There's no such thing. Go ahead and use your forensic skills to prove Eden ever existed. Or that the Flood actually happened.
Belief in Jesus as the Messiah is predicated on these stories being true. Especially Eden, given that it lays the foundation for why Jesus died on the cross for us: original sin.
Whether you're a believer or a skeptic, the question of whether Jesus of Nazareth truly lived 2,000 years ago is a fascinating historical puzzle. While the divine miracles attributed to him are a matter of faith, scholars and archaeologists have uncovered several compelling clues that suggest Jesus
www.thearchaeologist.org
Is there any evidence that Jesus existed? In his book, Lee Strobel consults scholars and clergy to find out the truth: was Jesus real?
www.shortform.com
A wealth of written evidence exists to prove Christianity is not based on a fairy tale.
aleteia.org
Whether Jesus of Nazareth truly walked the earth, or remains a figure lost to myth, has been a matter of debate for centuries. Outside of the Gospels, scant records survive to confirm his existence. While Roman chroniclers mentioned him briefly, and Jewish historians wrote of a crucified teacher...
www.historyskills.com
The Bible says that Adam and Eve were the first two humans and were made by God. The Old Testament says they lived in the Garden of Eden and are central to the belief that everyone on the planet descended from a single pair of original ancestors.
www.irishstar.com
Despite scepticism surrounding the biblical tale, there is an increasing amount of evidence suggesting that some elements of the story could be accurate. Remarkably, archaeologists have uncovered surprising signs that Eden was not only a real location but could also have been the cradle of civilisation as we know it, as reported by The Daily Mail.
The story of Adam and Eve, the first man and woman to be created by God, is one of the most famous in the Bible. But many question whether they really existed - but science has tried to answer that
www.irishmirror.ie
This piece is excerpted from a longer article alum T. Wyatt Reynolds, AB ’17, wrote for Mere Orthodoxy.
An atheist, a Christian, and a Jew start talking about science and faith. This might seem like it is either the lead up to a joke or the beginning of a fight. Instead, it was the setting of a meeting convened by S. Joshua Swamidass, MD, associate professor of Pathology & Immunology in the School of Medicine and of Biomedical Engineering in the McKelvey School of Engineering. This meeting gathered scientists and theologians of nearly every stripe to discuss his new book, The Genealogical Adam and Eve (Intervarsity Press). Its argument: that there is no intrinsic contradiction between conventional evolutionary theory and belief in Adam and Eve as a couple specially created six thousand years ago.
Washington University Professor S. Joshua Swamidass, MD, uses science to show that Adam and Eve could have existed.
source.washu.edu