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The Coming Prince
Sir Robert Anderson
(1841-1918)
CHAPTER VI.
THE PROPHETIC YEAR
IN English ears it must sound pedantic to speak of "weeks" in any other than
the familiar acceptation of the term. But with the Jew it was far otherwise. The
effect of his laws was fitted "to render the word week capable of meaning
a seven of years almost as naturally as a seven of days. Indeed the generality
of the word would have this effect at any rate. Hence its use to denote the
latter in prophecy is not mere arbitrary symbolism, but the employment of a not
unfamiliar and easily understood language."[1]
1. Smith's Bib. Dict., III., 1726, "Week." Greek and Latin
philosophers too have known of 'weeks of years. '" – PUSEY, Daniel,
p. 167.
Daniel's prayer referred to seventy years fulfilled: the
prophecy which came in answer to that prayer foretold a period
of seven times seventy still to come. But here a question arises
which never has received sufficient notice in the consideration
of this subject. None will doubt that the era is a period of
years; but of what kind of year is it composed? That the Jewish
year was lunisolar appears to be reasonably certain. If
tradition may be trusted, Abraham preserved in his family the
year of 360 days, which he had known in his Chaldean home.[2]
The month dates of the flood (150 days being specified as the
interval between the seventeenth day of the second month, and
the same day of the seventh month) appear to show that this form
of year was the earliest known to our race. Sir Isaac Newton
states, that "all nations, before the just length of the solar
year was known, reckoned months by the course of the moon, and
years by the return of winter and summer, spring and autumn; and
in making calendars for their festivals, they reckoned thirty
days to a lunar month, and twelve lunar months to a year, taking
the nearest round numbers, whence came the division of the
ecliptic into 360 degrees." And in adopting this statement, Sir
G. C. Lewis avers that "all credible testimony and all
antecedent probability lead to the result that a solar year
containing twelve lunar months, determined within certain limits
of error, has been generally recognized by the nations adjoining
the Mediterranean, from a remote antiquity."[3]
2. Encyc. Brit.
(6th ed.), title "Chronology." See also Smith's Bib. Dict.,
title "Chronology," p. 314.
3. Astronomy of the Ancients, chap. 1 & 7. Are not the hundred and
eighty days of the great feast of Xerxes intended to be equivalent to six
months? (Esther 1:4.)
But considerations of this kind go no further than to prove how
legitimate and important is the question here proposed. The
inquiry remains whether any grounds exist for reversing the
presumption which obtains in favor of the common civil year. Now
the prophetic era is clearly seven times the seventy years of
the "desolations" which were before the mind of Daniel when the
prophecy was given. Is it possible then to ascertain the
character of the years of this lesser era?
One of the characteristic ordinances of the Jewish law was, that
every seventh year the land was to lie fallow, and it was in
relation to the neglect of this ordinance that the era of the
desolations was decreed. It was to last "until the land had
enjoyed her Sabbaths; for so long as she lay desolate, she kept
Sabbath, to fulfill threescore and ten years." (2 Chronicles
36:21; cf. Leviticus 26:34, 35) The essential element in
the judgment was, not a ruined city, but a land laid desolate by
the terrible scourge of a hostile invasion, (Compare Jeremiah
27:13; Haggai 2:17) the effects of which were perpetuated by
famine and pestilence, the continuing proofs of the Divine
displeasure. It is obvious therefore, that
the true epoch of the judgment is not, as has been generally assumed,
the capture of Jerusalem, but the invasion of Judea. From the
time the Babylonian armies entered the land, all agricultural
pursuits were suspended, and therefore the desolations may be
reckoned from the day the capital was invested, namely, the
tenth day of the tenth month in the ninth year of Zedekiah. This
was the epoch as revealed to Ezekiel the prophet in his exile on
the banks of the Euphrates, (Ezekiel 24:1, 2) and for
twenty-four centuries the day has been observed as a fast by the
Jews in every land.
The close of the era is indicated in Scripture with equal
definiteness, as "the four-and-twentieth day of the ninth month
in the second year of Darius.[4] "Consider now" (the prophetic
word declared) "from this day and upward – from the four-and-
twentieth day of the ninth month, even from the day that the
foundation of the Lord's temple was laid – consider it: from
this day I will bless you." Now from the tenth day of Tebeth
B.C. 589,[5] to the twenty-fourth day of Chisleu B.C. 520,[6]
was a period of 25, 202 days; and seventy years of 360 days
contain exactly 25, 200 days. We may conclude, therefore, that
the era of the "desolations" was a period of seventy years of
360 days, beginning the day after the Babylonian army invested
Jerusalem, and ending the day before the foundation of the
second temple was laid.[7]
4. Haggai. 2:10, 15-19. The books of Haggai and Zechariah give in full the
prophetic utterances which the narrative of Ezra (4:24; 5:1-5) mentions as
the sanction and incentive under which the Jews returned to the work of
setting up their temple.
5. The ninth year of Zedekiah. See App. 1. post.
6. The second year of Darius Hystaspes.
7. The date of the Paschal new moon, by which the Jewish year is regulated,
was the evening of the 14th March in B. C. 589, and about noon on 1st April
B. C. 520. According to the phases the 1st Nisan in the former year was
probably the 15th or 16th March, and in the latter the 1st or 2nd April.
But this inquiry may be pressed still further. As the era of the
"desolations" was fixed at seventy years, because of the neglect
of the Sabbatic years, (2 Chronicles 36:21; Leviticus 26:34, 35)
we might expect to find that a period of seven times seventy
years measured back from the close of the seventy years of
"indignation against Judah," would bring us to the time when
Israel entered into their full national privileges, and thus
incurred their full responsibilities. And such in fact will be
found upon inquiry to be the case. From the year succeeding the
dedication of Solomon's temple, to the year before the
foundation of the second temple was laid, was a period of 490
years of 360 days.[8]
8. The temple was dedicated in the eleventh year of Solomon, and the second
temple was founded in B. C. 520. The intervening period reckoned exclusively
was 483 years = 490 lunisolar years of 360 days. It is noteworthy that the
interval between the dedication of Solomon's temple and the dedication of
the second temple (B. C. 515) was 490 years. A like period had elapsed
between the entrance into Canaan and the foundation of the kingdom under
Saul. These cycles of 70, and multiples of 70, in Hebrew history are
striking and interesting. See App. 1.
It must be admitted, however, that no argument based on
calculations of this kind is final.[9] The only data which would
warrant our deciding unreservedly that the prophetic year
consists of 360 days, would be to find some portion of the era
subdivided into the days of which it is composed. No other proof
can be wholly satisfactory, but if this be forthcoming, it must
be absolute and conclusive. And this is precisely what the book
of the Revelation gives us.
9. Though it is signally confirmed by the undoubted fact that the Jewish
Sabbatical year was conterminous, not with the solar, but with the
ecclesiastical year.
As already noticed, the prophetic era is divided into two
periods, the one of 7+ 62 heptades, the other of a single
heptade.[10] Connected with these eras, two "princes" are
prominently mentioned; first, the Messiah, and secondly, a
prince of that people by whom Jerusalem was to be destroyed, – a
personage of such pre-eminence, that on his advent his identity
is to be as certain as that of Christ Himself. The first era
closes with the "cutting off" of Messiah; the beginning of the
second era dates from the signature of a "covenant," or treaty,
by this second "prince," with or perhaps in favor of "the
many,"[11] that is the Jewish nation, as distinguished probably
from a section of pious persons among them who will stand aloof.
In the middle of the heptade the treaty is to be violated by the
suppression of the Jews' religion, and a time of persecution is
to follow.
10. The division of the 69 weeks into 7 +62 is accounted for by the fact
that the first 49 years, during which the restoration of Jerusalem was
completed, ended with a great crisis in Jewish history, the close of the
prophetic testimony. Forty-nine years from B. C. 445 brings us to the date
of Malachi's prophecy.
11. "The multitude." – TREGELLES, Daniel, p. 97.
Daniel's vision of the four beasts affords a striking commentary
upon this. The identity of the fourth beast with the Roman
empire is not doubtful, and we read that a "king" is to arise,
territorially connected with that empire, but historically
belonging to a later time; he will be a persecutor of "the
saints of the Most High," and his fall is to be immediately
followed by the fulfillment of Divine blessings upon the favored
people – the precise event which marks the close of the "seventy
weeks." The duration of that persecution, moreover, is stated to
be "a time and times, and the dividing of time," – a mystical
expression, of which the meaning might be doubtful, were it not
that it is used again in Scripture as synonymous with three and
a half years, or half a prophetic week. (Revelation 12:6, 14)
Now there can be no reasonable doubt of the identity of the king
of Daniel 7:25 with the first "beast" of the thirteenth chapter
of Revelation. In the Revelation he is likened to a leopard, a
bear, and a lion,– the figures used for Daniel's three first
beasts. In Daniel there are ten kingdoms, represented by ten
horns. So also in Revelation. According to Daniel, "he shall
speak great words against the Most High, and wear out the saints
of the Most High": according to Revelation, "he opened his mouth
in blasphemy against God," "and it was given unto him to make
war with the saints and to overcome them." According to Daniel,
"they shall be given into his hand until a time and times and
the dividing of time," or three and a half years: according to
Revelation, "power was given unto him to continue forty and two
months."
It is not impossible, of course, that prophecy may foretell the
career of two different men, answering the same description, who
will pursue a precisely similar course in similar circumstances
for a similar period of three and a half years; but the more
natural and obvious supposition is that the two are identical.
Owing to the very nature of the subject, their identity cannot
be logically demonstrated, but it rests upon precisely the same
kind of proof upon which juries convict men of crimes, and
convicted prisoners are punished.
Now this seventieth week is admittedly a period of seven years,
and half of this period is three times described as "a time,
times, and half a time," or "the dividing of a time;" (Daniel
7:25; 12:7; Revelation 12:14) twice as forty-two months;
(Revelation 11:2; 13:5) and twice as 1, 260 days. (Revelation
11:3; 12:6) But 1, 260 days are exactly equal to forty-two
months of thirty days, or three and a half years of 360 days,
whereas three and a half Julian years contain 1, 278 days. It
follows therefore that the prophetic year is not the Julian
year, but the ancient year of 360 days.[12]
12. It is noteworthy that the prophecy was given at Babylon, and the
Babylonian year consisted of twelve months of thirty days. That the
prophetic year is not the ordinary year is no new discovery. It was noticed
sixteen centuries ago by Julius Africanus in his Chronography,
wherein he explains the seventy weeks to be weeks of Jewish (lunar)
years, beginning with the twentieth of Artaxerxes, the fourth year of the
83rd Olympiad, and ending in the second year of the 202nd Olympiad; 475
Julian years being equal to 490 lunar years.
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