To: Leonard210
Is creation more difficult than bread from bread simply because of the scope of the undertaking? Do we therefore need to give God plenty of time to complete his tasks? If so, how long must we give God to raise the cold, dead body of his Son? Would that be only marginally more difficult than bread from bread but not nearly as difficult as creation? I'd say it must be, as God needed billions of years to create the universe, but raised Jesus in only three days. Good point.
97 posted on
07/17/2002 4:10:15 PM PDT by
Jorge
To: Jorge
Leonard210: Is creation more difficult than bread from bread simply because of the scope of the undertaking? Do we therefore need to give God plenty of time to complete his tasks? If so, how long must we give God to raise the cold, dead body of his Son? Would that be only marginally more difficult than bread from bread but not nearly as difficult as creation? I'd say it must be, as God needed billions of years to create the universe, but raised Jesus in only three days.
Jorge: Good point.
Thanks Jorge. I had a friend visit an area in Kalifornia where there's a whole bunch of sharks teeth and such. It's up the mountain and miles from the coast, proof that billions of years ago the area from the mountains to the coast were under water. OK, well where's the equivalent to a shark graveyard developing today along the coast? It's kinda like, if an elephant walks through the valley and dies before reaching the coast, how many billions of years will it take for its remains to fossilize? I'm still cunfused. :-/
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