No. Im not interested in a video. You can present your argument here.
So, again, 1.) where is it definitely established that the 'Septuagint' was translated from the original?
If the 'Septuagint' isn't perfect, why should I trust your use of it?
And, you ignore my questions. Where is this so called 'Septuagint' everyone loves to quote from? Where is the oldest known complete copy of the so called 'Septuagint'?
Lees
It’s a 30-minute long video which explains my belief graphically. You want me to type it all here?
Basically, it comes down to the fact that it’s not just the Greek Septuagint that includes an extra 100 years on the 6 generations from Arphaxad down to Serug, but also the Samaritan Pentateuch and Flavius Josephus include them as well.
Plus, that combined with the fact that it doesn’t make sense for Shem to have outlived almost all of his descendants down to the 8th generation. It makes more sense for each generation to have died in succession, one after the other. That’s consistent with the biblical narrative.
After all, scripture says Abraham died “old and full of years” at 175. But that wouldn’t make sense if his great great great great grandfather Heber is still alive at 460. It makes sense in the Septuagint, where Heber died 500 years before Abraham died.
Also, what I didn’t share in the video is that fact that not only does Josephus agree with the chronology in the Septuagint, but so does Eupolemus, a Jewish historian before Christ about 158 BC, and also church fathers agreed with the chronology in the Septuagint, such as Theophilus, Africanus, and Eusebius, from the 2nd, 3rd, and 4th centuries accordingly.
So there’s tremendous support for the timeline in the Septuagint, along with the fact that it makes more logical sense, and fits with the Biblical narrative.
As a side issue, this also fixes the accusations that atheists bring up about the Egyptian pyramids pre-dating Noah’s flood yet lacking water damage, and with there being enough time for the population to have grown from 8 people to a large enough size after the flood to build the Tower of Babel. These are a problem in the Hebrew Masoretic, but not in the Greek Septuagint. In the Septuagint, there’s no problem at all when it comes to these issues.
On top of that, there are hundreds of examples of Jesus and the apostles siding with the Septuagint throughout the New Testament when they quote the Old Testament scriptures.