So, when Edwin Theile published ‘The Mysterious Numbers of the Hebrew Kings’ in 1951 conservative biblical scholars acclaimed it as a breakthrough and his dates found their way into many study Bibles. If your commentary is a modern one it probably follows Theile’s system. However, Dr. Thiele needed a few tweaks too. Since 1951 followers (notably Leslie McFall) made a few useful refinements to his theories.
Giving credit where credit is due is the least we can do for scholars like these, but Theile made one fatal mistake. He deliberately fudged the period between Jotham and Hezekiah. Why? I’ll get back to this later. In the meanwhile, here is my timeline for the books of the Kings. They are a series of printable charts showing every year from David unto Zedekiah, the last of the southern kingdom.
Anyone interested in this subject, please take the time to check them out with the information found in 1 Kings, 2 Kings and Chronicles. Any feedback would be great too.
THE MIDDLE YEARS - David to Joash
FALL OF SAMARIA AND JERUSALEM - Amaziah to Zedekiah
Cyberseeker