Then why are people trying to use it to teach Intelligent Design if it isn't a science book?
Ping!
That causes them to go through all sorts of contortions to come up with outlandish alternative explanations.
"Scientists" who bring their conclusion to the table ahead of time are doomed before they start.
And that guy will Never get this one:
Gen 1:6 And God said, Let there be a firmament in the midst of the waters, and let it divide the waters from the waters.
Gen 1:7 And God made the firmament, and divided the waters which were under the firmament from the waters which were above the firmament: and it was so.
There's a sea up there...And it's a big one...And it's going to divide just like the Red Sea did to provide safe passage for God's Bride...
Because he isn't the first. A lot of these ideas, the Santorini eruption in particular, have been around long enough that I was familiar with them, certainly by when I went to college (1984).
The cantor who taught Hebrew school, when my age was in single digits, once went through each of the ten plagues and the parting of the Red Sea and gave possible scientific explanations for each of them (I forget the details -- it's been a long time). He then paused and said that the miracle was not that these events occurred, but that they happened at the right time.
I have always believed, since then, that God has chosen to play within the rules of the universe He created and that miracles are not impossible events happening, but God skewing the odds in favor of highly unlikely events.
We all know that carbon monoxide kills only first-born, don't we? (Sarcasm)
But I would like to hear an explanation why a God who is not partial, a God who is the source of life, personally kills (according to Exodus) and wants to be remembered for that? Sin came into this world through one man, and through his sin death. God is not the source of death or else He must be the source of sin as well.
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Director posits proof of biblical Exodus
The Globe and Mail | 14 April 2006 | Michael Posner
Posted on 04/14/2006 8:58:16 AM EDT by timsbella
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/1614957/posts
Documentary Sets New Date For Exodus
Jerusalem Post | 7-3-2006 | Etgar Lefkovits
Posted on 07/03/2006 5:26:25 PM EDT by blam
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/1659872/posts
What a miracle? The Egyptian soldiers drowned on a land bridge.
I also think the reviewer did not make his last point very clearly. The Bible is not a history book in the modern sense of historical writing where events are precisely chronologed in order. But it does contain history, especially salvation history. The reviewer but his unclear statement seems to dismiss the miracles mentioned in the first place by dismissing it as not being history. Bad enough when skeptical film producers do this, another thing with a film reviewer for the USCCB does it.
just a bump...as the show is about to air (8PM Eastern; Sunday 8-20-06)
What a lucky guy!
Earthquakes, volcanoes, tsunamis, poison clouds!
Did someone say, "Lucky?"!
And Moses got Pharoah to believe it was an invisible God doing it all!
The one about the bridge rising from the "Reed Sea" at precisely the time the Jews were in need of it was an especially nice touch.
Oh, and the resulting tsunamis that wiped out Pharoah's army and chariots was much better than an earlier version that would have required thousands of grown men in chariots drowning in a foot of water that closed in on them.
Can't wait for the next explanantion of how to make clothes and sandals last for 40 years. Better yet, in a manna of speaking, how to get people to fit in the same clothes for 40 years.
See my review, headed "Reporter from the Apocalypse?" Thanks to CD universe for the cover art.
Quest For The Lost Tribes
Simcha Jacobovici, director
I'm a Bible believing ger tzedek. Though the lack of artifacts that would have sustained such a large population in the Sinai, wasn't even touched on.