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  1. May 24, 2018 · Here, for example, is W.R. Harper's comment from his 1905 International Critical Commentary Amos and Hosea : Two years before the earthquake] This phrase, contrary to Keil, is intended to mark a date. Since earthquakes (the view which makes it a civil commotion is untenable) are not infrequent in Palestine,* as may be gathered from their ...

    • The Biblical Account
    • The Archaeological Account
    • The Historical Account

    According to biblical chronology, this quake happened sometime during the first half of the eighth century b.c.e. Amos 1:1 and Zechariah 14:5 reveal that it took place during the reigns of Jeroboam ii of Israel and Uzziah of Judah—two kings whose reigns overlapped for a narrow 14-year window (Jeroboam the earlier king, and Uzziah the latter; 2 King...

    At numerous eighth-century b.c.e. site-levels throughout the Levant, archaeologists have found massive amounts of earthquake damage. Taken together, with synchronized dating, the remains correlate to an event that can be pinpointed to around 760 b.c.e.Evidence at the sites include tilted or collapsed walls, twisted and sunken floors, masonry and st...

    We do have data from later earthquakes that hit the region—although of somewhat lesser intensity. Two intensity-8 earthquakes are known to have occurred on the Dead Sea Transform fault in antiquity—one in c.e. 749, killing 100,000 people; and one in c.e. 526, killing 255,000. And Amos’s earthquake is estimated as another intensity level higher! Wor...

  2. The Bible speaks of his prophecies concluding around 765 BC, two years before the earthquake that is talked about in Amos 1:1, "...two years before the earthquake." [ 6 ] The prophet Zechariah was likely alluding to this same earthquake several centuries later: Zechariah 14:5 , "And you shall flee as you fled from the earthquake in the days of Uzziah, King of Judah."

  3. The reference to "two years before the earthquake" serves as a chronological marker, indicating a significant event that would have been well-known to Amos's original audience. This earthquake, likely a divine act of judgment, underscores the seriousness of Amos's message and serves as a tangible reminder of God's power and the reality of His warnings.

  4. Two years before the earthquake - This earthquake must plainly have been one of the greatest, since it was vividly in people's memories in the time of Zechariah, and Amos speaks of it as "the earthquake." The earthquakes of the east, like that of Lisbon, destroy whole cities.

  5. Amos prophesied “two years before the earthquake” (Amos 1:1; see also Zechariah 14:5), just before the halfway point of the eighth century BC, during the reigns of Uzziah, king of Judah, and Jeroboam, king of Israel. Their reigns overlapped for fifteen years, from 767 BC to 753 BC.

  6. May 18, 2017 · Secondly, Amos states that he is writing two years before a major earthquake (Amos 1.1), an earthquake that has been identified by geologists and known to have devastated Israel somewhere during the middle of the 8th century BCE. Thirdly, in the sixth chapter of Amos (Amos 6.1-2), Amos talks about the destruction of three known ancient cities ...

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