sandwiches
Mas sabe el diablo por viejo que por diablo.
So, let's break down your last sentence using the terms you had agreed to previously:Okay, sandwiches, I'm back.
Sorry --- I'm giving a lecture tonight titled:
Where is the Water Canopy Today? A Lecture on the Canadian Shield, or Laurentian Theology.
Just kidding ---Yes.No.
For example: If evidence points to Egypt existing before the Flood, since this clearly contradicts the Bible, I take it on faith that the Bible is right, and these marks left over are wrong.
Then my faith [in the Bible] becomes my evidence that I'm right.
"Then my belief without evidence [in the Bible] becomes my evidence that I'm right."
So to shorten this, you're saying the following:
"My BELIEF is evidence that I'm right."
Does this make sense to you?
I don't even think we should move on into the "validity" of evidence if the very definition of evidence and faith seem to be up in the air.Science, of course, is going to disagree, and then it becomes a matter of he-said/she-said.
So, let's try to clarify.
Faith - Belief without evidence, Yes or no?
Evidence - Some sign left behind by an event, Yes or no?
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