Also be sure to bookmark the Bible Hub site. https://biblehub.com/
They also have an app. Every Bible tool, including the original Greek and Hebrew, Strong’s, Dictionaries, maps, commentaries, etc. This is a library that used to only be available to very few, yet we have it all at our fingertips.
Yes biblehub is a pretty handy source. However, be wary of the Hebrew because it is a recreated written language of 1000 AD. It is not from the ancient Hebrew (paleo-Hebrew); the ancient written Hebrew that was lost in history about a thousand years before. By the 3rd Century BC, Paleo-Hebrew was dying out. There was great trepidation among Israelite priests and scholars that the paleo-Hebrew written language would soon be lost in antiquity. In 285 BC, 72 scribes translated the written Hebrew language of the Old Testament in Alexandria, Egypt into Koine Greek because they knew the writings would soon be indecipherable and lost. If the written language of the Bible hadn't been translated into the Koine Greek in 285 BC in Alexandria, to which 72 scribes were gathered, much of it would have perished altogether.
The results of their work became known as the Greek Septuagint and is the basis of all Old Testament versions today. The oldest Bible (OT) in existence is the Septuagint (285 BC). All original Bibles (OT+NT) are copies of earlier versions. The earliest versions are written in Koine Greek. These include the Uncials, papyrii, Syraic, etc. Greek was the international language spoken throughout the Levant, Egypt, and Turkey and served as the best means of preserving the Bible (OT).
So, what about the Hebrew today?
The written Hebrew today is a poorly reconstructed language referred to as 'Neo-Hebrew'. The Masoretes were Talmudic scribes that recreated a written form of 'Hebrew' from Arabic and other sources in 1000 AD. It is not the same written language of the ancient Israelites. The written Hebrew of the Israelites is lost in antiquity and the reason why the Greek Septuagint was written.
I just find it fascinating that Hebrew as we know it is only 1k years old (at most) and we're just guessing about so called ancient hebrew.
Fomenko contends that history is very wrong, that we only actually have 1000 years of recorded history and everything beyond that are repeated echos of more recent events. Yes, even Egypt and every story in the Bible is very recent. He presents spectacular evidence to make the case that Jesus was actually from the year 1185ad.
Of course, AD by our current flawed measurement.
At first it sounds lunatic. And I wish I didn't take him seriously, but then he parades thousands of pages of pretty firm and convincing evidence at you.
He doesn't get kooky. No mud floods or aliens. Very scholarly.
I'd be happy to tell you more. Anything you read about him that pretends to debunk him doesn't even delve below the surface and gets everything wrong. I'd kill for a proper debunking, because I honestly want him to be wrong.
Also be sure to bookmark the Bible Hub site. https://biblehub.com/ They also have an app. Every Bible tool, including the original Greek and Hebrew, Strong’s, Dictionaries, maps, commentaries, etc. This is a library that used to only be available to very few, yet we have it all at our fingertips.
I wish I could sticky this comment.
Did anybody download this video & upload to catbox/archive it somehow?
Yes biblehub is a pretty handy source. However, be wary of the Hebrew because it is a recreated written language of 1000 AD. It is not from the ancient Hebrew (paleo-Hebrew); the ancient written Hebrew that was lost in history about a thousand years before. By the 3rd Century BC, Paleo-Hebrew was dying out. There was great trepidation among Israelite priests and scholars that the paleo-Hebrew written language would soon be lost in antiquity. In 285 BC, 72 scribes translated the written Hebrew language of the Old Testament in Alexandria, Egypt into Koine Greek because they knew the writings would soon be indecipherable and lost. If the written language of the Bible hadn't been translated into the Koine Greek in 285 BC in Alexandria, to which 72 scribes were gathered, much of it would have perished altogether.
The results of their work became known as the Greek Septuagint and is the basis of all Old Testament versions today. The oldest Bible (OT) in existence is the Septuagint (285 BC). All original Bibles (OT+NT) are copies of earlier versions. The earliest versions are written in Koine Greek. These include the Uncials, papyrii, Syraic, etc. Greek was the international language spoken throughout the Levant, Egypt, and Turkey and served as the best means of preserving the Bible (OT).
So, what about the Hebrew today?
The written Hebrew today is a poorly reconstructed language referred to as 'Neo-Hebrew'. The Masoretes were Talmudic scribes that recreated a written form of 'Hebrew' from Arabic and other sources in 1000 AD. It is not the same written language of the ancient Israelites. The written Hebrew of the Israelites is lost in antiquity and the reason why the Greek Septuagint was written.
How convenient! More points in Fomenko's New Chronology favor
What part of this do you disagree with?
I actually agree.
I just find it fascinating that Hebrew as we know it is only 1k years old (at most) and we're just guessing about so called ancient hebrew.
Fomenko contends that history is very wrong, that we only actually have 1000 years of recorded history and everything beyond that are repeated echos of more recent events. Yes, even Egypt and every story in the Bible is very recent. He presents spectacular evidence to make the case that Jesus was actually from the year 1185ad.
Of course, AD by our current flawed measurement.
At first it sounds lunatic. And I wish I didn't take him seriously, but then he parades thousands of pages of pretty firm and convincing evidence at you.
He doesn't get kooky. No mud floods or aliens. Very scholarly.
I'd be happy to tell you more. Anything you read about him that pretends to debunk him doesn't even delve below the surface and gets everything wrong. I'd kill for a proper debunking, because I honestly want him to be wrong.