Before I begin, you are supposed to include links to the original websites when you just copy and paste entire articles from the internet, as you have done here.
LittleNipper wrote:TYRE
In the 26th chapter of Ezekiel (592-570 BC) seven things are predicted to happen to the city of Tyre:
1) Nebuchadnezzar will destroy the mainland of Tyre (Ezekiel 26:8).
Nope. That verse only says he will slay daughters in the field. It never says his attack will be limited to the mainland city, nor does the verse say anything whatsoever about him destroying it. The verse is describing his preparations for battle. Irrespective, Nebuchadnezzar never
destroyed mainland Tyre, he just succeeded in running the inhabitants off to the island. Taking a city and destroying a city are two entirely different things. Old Tyre was not actually destroyed until Alexander the Great tore it apart to use the rubble for his causeway. Oops.
LittleNipper wrote:2) Many nations against Tyre (Ezekiel 26:3).
Which really just refers to Nebuchadnezzar. As we can see in 2 Kgs 24:1-2 and Jer 25:9, Nebuchadnezzar's forces were thought to constitute several nations (the "tribes of the north"). Jer 25:9 uses the plural "them" to refer to the nations under Nebuchadnezzar's purview. As you can see, this prophecy was really intended just to refer to Nebuchadnezzar's siege.
LittleNipper wrote:3) Make her a bare rock; flat like the top of a rock (Ezekiel 26:4).
Never happened.
LittleNipper wrote:4) Fishermen will spread their nets over the site (Ezekiel 26:5).
Never happened.
LittleNipper wrote:5) Throw the debris into the water (Ezekiel 26:12).
This must be talking about the island city, since, according to the prophecy, the mainland city had been destroyed long before "they" came to destroy the island. In light of that, number 5 also didn't happen.
LittleNipper wrote:6) Never be rebuilt (Ezekiel 26:14).
Never happened.
LittleNipper wrote:7) Never be found again (Ezekiel 26:21)
Never happened.
LittleNipper wrote:Nebuchadnezzar laid siege to mainland Tyre three years after the prophecy and after a 13 year siege (585-573 BC) Tyre made terms and acknowledged Babylonian authority over them. When Nebuchadnezzar broke the gates down, he found the city almost empty. The majority of the people had moved by ship to an island about 1/2 miles off the coast and fortified a city there. The mainland city was destroyed in 573 BC, as predicted.
Where do you find an account saying he destroyed the empty city? Please cite a source for this.
LittleNipper wrote:The city of Tyre on the island remained a powerful city for several hundred years.
Alexander the Great, in his war on Persia, marching southward called on each city to open their gates to him, as part of his plan to deny the use to the Persian fleet. Tyre refused to do so, and Alexander laid siege to the city. Possessing no fleet, he demolished old Tyre, on the mainland, and with the debris built a causeway 200 feet wide across the straits separating the old and new towns, erecting towers and war engines at the farther end. Tyre continually raided the causeway with fire-ships greatly retarding progress, until Alexander pressured conquered subjects to make ships for his operation. After attaining a superior naval force, Alexander finished the causeway, battered the walls of Tyre down
This is a misrepresentation. Alexander actually only achieved a small breach in one side of one wall and his troops entered and took the city through that small breach.
LittleNipper wrote:killed eight thousand of the inhabitants and sold thirty thousand into slavery.
A history book by a secular historian reads, "Alexander the Great ... reduced Tyre to ruins... The larger part of the site of the once great city is now bare as the top of a rock --- a place where fishermen now spread their nets to dry."
You forgot to mention that this history book was a high school textbook published in 1890. It's hardly "secular history," as it relies primarily on the Bible for many of its historical accounts. In other words, it's not reporting history that just happens to coincide with the Bible, it's reporting what the Bible says as history. The simple fact is that Tyre remained inhabited.
LittleNipper wrote:Another historian, John C. Beck, says, "The history of Tyre does not stop with after the conquest of Alexander. Men continue to rebuild her and armies continue to besiege her walls, until finally after sixteen hundred years, she falls never to be rebuilt again."
This is a quote from an unpublished master's thesis from Dallas Theological Seminary. This is amateur apologetics, not actual history.
LittleNipper wrote:All the prophecies of Ezekiel about Tyre have come true: Nebuchadnezzar destroyed the mainland city of Tyre; Many nations were against Tyre; Alexander made her a bare rock and threw debris into the water to make the causeway; fishermen now spread nets over the site; (there is a city of Tyre today, but it is located down the coast from the original Tyre) the old city of Tyre has never been rebuilt, even though a great freshwater spring are located at the site, providing 10,000,000 gallons daily. It is still an excellent site today but has never been rebuilt, although many have tried. All seven of the predictions came true in the minutest detail.
Apologetic claptrap. Evidently you're unable to discern real history from imaginary history.