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Search results for: bible in all categories
1131 results found.
114 pages of results. 641. Isotopic Anomalies in Chronometric Science [Journals] [SIS Review]
... : "Comparison between tree ring dates and C14 dates in a New Zealand Kauri tree". N.Z . J. Sci. 5 (1962). 78. 10. J. Collis: "Thoughts on radiocarbon dating", Antiquity XLV (1971). 200. 11. R. D. Long: "The bible, radiocarbon dating and Ancient Egypt", Cre. Res. Quart. 10 (1973), 19-30. 12. D. L Thurber: "Problems of dating non-woody material from continental environments" in W. W. Bishop and J. A. Miller (eds.): Calibration of Hominid Evolution (Edinburgh: Scottish ...
642. Forums [Journals] [SIS Review]
... 2. "began. Not began to worship for Abel worshipped, and others, doubtless, long before. But here: began to call upon (their gods) by the name of Jehovah' or began profanely to call upon the name of the Lords'." Thus a marginal note on Gen 4:26 from Bagster's Companion Bible. 3. Ginzberg op. cit., I. p. 123. 4. Ibid., V. p. 152 (note 55). 5. Ibid. 6. See H. Tresman & B. O'Gheoghan: "The Primordial Light", SISR II:2 , 35ff. 7. E.g ...
643. Forum [Journals] [SIS Review]
... It is true that Patten et al. have Mars as the destroying agent in The Long Day of Joshua, their otherwise excellent account of the early catastrophes, but they present no evidence in favour of the identification they make. So I decided to investigate further. It seemed to me that both archangels get involved in catastrophic events in the Bible, and in their involvement they are rarely seen acting separately. The destruction of Sennacherib's army is ascribed to the work of Mars, and both Michael and Gabriel are involved (see Ginzberg's Legends of the Jews, Vol. VI, pp. 362, 363). The other events are seemingly the works of Venus, and again ...
644. Horizons [Journals] [SIS Review]
... on the Velikovsky theses, the implications of their study for the work of DR IRVING WOLFE on a "deep memory" source for this catastrophic imagery will surely be dealt with in the forthcoming second part of the paper. The authors provide a wealth of evidence to suggest that Shakespeare [and, incidentally, the translators of the King James Bible!] lived in a period of extraordinarily severe visitations of storms and floods, famines and plagues, and that his contemporaries were much preoccupied with portentous natural phenomena - which might offer a more direct source of inspiration than that suggested by Wolfe in both SISR and KRONOS. "The Ocean" is a section from VELIKOVSKY'S The Test of ...
645. Bookshelf [Journals] [SIS Review]
... three and four of the book take us into the realms of precognition and prophecy where we are told that modern psychics Edgar Cayce, Aron Abrahamson, Paul Solomon and others have all "seen" pole shifts of one sort or another, the descriptions of which sometimes bear a marked resemblance to those of the scientific investigations. Nostradamus, the Bible and other ancient sources are also called upon to show that there is a general concordance of views that pole shifting accounts for past catastrophes and future ones, though the details may vary from source to source, and no one' has yet pointed to a convincing trigger mechanism. White's concern is with the future, particularly since the psychics ...
646. A Response to Forrest [Journals] [SIS Review]
... prosecution witness, let us end on a quizzical note. It could link up with the Hyksos. As Gardiner comments - in a hint picked up by Forrest in a later addendum but left severely alone by Velikovsky, who was clearly more eager to follow up the link with the "plagues" of Exodus (not so called in the Bible, however .. . - i(3 )dt, the "plague" bemoaned by Ipuwer in this quotation, is "a term of opprobrium" used elsewhere for these invaders. We can choose, it seems, between a possible link with the fall of the Middle Kingdom and a possible link with the Exodus. There ...
647. Proceedings of the Third Seminar of Catastrophism and Ancient History (Review) [Journals] [Catastrophism & Ancient History]
... periods materialized. William Shea, Associate Professor at Andrews University Seminary, presented additional evidence for a fifteenth-century B.C . date for the Exodus, based on the contemporaneous chronology of the Ancient Near East. He also presented some further evidence against the conventional thirteenth-century Exodus date- a view recently developed in his Exodus article in the International Standard Bible Encyclopedia. Dr. Shea, in addition, showed a very convincing slide presentation on the location of the cities of Sodom and Gomorrah. Donovan Courville, author of The Exodus Problem and Its Ramifications, addressed several matters concerning Egyptian chronology. Lester Mitcham contributed a paper, "A New Interpretation of the Assyrian King List." He ...
648. El-Amarna Excursuses [Journals] [SIS Review]
... direct. But we do know that Ishbaal and David were in a permanent state of war. David married the daughter of Talmai, king of Geshur, and the son he had from this marriage, Absalom, was his favourite and the heir to the throne. That the Geshur mentioned here was the Geshur in Syria is confirmed by the Bible in recording how Absalom flees there after killing his half-brother Amnon (II Samuel 13:37). A marriage which produces the son who is heir to the throne is surely a significant one, maybe of greater importance than many of the other marriage alliances David entered into. We believe it may indicate that David formed an alliance with ...
649. Shoshenq's Palestinian Campaign: a reply to Shea [Journals] [SIS Review]
... account in I Kings 20 seems to state in verse 20 that only the tribe of Judah' remained loyal to Rehoboam, but cf. verses 21-23 which only make sense if Benjamin is included in this expression. 6. See, e.g ., J. Monson et al.: Student Map Manual: Historical Geography of the Bible Lands, (Zondervan, Grand Rapids, 1979), map 1/13. An alternative reading for Ephrain is Ephron, as in most English translations, but as Ephron lay on Benjamin's southern border (Joshua 15:9 , cf. 18:15) this does not seem likely to be correct. 7. K. ...
650. Some 'New Chronology' Issues [Journals] [SIS Review]
... as the age of Ish-bosheth (40) at his accession, and David's honouring of Micah, a grandson of Jonathan. Steven also draws my attention to two critical assumptions, either or both of which may be incorrect. In my response in Workshop 1990:2 , p. 27, I had followed the King James Version of the Bible and had deduced from this English translation that the war with the Philistines had begun in Saul's second year. But Steven has sent me the translation of a Hebrew text of I Samuel 13:1 which reads: "Saul was .. . years old when he began to reign; and he reigned .. . [and] ...
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