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Did Jehovah destroy millions with a flood in Noah's day?
by fish 96 Replies latest watchtower scandals
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stevenyc
Mr Kim: LMAO: A troll? No. But I am the one in charge of all other GB members. I have the attitude.....care to try for a homerun; This is the most relaxing fun I have had in a long time........
LOL, yep this is quite enjoyable.
I have to ask you though, is there anything at all, that would convince you that the flood is a myth?
steve
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slacker911
Mr. Kim,
Yet another post where you chose not to back up a single claim you have made. You have completely and entirely reinforced the suspicions of every other poster on this thread that has confronted you with the challenge that you know absolutely nothing of what you are talking about. I have a strong feeling that your laughter isnt nearly as loud as you would like us to believe...
Let me ask you...if you stretch both of your arms out, can you reach all the way across the rabbit hole?
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Mary
Mr. Kim said: There really is a lot of evidence supporting the fact that at one time, all land mass was under water. The fossil record is very clear on this matter. That is, if people believe in fossils......
Okay, then please quote us the literature that shows the evidence that "all land mass was under water." Apparently you don't read very much, because the physical evidence on the earth today does not prove any such thing. If there was an earth-wide flood 5,000 years ago, then geologists would be able to go to any part of the earth and find it in the records. IT'S NOT THERE.
So enlighten us Einstein. Show us these "facts".
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Deputy Dog
slacker911
That being said, how would you explain God and his relationship with Abraham, and how God chose to see if Abraham would be willing to sacrifice his son? According to the bible, God waited until the last possible second, and then stopped Abraham, just as he was about to kill Isaac. God then said that only at that time could he be sure that Abraham would or would not sacrifice his son. In other words, God had to wait and see how Abraham would control his son's fate. That, in my mind, is not the behavior of a God that "controls everyone's life and death."
I think you are reading into the text. Could you quote the verses that you are speaking of? For example, I don't see any verses that say "God had to wait and see" anything. I do however see in Genesis 22 that an angel did.
Gen 22:11 And the angel of the LORD called unto him out of heaven, and said, Abraham, Abraham: and he said, Here am I.Gen 22:12
And he said, Lay not thine hand upon the lad, neither do thou any thing unto him: for now I (the angel) know that thou fearest God, seeing thou hast not withheld thy son, thine only son from me.I believe this test was for the benefit of others, not for God.
D Dog
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slacker911
Mr. Kim,
Hey Genius...the fossil record would not be the place you would look for proof that all land masses were once under water. And even if you could come up with some proof that they were all once under water, it doesnt mean that they were under at the same time. What you need to find in order to prove what many are imagining to be your point is a uniform layer of sediment covering the entire globe.
Good luck finding it, since it doesn't exist.
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slacker911
D Dog, you make a great point...
The basis for the comment that I made was on not only the scripture that you read, but also the one found at Gen 22:15,16. The only bible I know how to find online is the New World, so you'll have to forgive me on that one...but here it is...
15 And Jehovah’s angel proceeded to call to Abraham the second time out of the heavens 16 and to say: “‘By myself I do swear,’ is the utterance of Jehovah, ‘that by reason of the fact that you have done this thing and you have not withheld your son, your only one,
It is the fact that the utterance of God himself revealed that Abraham had the choice to withhold his son and control his fate that I am talking about here. If God had control over all of our lives and deaths, then that would be, I feel, a contradiction of this scripture.
But again, you do make a great point.