I believe one family line lists the genealogy of Mary, and the other of JosephWhat is interesting about Hamm's and other's claims that the earth is only 6000 years old is that their beliefs are so dependent upon one book and with their insistence upon that timescale, they don't really believe in existence before the invention of writing which estimated to have been developed around 5500 years ago.
Also that date is derived from the Genealogies in the bible, the thing is there are two of them. One copy is in Luke, the other is in either Matthew or Mark. The two of them contradict eachother but both represent an attempt to place Jesus in a family tree of famous figures from the Old testament. Similar family trees were written for other people like kings and such at the time.
Except for the whole complete and utter lack of evidence thing.
Interesting anatomy on that green camel in the back....one part in particular....
does anyone have a response for ken hamm's constant criticism that the science world has no consistent or accurate procedure for dating things? he kept bringing it up. and it's something i would have liked to of seen bill refute, but he didnt.
Where the frak is that from? Is that really something someone believes?
What is interesting about Hamm's and other's claims that the earth is only 6000 years old is that their beliefs are so dependent upon one book and with their insistence upon that timescale, they don't really believe in existence before the invention of writing which estimated to have been developed around 5500 years ago.
Also that date is derived from the Genealogies in the bible, the thing is there are two of them. One copy is in Luke, the other is in either Matthew or Mark. The two of them contradict eachother but both represent an attempt to place Jesus in a family tree of famous figures from the Old testament. Similar family trees were written for other people like kings and such at the time.
What is interesting about Hamm's and other's claims that the earth is only 6000 years old is that their beliefs are so dependent upon one book and with their insistence upon that timescale, they don't really believe in existence before the invention of writing which estimated to have been developed around 5500 years ago.
Also that date is derived from the Genealogies in the bible, the thing is there are two of them. One copy is in Luke, the other is in either Matthew or Mark. The two of them contradict eachother but both represent an attempt to place Jesus in a family tree of famous figures from the Old testament. Similar family trees were written for other people like kings and such at the time.
Regardless of date, the Bile claims conscious supernatural design and credit for all that exists.....and that part is absolute horse s**t.
Evolutionary, cosmological, and geological study has done that already. Burden of proof lies with that which hasn't...like the Bible. Next.I'm gonna pull a page out of your book. Prove it.
Evolutionary, cosmological, and geological study has done that already. Burden of proof lies with that which hasn't...like the Bible.
I never said you did.I don't think the earth is flat.
I believe God exists outside of time. So the Big Bang? I believe he made that happen. There are even parts of science that suggest a multiverse (Hmm...) or the recently discovered Dark Flow that we can't yet figure out. I get what you're saying, I just don't agree. Because you're saying I have nothing to put in a test tube, but a large part of the atheist argument when it comes to our origins is based on having nothing to put in a test tube. The evidence that we do have, can point to something greater. Lawrence Krauss even indirectly admitted as much in A Universe From Nothing.
I never said you did.
Why is it that God made the big bang happen? What rational or scientific precedent is there for that? You must first prove that God exists before even beginning to attribute natural phenomenon to the concept of God.
And you cannot show a million +-year process in a test tube....but you can study, test, and match the results of it out in the world and even in space...retest and corroborate results. Unlike religion, that's how science has shown processes that we can't see. Religion cannot challenge science in a scientific or rational arena...it's not what religion does or is. The idea of coming from 'nothing' is an emotional concept not a rational one. Science will never say everything ultimately came from nothing...we can only point to what we've found out so far. But the more we do find out, rest assured it will be natural and not some all-powerful being (that religion somehow says we ca grasp and imagine ourselves being in its image??) sitting at the end of it.
What does proof of God look like to you? Hypothetically, whether I'm right or wrong, let's propose that for arguments sake there is a God, okay? What does him proving himself look like?
The very concept of Adam and Eve is problematic in its own right from a biological perspective...regardless of date.webhead9707 said:However, it seems to stretch credulity to argue for anything much older than 100,000 years for Adam and Eves appearance on Earth.
I don't look at science as a threat by any means.Look, I'm not going to tell you or anyone else not to believe in God, or that you shouldn't have the free right to religion. I hold that freedom as dear as any other, whether I'm religious or not. I frankly wouldn't even go so far as to call religion a futile endeavor, devoid of any value whatsoever. Rather, I propose at least a bit more perspective, and to not see science as a threat or what have you to religion. There's got to be a way to still believe in God but not have to give him full credit for everything there is. Sure that may be a symbolic representation of his power et al, but the fact is we know better these days...and just like the rest of the world, religion should evolve as well.
The very concept of Adam and Eve is problematic in its own right from a biological perspective...regardless of date.
I don't look at science as a threat by any means.I think if a religion requires staying in the dark, it's highly questionable. I mean, I think God ultimately has credit for everything, but also, I'm not one of those people that sees the NY skyline and says "Wow, God made all that." He may have given us the ability to create that resulted in that, but the New York skyline was made by men. Like you said though, let's not argue. We can all just be friends!
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Adam and Eve, Noahs Family post-flood and the animals off the ark, They all share a common issue that would be self evident with a few generations. I've always had issues with how that worked and no one has ever been able to explain it to my satisfaction, usually ending with 'It's one of Gods mysteries', 'It's not meant to be taken literally, it's all a metaphor', or 'Shut up and go away'.
When did he outlaw the gays?Well Noah's family had his sons wives, so that, in theory, would offer enough genetic diversity as far as being affected by illness, right? By the time of Abraham, God had not yet declared this kind of marriage to be contrary to His will (see Genesis 20:12). Laws governing incest apparently did not become enacted until the time of Moses (Lev 18:7-17; 20:11,12,14,17,20,21). Hence, there was no prohibition regarding marrying a sister (or niece or grandniece)