He let his jealously of his brother get the best of him. Sadly he paid a huge price. Not with his life though.ChristRoseFromTheDead said:He just killed his own relative. What goes around comes around...
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He let his jealously of his brother get the best of him. Sadly he paid a huge price. Not with his life though.ChristRoseFromTheDead said:He just killed his own relative. What goes around comes around...
What Ussher believed on how old the earth was has nothing to do with what I presented. If Sargon was Cain, then 204 is years was plenty of time to account for what you're thinking.Purity said:Usshers also believe the earth was only 6000 years old. The evidence of course speaks to a very old earth created by a very old God. The principle of "long and slow" is a divine one and needs consideration when dealing with the population of the earth during Adams time and those things before him.
Purity
If.What Ussher believed on how old the earth was has nothing to do with what I presented. If Sargon was Cain, then 204 is years was plenty of time to account for what you're thinking.
Yes of course, IF, because neither you nor I lived back to that time. But such arguments like that are useless and just steer off the subject. Is that what you're trying to do?Purity said:
Christians must be very careful when presenting scientific research that they take extreme care to providing all the relevant data/findings.Those studies were based on a type of mitochondrial DNA, genetic material passed on only by the female. Reports in 1995 concerning research on male DNA point to the same conclusion—that “there was an ancestral ‘Adam,’ whose genetic material on the [Y] chromosome is common to every man now on earth,” as Time magazine put it.(also quoted by Nicholas Nurston in his book Evolution - Fact or Fiction, published in 2012) Whether those findings are accurate in every detail or not, they illustrate that the history we find in Genesis is highly credible, being authored by One who was on the scene at the time, Jehovah God.
Eve was called the mother of all living because it's a symbol for Christ's Salvation, i.e., those who come to the FINAL land of the living (eternally). Pretty obvious Eve did not bare all... children of this world.Guestman said:The apostle Paul told the Athenians, that Jehovah "made out of one man all nations of men, to dwell upon the entire surface of the earth."(Acts 17:26) Hence, everyone that has ever lived (it has been estimated that from 14 to 20 billion people have lived and died since Adam's creation over 6,000 years ago) or is living descended from Adam and Eve, our original parents.
That theory is so far fetched only one in abosulte ignorance would believe it. The Jews especially want us to believe they can go back in history using DNA to determine pureness of bloodlines so they can 'ordain' Levitical priests for the future temple to be built in Jerusalem. That's who's behind all that.Guestman said:In recent years, scientists have researched human genes extensively. By comparing human genetic patterns (genomes) around the earth, they found clear evidence that all humans have a common ancestor, a source of the DNA of all people who have ever lived, including each of us. In 1988, Newsweek magazine presented those findings in a report entitled “The Search for Adam and Eve.” (January 11, 1988)
Those studies were based on a type of mitochondrial DNA, genetic material passed on only by the female. Reports in 1995 concerning research on male DNA point to the same conclusion—that “there was an ancestral ‘Adam,’ whose genetic material on the [Y] chromosome is common to every man now on earth,” as Time magazine put it.(also quoted by Nicholas Nurston in his book Evolution - Fact or Fiction, published in 2012) Whether those findings are accurate in every detail or not, they illustrate that the history we find in Genesis is highly credible, being authored by One who was on the scene at the time, Jehovah God.
Is God's other work silent on the issue?aspen2 said:We cannot know if Adam and Eve were alone because the Bible is silent on the issue.
It is pretty obvious that through Eve, she, in effect, did "bare all....children of this world", for Genesis 3:20 states that she did as well as Acts 17:26 showing that through Adam "all nations of men" came into existence. The earliest Greek manuscripts reads literally "He makes besides out of one every nation of humans."(Scripture4all interlinear)veteran said:Eve was called the mother of all living because it's a symbol for Christ's Salvation, i.e., those who come to the FINAL land of the living (eternally). Pretty obvious Eve did not bare all... children of this world.
My Bible (nor the NT Greek) does not say, "made out of one man all nations of men". My Bible (KJV) says, "... made of one blood all nations of men...". The word 'man' is NOT there in the Greek of Acts 17:26. And indeed... all human beings have blood that according to type is transfusable from one person to another, regardless of their parents lineage.
Nah, she was called the mother of all living because she represents the Seed of the Woman like Gen.3 revealed, and through that Seed (Christ) all would be offerred eternal life through His Blood shed upon the cross. Thus the expression is more than just some fleshy notion.Guestman said:It is pretty obvious that through Eve, she, in effect, did "bare all....children of this world", for Genesis 3:20 states that she did as well as Acts 17:26 showing that through Adam "all nations of men" came into existence. The earliest Greek manuscripts reads literally "He makes besides out of one every nation of humans."(Scripture4all interlinear)
Acts 17:26 does not have the Greek word haima at all, for according to the Scripture4all WHNA interlinear and Westcott-Hort's Greek master text of 1881, The New Testament in the Original Greek (both based on the Codex Sinaiticus of the 4th century C.E.) as well the Emphatic Diaglott (of 1864 and based on the Codex Vaticanus of the 4th century C.E.), Paul did not use the Greek word haima, but rather used just ex henos (meaning "out of one").veteran said:Nah, she was called the mother of all living because she represents the Seed of the Woman like Gen.3 revealed, and through that Seed (Christ) all would be offerred eternal life through His Blood shed upon the cross. Thus the expression is more than just some fleshy notion.
The Greek manuscripts of Acts 17:26 does not have the word 'man' in that phrase, period. Instead it uses the Greek word for 'blood' (Greek haima - Strong's no. 129). Don't know where you're getting your info from but it is false on that point.
What do you think this was about?
Deut 23:2
2 A bastard shall not enter into the congregation of the LORD; even to his tenth generation shall he not enter into the congregation of the LORD.
(KJV)
What you've believed with your interpretation of all peoples descending from Adam and Eve is an old tradition, much like the tradition that Eve ate an apple. It has been taught as an obvious fact for so long in most Churches that to consider any other meaning would be like losing part of their foundation in Christ, to those.
It's the same problem with thinking that all peoples descended from one of Noah's three sons after the flood. When one gets to Genesis 15 with the nations of Canaan, peoples are discovered there that had no lineage through any of Noah's sons, yet that tradition continues to go on as if it were Biblical fact also.
So now you want to argue ascendency of the Alexandrian texts of the New Testament that originate from Alexandria, Egypt over the Byzantine New Testament texts which show origin from the Christian Church in Antioch, Syria?Guestman said:Acts 17:26 does not have the Greek word haima at all, for according to the Scripture4all WHNA interlinear and Westcott-Hort's Greek master text of 1881, The New Testament in the Original Greek (both based on the Codex Sinaiticus of the 4th century C.E.) as well the Emphatic Diaglott (of 1864 and based on the Codex Vaticanus of the 4th century C.E.), Paul did not use the Greek word haima, but rather used just ex henos (meaning "out of one").
What you are looking at is based on F.H.A Scriveners text, Scriveners Textus Receptus of 1894 (which Scripture4all now generates instead of the WHNA or Westcott-Hort, Nestle-Aland text as some years ago), which is a modified Beza 1598 Textus Receptus and not based on the oldest known Greek manuscripts.
Yes it is, claims of the Alexandrian manuscripts being more accurate is exactly what their 'my texts are older than your texts' debate is about. That word "validity" is in the same sense as 'accuracy'. It's just an asumption by that crowd.Guestman said:It is not the Alexandrine manuscript (5th century C.E.) or text that is being noted as having more weight of accuracy, but it is both the Codex Sinaiticus and Code Vaticanus (No.1209) of the 4th century that has more validity than other manuscripts.
That claim easily refuted here:Guestman said:The King James Bible is based on late Greek manuscripts, rather than either the Sinaiticus or Vaticanus, for it was not until 1859 that Konstantin Von Tischendorf was able to bring back some 393 leaves of possibly 730 from the Monastary of St. Catherine at Mount Sinai.(It has been reported that 8 to 14 more leaves were discovered in the same monastary in 1975) And the Codex Vaticanus (housed in the Vatican Library) was not made fully available by the Vatican until a photographic facsimile was published in 1889-90.