Sunday, May 5, 2024

William Foxwell Albright: Haggai 2:21ff being a false prophecy

  

Speak to Zerubbabel, governor of Judah, saying, I will shake the heavens and the earth; And I will overthrow the throne of kingdoms, and I will destroy the strength of the kingdoms of the heathen; and I will overthrow the chariots, and those that ride in them; and the horses and their riders shall come down, every one by the sword of his brother. In that day, saith the Lord of hosts, will I take thee, O Zerubbabel, my servant, the son of Shealtiel, saith the Lord, and will make thee as a signet: for I have chosen thee, saith the Lord of hosts. (Hag 2:21-23)

 

. . . we have exceedingly few cases of vaticinium ex eventu in the Hebrew Bible before the third or second century B.C. How perilous this type of reasoning may be can be shown in the case of Jeremiah's prophecies of a seventy-year desolation of Judah (25:12; 29:10, etc.). In several passages in the inscriptions of Esarhaddon, king of Assyria nearly a century before the fall of Jerusalem, he states that after Sennacherib's destruction of Babylon in 689, Marduk, chief god of Babylon, had intended to allow his city to remain in ruins for seventy years, but the merciful god changed his mind and turned the cuneiform writing of "seventy" upside down, when it automatically became "eleven" (vertical wedge + corner wedge becoming corner wedge + vertical wedge). That "eleven" was only approximately right did not disturb the Babylonian priests any more than the fact that "seventy" was an inexact estimate of the period during which Judah and Jerusalem lay waste worried the Jews. It thus follows that "seventy years" was a recognized pattern for the period of destruction of cities or countries whose gods still remained interested in their people.

 

It should be emphasized that fulfilment of prophecies was only one important element in the validation of a "true" Prophet, and that it was not always essential, as illustrated by the apparent failure of Haggai's prophecy against the Persian Empire (2:21 f.). More important still was the moral and religious content of a Prophet's message. Moreover, the Prophets did not always follow a definite pattern; sometimes they undoubtedly shared in the capacity for intuitive grasp of wide fields of perception which has characterized certain figures of the last 250 years, at least in occasional moments of exaltation. We need refer only to the famous prophecies of the future of Germany and France by Heinrich Heine and Leon Bloy, or to the fantastic previsions of future technology by Jules Verne, or to the glimpses into the future on the part of Emanuel Swedenborg and Ellen White. It was no vaticinium ex eventu when Jules Verne described the giant submarine Nautilus, operated by solar power, ninety years before the launching of the U.S. submarine by the same name, powered by nuclear energy. On the other hand, it is no accident that logically trained specialists are seldom able to predict the future; this is notoriously true of physical scientists, historians, and other academic folk. (William Foxwell Albright, From the Stone Age to Christianity: Monotheism and the Historical Process [2d ed.; Garden City, N.Y.: Doubleday Anchor Books, 1957], 18-19, emphasis in bold added)

 

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