This book by Jan Smits D.D.S. is mainly a biblical chronology and covers Genesis to Revelation. God's Word is historic and reliable! History, dated 306 years later than the conventional chronology, goes back to the Flood. The Septuagint or Greek text is sometimes more correct than the King James or Hebrew text, but both have been corrupted. The ten pre-flood kings of ancient Mesopotamia have a unique biblical context. It shows promises (and curses) to Abraham are carried through in history. Biblical statistics tell a story, not merely satisfy intellectual curiosity. Nehesy is the pharaoh of the Exodus. Manetho, an author of antiquity, defined the Second Intermediate Period of Egypt, or Dark Age, from break-up to unification, and presented the pharaohs consecutively. He is rehabilitated. Histories of Israel and Egypt mesh perfectly. This book should interest both Bible students and historians. It gives a biblical view of the Israel-Arab conflict. Worship on Sunday is historical and biblical. "For we have not followed cunningly devised fables, when we made known unto you the power and coming of our Lord Jesus Christ, but were eyewitnesses of his majesty" (II Peter 1:16, NKJV).
This book by Jan Smits D.D.S. is mainly a biblical chronology and covers Genesis to Revelation. God's Word is historic and reliable! History, dated 306 years later than the conventional chronology, goes back to the Flood. The Septuagint or Greek text is sometimes more correct than the King James or Hebrew text, but both have been corrupted. The ten pre-flood kings of ancient Mesopotamia have a unique biblical context. It shows promises (and curses) to Abraham are carried through in history. Biblical statistics tell a story, not merely satisfy intellectual curiosity. Nehesy is the pharaoh of the Exodus. Manetho, an author of antiquity, defined the Second Intermediate Period of Egypt, or Dark Age, from break-up to unification, and presented the pharaohs consecutively. He is rehabilitated. Histories of Israel and Egypt mesh perfectly. This book should interest both Bible students and historians. It gives a biblical view of the Israel-Arab conflict. Worship on Sunday is historical and biblical. "For we have not followed cunningly devised fables, when we made known unto you the power and coming of our Lord Jesus Christ, but were eyewitnesses of his majesty" (II Peter 1:16, NKJV).