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Defute the Bible or not!

F0uad

Well-Known Member
Sorry but this is hilarious next time i will just use google you never addressed my questions you simply took a U-turn and then tried to answer what was no answer.

So you agree that god broke hes own law and died and directly contradicts with hes own words when he says he will uphold the laws and that each person should responsible for hes own actions.

You make no sense..
 

HerDotness

Lady Babbleon
Except for Moses, Joshua, and a handful of others, the entire population of the original Hebrews (who had been Egyptian slaves) were punished by God for grumbling during that 40 years. They all died in the Sinai desert and never even reached the Promised Land.

This part is the entirety of a Wiki Answer given by Debe L. on this site:

Hebrews wandering in the wilderness for forty years, how is it that there is no evidence of this? - Yahoo! Answers NZ

There's no evidence to be found when one is looking in the wrong place for it. You want to go east, to the Arabian Peninsula, to the foot of a mountain called Jabal al Lawz.There's quite a bit of evidence around that region supporting the idea that 2.5 million people camped in the area, including huge boulders with seemingly inexplicable water erosion, originating from inside the rock itself, toward the top.

The above is most of a Wiki Answer by Atarah on that same site:
Hebrews wandering in the wilderness for forty years, how is it that there is no evidence of this? - Yahoo! Answers NZ

You left off the last sentence which reads, "The desert preserves things remarkably well for all that wind-blown sand."

" Evidence from Egypt indicates that Moses (Akhenaten) led his people from Pi-Rameses (near modern Kantra) southward, through Sanai, towards Lake Timash. Among the retainers who fled with Moses were the sons and families of Jacob (Israel). Then at the instigation of their leader, they constructed the tabernacle at the foot of Mount Sanai. Once Moses had died, they began their invasion of the country left by their forefathers so long before. But Canaan (Palestine) had changed considerably in the meantime, having been infiltrated by waves of Philistines and Phoenicians. The records tell of great sea battles, and of massive armies marching to war. At length, the Hebrews (under their new leader, Joshua) were successful and, once across the Jordan, they took Jericho from the Canaanites, gaining a real foothold in their traditional Promised Land.

And you've lifted this word-for-word from Laurence Gardner's book, Bloodline of the Holy Grail, p. 11, as Quagmire indicated.

Stop it, now, Enoch. It is outright theft and worse still, you lied that you really did write it all yourself. You didn't write any of that yourself which is now obvious to everyone.
 
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The_Evelyonian

Old-School Member
im not worried i wrote it.i post the site when i copy cause i have.i had already wrote that.

Except for Moses, Joshua, and a handful of others, the entire population of the original Hebrews (who had been Egyptian slaves) were punished by God for grumbling during that 40 years. They all died in the Sinai desert and never even reached the Promised Land.

This part is the entirety of a Wiki Answer given by Debe L. on this site:

Hebrews wandering in the wilderness for forty years, how is it that there is no evidence of this? - Yahoo! Answers NZ

There's no evidence to be found when one is looking in the wrong place for it. You want to go east, to the Arabian Peninsula, to the foot of a mountain called Jabal al Lawz.There's quite a bit of evidence around that region supporting the idea that 2.5 million people camped in the area, including huge boulders with seemingly inexplicable water erosion, originating from inside the rock itself, toward the top.
The above is most of a Wiki Answer by Atarah on that same site:
Hebrews wandering in the wilderness for forty years, how is it that there is no evidence of this? - Yahoo! Answers NZ

You left off the last sentence which reads, "The desert preserves things remarkably well for all that wind-blown sand."

" Evidence from Egypt indicates that Moses (Akhenaten) led his people from Pi-Rameses (near modern Kantra) southward, through Sanai, towards Lake Timash. Among the retainers who fled with Moses were the sons and families of Jacob (Israel). Then at the instigation of their leader, they constructed the tabernacle at the foot of Mount Sanai. Once Moses had died, they began their invasion of the country left by their forefathers so long before. But Canaan (Palestine) had changed considerably in the meantime, having been infiltrated by waves of Philistines and Phoenicians. The records tell of great sea battles, and of massive armies marching to war. At length, the Hebrews (under their new leader, Joshua) were successful and, once across the Jordan, they took Jericho from the Canaanites, gaining a real foothold in their traditional Promised Land.
And you've lifted this word-for-word from Laurence Gardner's book, Bloodline of the Holy Grail, p. 11, as Quagmire indicated.

Stop it, now, Enoch. It is outright theft and worse still, you lied that you really did write it all yourself. You didn't write any of that yourself which is now obvious to everyone.

Care to try again, Enoch?
 

HerDotness

Lady Babbleon
Why bother asking him? What I want is an apology, expression of remorse and plea for our forgiveness for creating such a terrible impression of what a Christian ought to do when defending his faith.

Go ahead, Enoch, we're waiting.

And once you do that, you can believe that people will be checking everything else you say on this thread to see if you've "forgotten where" you got anyone else's ideas...word-for-word.
 

Dirty Penguin

Master Of Ceremony
How can patterns form from randomness?




You can't be serious??????

Snow flakes come to mind. All form random patterns.......:facepalm:

Frequently Asked Questions about Snow Crystals
x031230a113.jpg
flake.jpg
 
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9-10ths_Penguin

1/10 Subway Stalinist
Premium Member
Yes they followed a star and yes it went ahead of them.this could be interpreted as the earth was rotating.Or it could have really happened the way you describe and think as the star went ahead of them an stopped.This is possible of God is real.Not a refute.

I didn't say it was. At this point, the question I'm dealing with is figuring out whether your argument is consistent with the Bible. On this point, I'm not even trying to address whether the Bible is consistent with reality or itself yet.

(BTW: "refute" isn't a noun, but it's probably closer to correct than "defute" was)

So... your possible explanations are:

- the star did appear to move because of the motion of the Earth... which raises the question of how it could have stopped.

- the star moved because God actually did move it. I suppose if we're assuming an all-powerful God, then we can't exclude the possibility... though it raises the question of why nobody else saw it.

BTW: the Easter Challenge is still waiting for you.
 
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