@Erik: If the flood was universal, all post-diluvian human bengs …

Comment on The hinge of our faith by Mark Houston.

@Erik: If the flood was universal, all post-diluvian human bengs share a common geographic origin (perhaps mount Ararat) and so necessarily do all flood legends-unless they were invented later. So a universal flood does not imply ubiquitous flood legends and vice versa.

Mark

Mark Houston Also Commented

The hinge of our faith
@Erik: If the flood was universal, all post-diluvian human beings share a common geographic origin (perhaps mount Ararat) and so necessarily do all flood legends-unless they were invented later. So a universal flood does not imply ubiquitous flood legends and vice versa.

Mark


Recent Comments by Mark Houston

What is taught at LSU
@Kevin:
Excuse me, but have you studied the full extent of Walter Veith’s “lectures”? He is an embarrassment (my favorite lecture unearths a conspiracy somehow connected to the “fact” that every American president since Abe Lincoln or so is the descendant from some royal European bloodline). Why does his name turn up here again and again?

Mark


Why Orthodox Darwinism Demands Atheism
I hope you realize that camels are perfectly adapted (or created- doesn’t matter) to a post fall (are probably post flood) environment.

Mark


Silence of the Geoscience Research Institute
@BobRyan:

The strong nuclear force is the one you see released during a fusion reaction.

…No no no – ouch! The strong nuclear force is *not* “released” during a fusion reaction (or at any other time) – this quote is a clear demonstration of a significant lack of physical knowledge (to put it in friendly terms).

Mark


Silence of the Geoscience Research Institute
@David: If you call the strong nuclear force “god” it would only be fair to give that name to electromagnetism, gravity and the weak nuclear force, too. But, whichever naming scheme you choose, this seems a bit pantheistic.

Mark


EducateTruth.com promoted on 3ABN
A sudden extreme cold snap is not necessarily related with a cold period causing glaciers to extend down south to Illinois. If all frozen mammoths really died quite exactly at the same time, they all should give the same age when dated with whatever method available. Even if the absolute age was off, the same “radiometric” age for all the mammoths we’re talking about would support your theory.

Mark