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A Bible

What Does the Bible Really Teach?

APPENDIX

How Daniel’s Prophecy Foretells the Messiah’s Arrival


CHAPTERS

  1. What Is the Truth About God?
  2. The Bible—A Book From God
  3. What Is God’s Purpose for the Earth?
  4. Who Is Jesus Christ?
  5. The Ransom—God’s Greatest Gift
  6. Where Are the Dead?
  7. Real Hope for Your Loved Ones Who Have Died
  8. What Is God’s Kingdom?
  9. Are We Living in “the Last Days”?
  10. Spirit Creatures—How They Affect Us
  11. Why Does God Allow Suffering?
  12. Living in a Way That Pleases God
  13. A Godly View of Life
  14. How to Make Your Family Life Happy
  15. Worship That God Approves
  16. Take Your Stand for True Worship
  17. Draw Close to God in Prayer
  18. Baptism and Your Relationship With God
  19. Remain in God’s Love

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THE prophet Daniel lived more than 500 years before the birth of Jesus. Nevertheless, Jehovah revealed to Daniel information that would make it possible to pinpoint the time when Jesus would be anointed, or appointed, as the Messiah, or Christ. Daniel was told: “You should know and have the insight that from the going forth of the word to restore and to rebuild Jerusalem until Messiah the Leader, there will be seven weeks, also sixty-two weeks.”—Daniel 9:25.

To determine the time of the Messiah’s arrival, first we need to learn the starting point of the period leading to the Messiah. According to the prophecy, it is “from the going forth of the word to restore and to rebuild Jerusalem.” When did this “going forth of the word” take place? According to the Bible writer Nehemiah, the word went forth to rebuild the walls around Jerusalem “in the twentieth year of Artaxerxes the king.” (Nehemiah 2:1, 5-8) Historians confirm that the year 474 B.C.E. was Artaxerxes’ first full year as ruler. Therefore, the 20th year of his rule was 455 B.C.E. Now we have the starting point for Daniel’s Messianic prophecy, that is, 455 B.C.E.

Daniel indicates how long the time period leading to the arrival of “Messiah the Leader” would last. The prophecy mentions “seven weeks, also sixty-two weeks”—a total of 69 weeks. How long is this period of time? Several Bible translations note that these are, not weeks of seven days, but weeks of years. That is, each week represents seven years. This concept of weeks of years, or seven-year units, was familiar to Jews of ancient times. For instance, they observed a Sabbath year every seventh year. (Exodus 23:10, 11) Therefore, the prophetic 69 weeks amount to 69 units of 7 years each, or a total of 483 years.

Now all we must do is count. If we count from 455 B.C.E., 483 years takes us to the year 29 C.E. That was exactly the year when Jesus was baptized and became the Messiah!* (Luke 3:1, 2, 21, 22) Is that not a remarkable fulfillment of Bible prophecy?


*  From 455 B.C.E. to 1 B.C.E. is 454 years. From 1 B.C.E. to 1 C.E. is one year (there was no zero year). And from 1 C.E. to 29 C.E. is 28 years. Adding these three figures gives us the total of 483 years. Jesus was “cut off” in death in 33 C.E., during the 70th week of years. (Daniel 9:2426) See Pay Attention to Daniel’s Prophecy! chapter 11, and Insight on the Scriptures, Volume 2, pages 899-901. Both are published by Jehovah’s Witnesses.

“SEVENTY WEEKS”
490 years
7 weeks
(49 years)
62 weeks
(434 years)

←B.C.E. | C.E.→

1 week
(7 years)
455

“The word to restore . . . Jerusalem”

Ruins of Jerusalem
406

Jerusalem rebuilt

Jerusalem rebuilt
29

Messiah arrives

Jesus being baptized
33

Messiah “cut off”

Jesus dying
36

End of the “seventy weeks”

A Roman soldier

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Published in 2005