Originally posted by RBHILLBut your response to Penguin and I pointing out your hypocrisy in asking a question of atheists when unwilling to answer a similar question in return - was to imply that the existence of God was undeniable (due to the phenomena of speaking in tongues).
They are not closet Christians and neither are Atheist.
So, now that you admit that I am genuinely an atheist, will you also admit to being a hypocrite?
Originally posted by RBHILLI am not surprised. You can't answer my questions, so you run away.
Well, I this discussion is over with all do respect.
(and sorry, but I won't watch youtube videos unless you are willing to pay for the internet usage I require to download it - only a few cents I guess, but I'd rather spend it on something more worthwhile).
Originally posted by RBHILLAre you telling me God came to save humanity from God's laws which were impossible to keep (and God presumably knew this) by letting humans kill his body while God himself went back to Heaven?
Don't forget that Jesus came to save us from the law that is impossible to keep.
🙄
Originally posted by AThousandYoungWell you have to have a sacrifice for sins. God killed an animal in place of Adam and Eve after they sinned.
Are you telling me God came to save humanity from God's laws which were impossible to keep (and God presumably knew this) by letting humans kill his body while God himself went back to Heaven?
Originally posted by AThousandYoungIf Moses was about 1500 Bc. then from Adam to Noah coming out of the Ark is 1656 years. And from taht date to Moses is about 900 years so 1656+900=2556
No, the Flood happened around 6000 BC or earlier when the Persian Gulf was born.
http://ldolphin.org/eden/
so 1500+900 is about 2400 and 2400+1656 is about 4060.
Originally posted by AThousandYoungEDIT - That's what I got from the map in that link, but the text is closer to your number:
No, the Flood happened around 6000 BC or earlier when the Persian Gulf was born.
http://ldolphin.org/eden/
about 5000 to 4000 B.C. came a worldwide phenomenon called the Flandrian Transgression, which caused a sudden rise in sea level. The Gulf began to fill with water and actually reached its modern-day level about 4000 B.C., having swallowed Eden and all the settlements along the coastline of the Gulf. But it didn't stop there. It kept right on rising, moving upward into the southern legions of today's Iraq and Iran.
http://ldolphin.org/eden/