







INTRODUCTION.
The Appendixes were written by Dr. E.W. Bullinger.
As a rule, the
Chronological Charts already available are set before
the reader, either on a scale so minute that they must be received or
rejected
as a whole, or else so encumbered with extraneous matter relating to
Babylon,
Egypt, Greece, Rome, &c., as to be hopelessly bewildering to
the ordinary
Bible reader.
Neither must they be dealt
with by arbitrarily adopting a particular
date, and reckoning from that onward to Christ, and back to
Adam.
This is a position that cannot be maintained; as the charts will show.
If the record of the
Scripture as to its own times and numbers is
not self-contained, then it
must be hopeless to supplement
it
by guesses and "explanations" as to the movements of the heavenly
bodies,
used mainly in support of human arguments and assumptions.
In the majority of cases 1Kings 6:1 has been adopted by chronologists as being correct, St. Paul's reckoning being left to take care of itself; or, they say that he was "misinformed", or "only speaking generally." The simple fact is both are right. The solution of the difficulty is that St. Paul's statement is according to Anno Mundi years (573) -- the other, on the principle of what we may call Anno Dei reckoning (480). (See the "Lo-Ammi" periods chart, 50. vii. 11).
The charts show that, on the plain and straight-forwad statements of the Scriptures themselves, the actual Anno Mundi period from the Exodus to the commencement of Solomon's temple was exactly 573 years, thus agreeing with St. Paul, and absolutely verifying the reckoning in Acts 13:17-22. But the four hundred and eightieth year of 1Kings 6 is also as absolutely correct, only it is reckoned from the Exodus on a different principle -- viz. according to God's reckoning. The difference in years between the two statements is, as already said, the ninety-three years of the servitudes.
Now, to ignore ninety-three years in the lifetime of the world cannot be done without upsetting all other dates. Yet this is precisely what is generally done. Understanding the "four hundred and eightieth year" as being on Anno Mundi reckoning instead of according to Anno Dei reckoning, chronologers are compelled, in order to make things "agree", to handle and compress the figures and facts of the Judges period in the most arbitrary manner.
St. Paul's testimony is that "God gave (them) Judges about 450 years until Samuel the prophet". (Acts 13:20.) The adverb of time here translated until (e]w", heos, until, as long as), marks the completion of an action up to the time of the commencement of another. Here, it denotes the fulfilment of the times of the Judges, ending with the close of Samuel's forty years, and the commencement of the kingdom. (Cp. the use of e]w"-- heos -- in Matt. 1:25, "until she had brought forth her firstborn son.")
The chart 50. iv. exactly
coincides with St. Paul's statement.
The Judgeship
period ends, and the kingdom time begins with Saul
in 1000 B.C.
When, for instance, it is stated in 2Kings 8:16, "In the fifth year of Joram the son of Ahab king of Israel (Jehoshaphat being then king of Judah began to reign" : Chart 50. vii shows this; and, while vindicating the accuracy of the statement in the text -- followed in the A.V. and R.V. (with a doubtful note in the latter) as to Jehoshaphat being at that time king of Judah -- it shows further that Jehoshaphat had joined his son with him in associate-kingship in the third year before his death.
The extreme value to the
student of this principle will be seen in this
and other instances, especially in the Ezra-Nehemiah period.
See
Chart 50. vii. 5.
The Tables will enable
others to follow up these figures on the same
lines; and doubtless many other important periods will be noted by
those
who delight in searching into the wonders of the Word of Life.
This, by means of the Section lines, can be done accurately.
Commencing with this, and taking each link as it follows, the chain is seen to extend in perfect sequence until it ends with the "cutting off of the Messiah" at the close of the sixty-ninth of the seventy sevens of Dan. 9:25, 26 -- in A.D. 29. That is 4,033 from the Creation. It shows also that the period from Adam to the Nativity was eighty jubilees (on Anno Mundi reckoning, but see note on p. 70) or 4,000 years. Each shaded column stands for 100 years (same in the detail charts) consisting of 10 sections of 10 years each. Every year, therefore, from beginning to end is shown, and nothing is left, in this respect, to chance or guesswork.
The figures to the left of this shaded column are B.C. dates : that is, they are reckoned from the common era of A.D. 0. But, all are agreed that the birth of Christ took place four years earlier :-- therefore, for any date required from the Nativity itself, these four years must be deducted in each case.
On so small a scale it is
almost humanly impossible to avoid some slight
overlappings
in connection with periods of the kings, owing to the use of the
cardinal
and ordinal numbers, and the absence in most cases of hints as to the
time
of year at which some of the reigns began or ended. But the
"charting"
has been done with the most careful and anxious exactitude, and the
"interlocking"
system, above referred to, has reduced such minutiae to (it is
believed)
the narrowest limits.
(a) When the record days "in the thirty and eighth year of Asa king of Judah began Ahab the son of Omri to reign over Israel, and Ahab ... reigned over Israel in Samaria twenty and two years" (1Kings 16:29), it is charted accordingly, and this shows that Ahaziah was joined in co-regency with his father Ahab two years before the death of the latter, in the seventeenth year of Jehoshaphat (1Kings 22:51).Now, Amaziah's twenty-nine years of reigning in Jerusalem (2Kings 14:2) end, as the chart shows, in the fourteenth year of Jeroboam; and, as Uzziah, Amaziah's son, began his reign in the twenty-seventh year of Jeroboam (2Kings 15:1), it follows that a gap of thirteen years intervenes in the line of Judah between Amaziah and Uzziah. No attempt is made to bridge this gap, much less to curtail or ignore it. The Scriptures are silent as to the reason for this break. The interval stands there, a plainly recorded fact, and is charted down accordingly.
(b) In 2Kings 14:23 it is stated -- "in the fifteenth year of Amaziah, the son of Joash king of Judah Jeroboam (II) the son of Joash king of Israel began to reign in Samaria, (and reigned) forty and one years."
In the same way there is an
interval of twenty-four years on the Israel
side between Jeroboam II and his son Zechariah's accession.
But Scripture
gives no detail as to how the intervening space was occupied.
In the case of the Davidian dynasty, the
periods omitted
(shown
in black) were not to be included in the Anno Dei
reckoning.
At once, it may be said, "Here is manifest error! We are told that leading chronologers are 'agreed' that the point of contact between sacred and profane chronology, and therefore the first certain date in Biblical history, is the accession of Nebuchadnezzar to the throne of Babylon in B.C. 625." But the chart of the "Lo-Ammi" periods (50. VII. 11) shows that chronologists have mixed up Anno Mundi reckoning with the Anno Dei reckoning.
The black portions of the columns in the charts show the times when the children of Israel were in servitude or under usurped authority (as in Athaliah, &c.), and therefore such periods were not to be reckoned, while Israel was Lo-Ammi, "Not My People!". Take, for example, from the Exodus to Jehoiachin's Captivity. On "received" dates this period is 1491-599 = 892 years. According to the charts this period is 1491-489 = 1003 years. A difference of 110 years.
The explanation is in the charts, and shows that the Anno Mundi years include the ninety-three of servitude in the Judges, and the three intervals in the Kings (together twenty years), totaling 113 years. Deducting this 113 from 1002, or adding it to 892, we have 889 and 1005 respectively. Allowing for the portions of years at the beginning and end of this period, and the overlapping at the intervals, it will be seen that these figures are practically identical.
The same Anno Dei reckoning removes the difficulty presented by "the four hundred and eightieth year," and shows that every date from the time of Eli to the usurpation of Athaliah is ninety-three years out of place in the ordinary reckoning; from Joash to the end of Amaziah every date is ninety-nine years wrong; and from Uzziah's death to the Captivity every date is 113 years wrong.
This is not inference but
fact, as those who use the charts can test
for themselves.
This one date in 1Kings 6:1, having been accepted by almost all the
"leading chronologers" as representing literal Anno Mundi
years,
has become the pivot upon which all
chronology, "sacred" and secular,
has been made to turn, and all "received" dates gathered from
"monumental"
or other sources, as well as by "computation", have been forced to "fit
in" accordingly.
Now, in the second year of DARIUS HYSTASPES (Hag. 1:1) the LORD'S HOUSE was not built. Hence the word of Jehovah : "Is it time for you to dwell in your ceiled houses, and this house lie waste?" (1:4). "Go up and BUILD the House" (v. 8). If this be so, we may ask -- When was Jerusalem rebuilt? On "received" dates we are asked to believe that this was completed by Nehemiah in 444, i.e. seventy-two years later. According to this dating the Temple was finished and dedicated in 516 B.C., seventy-two years before the houses and walls of Jerusalem were built!
The key to this period -- indeed, to the whole of Scripture chronology -- is in Dan. 9:25, "From the going forth" of the decree to BUILD JERUSALEM. Not a word is said about the Temple in this important passage; whereas the decree of Cyrus is entirely concerned with the Temple, "the House of the LORD GOD of Israel ... which is in Jerusalem." Ezra 1:3.
The charts show that the going forth of the decree to build JERUSALEM was issued in the twentieth year of Artaxerxes (ASTEIAGES = "Darius the Median," -- the father of Cyrus), and in the forty-second year of Nebuchadnezzar's reign. This was just at the close of the great king's seven years of "madness."&nbs 51b p; (See the Structures of Ezra-Nehemiah, and Ap. 58.). This decree to build Jerusalem was in 454 B.C.; and the decree of Cyrus to build the Temple was issued in 426 B.C.; twenty-eight years later.
An illustration from the Book of Exodus may help to illustrate the principle on which the books of Ezra-Nehemiah are placed in the Jewish (and our own) Bible. The specification of the Tabernacle, its materials and furniture, is placed first (canonically), beginning with the ARK. Then the construction itself follows. The order is reversed in actual building; and the chronological order comes first.
It is the same here. The building of the House of God being paramount, the decree, &c., concerning it comes first (canonically), on the same Divine principle. Afterwards we have the detail of the setting for the gem, so to speak -- the building of Jerusalem. Just as the Tabernacle was (chronologically) built first (Ex. 36) to contain the ark, so here, this city was built first to contain, guard, and protect the "House of Jehovah". Finally, the best explanation of the charts will be found in the charts themselves. For furhter information see Ap. 86.