Archaeologists debate over the location of the biblical city of Bethsaida. When you purchase through links on our site, we may earn an affiliate commission. Here’s how it works. The biblical city ...
WHEN SENNACHERIB, King of Assyria, sent his army to the kingdom of Judah in 701BC, and had it destroy the city of Lachish, 43km south-west of Jerusalem, he was doing his bit for science as well. As ...
When you purchase through links on our site, we may earn an affiliate commission. Here’s how it works. A 2,800-year-old jar inscribed in Hebrew with the Yahwistic name "Benayo" has been discovered at ...
Archaeologists in Turkey recently uncovered over 60 ancient tombs in Colossae, a biblical city immortalized in the New ...
Scientists have managed to study the impact of a fire that happened more than 2,500 years ago a study published in the Journal of Archaeological Science reveals. Israeli archaeologists assessed the ...
Researchers reconstructed the geomagnetic fields recorded in 21 archaeological destruction layers throughout Israel and used the data to develop a reliable new scientific tool for archaeological ...
I have dreaded writing this but am convinced that someone must stand up for the Bible. You see, creation science is not only bad science but it is also bad Bible. Creation science claims to champion a ...
A 3,200-year-old fortress has been discovered in southern Israel. The fortress was likely built by the ancient Canaanite civilization to protect against Philistine invaders, according to the Israel ...
Watch on DVD or Blu-ray starting January 1st, 2015 - Buy Why Biblical Creation Is Good Science DVD ...
The Forward on MSN
Why the story of Noah’s Ark seems timelier than ever
Charlotte McConaghy’s thriller 'Wild Dark Shore' is only the latest riff on a biblical tale of climate change.
Question: How can you not realize that religious belief up to the time of Copernicus was based on a no-longer valid, fixed Earth-centric view of the universe, in that the Earth is now known to rotate ...
The secret lies in extremely powerful wind vortices, such as tornadoes or waterspouts, which form over bodies of water like lakes, rivers, or the sea. When these vortices develop, they suck up water ...
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