>>May I quickly ask you to write down the dates you believe the following occured. I am collating this information from different theists. Generally most
theists have never checked these dates before coming to Skeptic websites to complain about evolution.
1) The start of the Sumerian empire
2) The 6 days of creation
3) The "Flood"
4) The Exodus
5) Hebrew became a language separate from Phonecian
6) The first complete Torah was printed<<
This is pointless… What's this about? Do you somehow get off at people not knowing dates?
I'll humor you. This is from the point of view of someone who had to study Islam from a very young age but never practiced it…
1) Sometime around late 6th millennium B.C. I looked this up. Nothing in Islam would have you believe otherwise. I fail to see why this is important.
2) Time is a relative concept. People can do all the calculations they want no matter what they might believe or how much it makes sense to them, in an Islamic point of view they simply cannot give a definite answer. Muslims usually say "Allah ya'alam" basically god knows.
3) 4,000 - 3,000 B.C. it affected parts of Mesopotamia not the entire world. Mentioned in the Quran as being strictly an infliction on Noah's people. Backed by geological evidence.
4) Sometime around 1200-1000 B.C. there is no evidence to back this up. Just the Russians I brought up.
Last two I have absolutely no knowledge of. Nor do I care.
Why hadn't anyone written about the splitting of the Red Sea? Quran states that all the warriors drowned and (this is not mentioned in the Quran) the other 1.2 million lived by the Nile. See any fault in that theory?
There are a few interesting things relating to Egypt and Moses in the Quran.
1) The Quran mentions a Haman as being someone important to the Pharaoh at the time of Moses. People discredited the Quran because of that. Apparently it was widely accepted that Haman was a member of the Persian Empire and not the Egyptian Empire. After the discovery of the Rosetta Stone, a scripture was translated. Guess who was mentioned in that scripture. From it they deduced that he was an important figure to the Pharaoh.
2) The Bible and Torah both state that the Pharaoh drowned and the Quran does the same BUT the difference is the Quran states that the body will be preserved as a lesson. Archeologists found a mummy BELIEVED to be of the aforementioned Pharaoh.
3) This has more to do with Egypt than it does Moses. Rulers of Ancient Egypt have not always been called Pharaohs. That developed later on in their history sometime around the 14 century B.C. I think. The Quran calls the rulers of Ancient Egypt before that transition rulers or kings and those after as Pharaohs. The Bible and the Torah don't make that distinction. Is this significant? You decide…
1) The start of the Sumerian empire
2) The 6 days of creation
3) The "Flood"
4) The Exodus
5) Hebrew became a language separate from Phonecian
6) The first complete Torah was printed<<
This is pointless… What's this about? Do you somehow get off at people not knowing dates?
I'll humor you. This is from the point of view of someone who had to study Islam from a very young age but never practiced it…
1) Sometime around late 6th millennium B.C. I looked this up. Nothing in Islam would have you believe otherwise. I fail to see why this is important.
2) Time is a relative concept. People can do all the calculations they want no matter what they might believe or how much it makes sense to them, in an Islamic point of view they simply cannot give a definite answer. Muslims usually say "Allah ya'alam" basically god knows.
3) 4,000 - 3,000 B.C. it affected parts of Mesopotamia not the entire world. Mentioned in the Quran as being strictly an infliction on Noah's people. Backed by geological evidence.
4) Sometime around 1200-1000 B.C. there is no evidence to back this up. Just the Russians I brought up.
Last two I have absolutely no knowledge of. Nor do I care.
Why hadn't anyone written about the splitting of the Red Sea? Quran states that all the warriors drowned and (this is not mentioned in the Quran) the other 1.2 million lived by the Nile. See any fault in that theory?
There are a few interesting things relating to Egypt and Moses in the Quran.
1) The Quran mentions a Haman as being someone important to the Pharaoh at the time of Moses. People discredited the Quran because of that. Apparently it was widely accepted that Haman was a member of the Persian Empire and not the Egyptian Empire. After the discovery of the Rosetta Stone, a scripture was translated. Guess who was mentioned in that scripture. From it they deduced that he was an important figure to the Pharaoh.
2) The Bible and Torah both state that the Pharaoh drowned and the Quran does the same BUT the difference is the Quran states that the body will be preserved as a lesson. Archeologists found a mummy BELIEVED to be of the aforementioned Pharaoh.
3) This has more to do with Egypt than it does Moses. Rulers of Ancient Egypt have not always been called Pharaohs. That developed later on in their history sometime around the 14 century B.C. I think. The Quran calls the rulers of Ancient Egypt before that transition rulers or kings and those after as Pharaohs. The Bible and the Torah don't make that distinction. Is this significant? You decide…
