Biblical Context for the Top Ten Biblical Archaeological Discoveries of 2015 | Bible Gateway Blog


Source: Biblical Context for the Top Ten Biblical Archaeological Discoveries of 2015 | Bible Gateway Blog

Biblical Archaeology Claim: Seal of Hezekiah Unearthed in Jerusalem | Bible Gateway Blog


Source: Biblical Archaeology Claim: Seal of Hezekiah Unearthed in Jerusalem | Bible Gateway Blog

Reasons To Believe : The First Humans Were Likely Farmers


Source: Reasons To Believe : The First Humans Were Likely Farmers

Reasons To Believe : Did Arabia Provide a Migration Route for Early Humans?–Dr. Hugh Ross


Reasons To Believe : Did Arabia Provide a Migration Route for Early Humans?. by Dr. Hugh Ross

Present day Arabia

Present day Arabia

Ice Age Arabia

Ice Age Arabia

Abraham in the Bible – Archaeology Unearths Clues to the World of Abraham in the Bible


sixth-to-fifth century B.C

via Abraham in the Bible – Archaeology Unearths Clues to the World of Abraham in the Bible.

Old Earth–BioLogos


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U6XkvjsiX6M

Reasons To Believe : Q&A: Does the Gobekli Tepe Site Contradict the Biblical Account of Man?


Reasons To Believe : Q&A: Does the Gobekli Tepe Site Contradict the Biblical Account of Man?.gobekli-tepe-pillar-1

Patterns of Evidence–Exodus


 

http://www.patternsofevidence.com/en/

 

 

Predictable Christmas fare: Newsweek’s Tirade against the Bible by Daniel B. Wallace


Daniel B. Wallace's avatarDaniel B. Wallace

Every year, at Christmas and Easter, several major magazines, television programs, news agencies, and publishing houses love to rattle the faith of Christians by proclaiming loudly and obnoxiously that there are contradictions in the Bible, that Jesus was not conceived by a virgin, that he did not rise from the dead, ad infinitum, ad nauseum. The day before Christmas eve (23 December 2014), Newsweek published a lengthy article by Kurt Eichenwald entitled, “The Bible: So Misunderstood It’s a Sin.” Although the author claims that he is not promoting any particular theology, this wears thin. Eichenwald makes so many outrageous claims, based on a rather slender list of named scholars (three, to be exact), that one has to wonder how this ever passed any editorial review.

My PDF of this article runs 34 pages (!) before the hundreds of comments that are appended. Consequently, I don’t have…

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