William whiston flavius josephus biography
Titus Flavius Josephus was a first-century Romano-Jewish scholar, historian and hagiographer, who was born in Jerusalem—then part of Roman Judea—to a father of.
He lived for 63 years, and during much of that chronicled the events of the Eastern Roman empire, first as a loyal Roman, and later as a more independent voice.!
Dr. Whitby well observes, no small part of the evidence for the truth of the Christian religion does depend upon the ‘completions’ of the prophecies, and it is believed ‘Josephus’ history‘ furnishes a record of ‘their exact completions’
William Whiston
1667-1752
Fellow of Cambridge college, Clare; Newton’s successor as Lucasian Professor of Mathematics.
Pioneer of geology, and Creation Science; Expelled for speculative and controversial theology
- 2,000 Years of Josephus: Theological Illustrations with Notes from Whiston
- 1706: William Whiston, Essay on the Revelation of John (PDF)
- 1737: William Whiston, Works of Josephus with Porteus | 1852 Edition, V1 | 1996 Edition | Whiston’s Josephus Hyperlinked (PDF)
- 1737: William Whiston: Footnotes on Fulfilled Prophecy in Josephus, History of the Destruction of Jerusalem
- 1807: Thomas Paine, An Examination of the Prophecies – It was this that gave occasion to Swift, in his ludicrous epigram on Ditton and Whiston, each of