jusplay4fun wrote:I disagree with ConfSS here:
The Bible...It is a Military History Book...If one looks close enough...
Yes, the Bible records battles of the Jewish people in their historical struggles for a place to call home. The Jews were a nomadic people, following the grasslands ("Green Pastures") for their sheep. And that led to conflicts as they travelled. And the attempt of the Jews to have a homeland has resulted in armed conflict and war. But to call the Bible a Military History Book is an overstatement and oversimplification. The Bible offers much more than history and that is not the main intend of its contents.
I will add that there has been some archeological validation of some of the history recorded in the Bible. However, not everything in the Bible has been or WILL BE validated by such archeological or historical evidence.
The bible is mostly bullshit. A few of the events in it did happen, like the Babylonian Captivity, but the vast majority are made up stories.
The city of Jericho is one of the most intensely studied ancient cities. Almost all of it has been dug up by archeologists. There is no evidence whatsoever that its walls have ever fallen down or suffered any major calamity. The story of the walls of Jericho falling down is quite simply a fairy tale presented as if it was history.
The worst lie in the bible, however, is not a made-up story but a deliberate case of character assassination. The greatest Israeli military leader was Ahab, who formed a grand alliance between Israel, Moab, the Syrian tribes, the Pheonician cities, and even far-away Cilicia, to resist the Assyrian conquest of the Levant. Three great battles were fought between Shalmaneser III of Assyria and Ahab's alliance -- in 853, 849, and 846 A.D. Shalmaneser's propaganda lists them as victories, of course, but although we can't say what happened tactically, strategically the alliance succeeded. The Assyrians withdrew and the little kingdoms of the Levant remained free for at least a generation.
Ahab's grand alliance was a glorious achievement. Beating the Assyrian army at the peak of its power is something that very few managed. Certainly no other Israeli king did. If the bible was a chronicle of jewish history as it pretends to be, it would be singing the praises of Ahab. Instead, because he didn't grovel before the priests and their mumbo-jumbo, they made him out to be a villain. He married Jezebel of Tyre, cementing the alliance with that city and bringing great prosperity to the region, and the priests centered her out for a special dose of character assassination, calling her a harlot and many other things besides.
Up is down and black is white. Israel's greatest king is painted as a bad guy, his bride as a whore, one of the most prosperous periods in Israel's history is completely ignored and a glorious diplomatic and military triumph is completely censored out of the record. The bible is exposed as not just a collection of harmless fairy tales but a deliberate and malicious piece of political propaganda.