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The discontinuity at the tomb, for instance:
Here we go with this again.

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The discontinuity at the tomb, for instance:
C'est la vie.Here we go with this again.![]()
C'est la vie.
The verses are quite clearly listed. And for the record, I made it myself. I'm quite proud of it.I'll tell you what, WC. Why don't you just go back to that chart you probably copy-and-pasted and fill it in for us?
Matthew 28Instead of saying "two women," "one human," "two humans," etc.; how about put some names with that (like the Bible did).
You left a prefix out. One site called it a "super flood," and the other called it a "megaflood."
If it's how the rock was "created" that you want to know, read Genesis 1.
I got a volume that's more eloquent than you'll ever be:
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AV it doesn't matter how "super" or "mega" it was, it was localised...
Okie-doke --- I'll save the laughter until after I hit the SUBMIT button.![]()
The verses are quite clearly listed. And for the record, I made it myself. I'm quite proud of it.
I think it is very sad that you haven't even made an effort to understand what was going on here, and worse when some one made the effort to explain it too you all you could do was laugh.
Who says we explain all phenomena on Earth in terms of local floods? I, for one, am quite partial to other phenomenon such as rain, erosion, etc.I'll tell you what I understand, Baggins. I understand that you guys love to deny a global flood occurred, then spend the rest of your time explaining every square mile of the earth in terms of local floods. That's sad.
Which contradicts John 20:1, which states that Mary Magdalene alone went early, and Matthew 28:1, which implies the stone was in place upon their arrival.From the Scofield Reference Bible:
- The order of events, combining the four narratives, is as follows: Three women, Mary Magdalene, and Mary the mother of James, and Salome, start for the sepulchre, followed by other women bearing spices.
Which contradicts Matthew 28:1-5, since there is no mention of Magdalene's little trip after verse 1, and her silent return before verse 4.
- The three find the stone rolled away, and Mary Magdalene goes to tell the disciples (Lk. 23:55; 24:9; John 20:1,2). Mary, the mother of James and Joses, draws nearer the tomb and sees the angel of the Lord (Mt. 28:2). She goes back to meet the other women following with the spices.
Actually, Luke 24:4 talks of two men, not angels. Where did these men pop from?
- Meanwhile Peter and John, warned by Mary Magdalene, arrive, look in,and go away (John 20:3-10). Mary Magdalene returns weeping, sees the two angels and then Jesus (John 20:11-18), and goes as He bade her to tell the disciples. Mary (mother of James and Joses), meanwhile, has met the women with the spices and, returning with them, they see the two angels (Lk. 24:4,5; Mk. 16:5).
Which contradicts John 20:1, which states that Mary Magdalene alone went early, and Matthew 28:1, which implies the stone was in place upon their arrival.
Traditions meaning oral traditions, histories passed on from generation to generation. These eventually tended to get embellished, and then written down at some point, but my point was is that these oral traditions generally have a core of truth to them, and within a few generations tend to stay relatively intact. That is why traditions in many cases can be used as evidence.So what did you mean?
Amazing he would have such an insight to hunt down Jesus even before he was born, but be stupid enough to tell those hunting to look for Children who were already born.Ah, but he had: King Herod had, allegedly, set out on a crusade against Jesus before he was even born. That's how famous the King of Kings was.
I will grant you that, things can slip over a few decades, for example, I don't remember one of my teacher's hair or eye color, but general things still tend to stick with me. Something like miracles is not really one of those small details. Also keep in mind, disciples, et al were with Jesus pretty much all the time this was not like "well I saw this guy do this thing one time". There is a profound difference from remembering someone's eye color and remembering people raised from the dead. Of course, we are not even talking about that yet are we, just a person's existence... generally I can remember whether or not a good friend of mine really existed... its kind of hard to do anything with a non-existent one.A few years, yes, but not a few decades. Even if someone was an eye-witness to a divine manifestation a few years ago, people do not have perfect recollection. Now extend that to a few decades,
Not really. Ignoring the miracles for a second, someone existing is not very hard to believe. I exist, my friends exist not exactly very 'unbelievable'. I doubt Jesus simply 'existing' is enough to turn any heads at all.Because wars are, unfortunately, fairly common. The manifestation of the Christ in front of your very eyes? Not so common.
Those are small contradictions. As I said look for the historical core. If we discarded everything because of such small contradictions, most early wars we would have to forget about. this is not a matter of saying what is 'probable' versus what is 'improbable' but having a consistent methodology.The discontinuity at the tomb, for instance:
I'll tell you what I understand, Baggins. I understand that you guys love to deny a global flood occurred, then spend the rest of your time explaining every square mile of the earth in terms of local floods. That's sad.
Actually, WC, what you need is not an explanation to these "contradictions," but you need a course in Hermeneutics. Specifically on how to resolve seeming contradictions.
Never, never, never assume there's a contradiction in the Scriptures until you've subjected the passages to the Law of Non-contradiction.
On your Matthew 28:1 assumption ---
[bible]Matthew 28:1-2[/bible]
Mark clears that up nicely ---
[bible]Mark 16:3-4[/bible]
Floods, tsunamis, storm surges, glaciers, and other major events involving water, do not equate to a global flood as described in the Bible. The articles you linked don't make such a claim either. And they put the event at hundreds of thousands of years ago.Oh Baggins, I see you are up to your bad boy stuff again. Why can't you just be nice?
Anyways....What about this site?
http://www.nature.com/news/2007/070716/full/news070716-11.html
Or this one?
http://www.guardian.co.uk/science/2007/jul/18/geography.geology
Of course we deny that a global flood occurred, since it didn't. As for the rest of your statement nobody here claims that all of the earth's geology are explained by local floods. Quite the contrary, there are many geological layers that cannot be explained by a flood of any kind, as has been explained to you numerous times here.I'll tell you what I understand, Baggins. I understand that you guys love to deny a global flood occurred, then spend the rest of your time explaining every square mile of the earth in terms of local floods. That's sad.