English Deutsch Français Italiano Español Português 繁體中文 Bahasa Indonesia Tiếng Việt ภาษาไทย
All categories

I have heard people say this before and just wondered if others really thought the same?

2006-09-11 07:24:31 · 12 answers · asked by Anonymous in Society & Culture Religion & Spirituality

12 answers

Some people believe in something called the Gap theory, this states that the first verse of the bible (Genesis 1:1) in the original greek text says "In the beginning God created the heavens and the earth," after that statement, there was a line that looked like this ______, some theologians believe that this line represents a period of time in which dinosaurs could have roamed the earth, and as the previous answer states, this also could have been a time where another form of man had been created because God did say to Adam "go and REplenish the earth. They also believe that this was when Satan was thrown on to the earth (Satan used to be an Arch angel in heaven named Lucifer, which means "angel of light", he betrayed God and God threw him down to earth along with 1/3 of the angels, that is a whole other story though) and there is a possibility that God had created this race of man, and when Satan came on the earth he decieved every last one of them, so God wiped everything out and then decided that He would create us, but this time in His image, which is amazing all in itself... So that is one belief. Others believe that when God created Adam, Adam was created as a man, he wasn't created as a baby, therefore this says that God could have created the earth as old as He wanted it to be, this is probably why people are saying the earth is billions of years old...

2006-09-11 07:34:54 · answer #1 · answered by DanielleJane 3 · 0 0

I am a Christain & I believe in a prehistoric world, It is in the bible, Gen 9:1 God told Noah to REPLINISH the world after the flood, He also told Adam & Eve in Ge. 1:28 To REPLINISH the earth & REPLINISH means to fill it up AGAIN. Good question But you did not fool me. I guess you thought us Christains did not have an answer.

2006-09-11 14:37:06 · answer #2 · answered by birdsflies 7 · 0 0

We don't have a problem with dinosaurs at all. They were created witth the rest of the animals. There is very strong evidence that they lived only a few thousands of years ago, not millions.

Dinosaur bones—just how old are they really?
An evolutionary dinosaur expert reveals some fascinating facts!

by Carl Wieland

[Ed. note: In late 2005, a report in TJ provided an update on the scientific appraisal of some of the bones discussed in this article. See John H. Whitmore, ‘Unfossilized’ Alaskan dinosaur bones? TJ 19(3):60.]

Most people think that fossil bones (of which the most well-known examples are those of dinosaurs) must be very, very old—because, after all, they have turned to stone, haven’t they?

Even millions of years might, to some, not even seem long enough to allow for natural processes to gradually, molecule by molecule, replace the original substance of the bone with rock minerals.

But this common picture is misleading. A recent book, co-authored by a world expert on dinosaurs, points out some things about dinosaur bones that are of great interest to creationists.1

For one thing, it says:

‘Bones do not have to be “turned into stone” to be fossils, and usually most of the original bone is still present in a dinosaur fossil.’2

Ok, but even if the actual bone is not replaced by rock minerals, some fossil dinosaur bones are rock-hard, and show under the microscope when cut that they have been thoroughly ‘permineralized.’ This means that rock minerals have been deposited into all the spaces within the original bone. Doesn’t this show that the formation of these fossils, at least, must represent a long time? Think again. The same authoritative work also tells us:

‘The amount of time that it takes for a bone to become completely permineralized is highly variable. If the groundwater is heavily laden with minerals in solution, the process can happen rapidly. Modern bones that fall into mineral springs can become permineralized within a matter of weeks.’

So even a rock-solid, hard shiny fossil dinosaur bone, showing under the microscope that all available spaces have been totally filled with rock minerals, does not indicate that it necessarily took millions of years to form at all.

Now of course if a dinosaur bone is indeed permineralized, it would give it great protection from the normal processes which cause things such as bone to just naturally ‘fall apart.’ So a permineralized bone might indeed be anything from a few weeks to millions of years old.

However, in a situation where the dinosaur bone has been prevented from being invaded by mineral-rich water, one would expect that over millions of years, even locked away from all bacterial agents, dinosaur bone would, in obeying the laws of thermodynamics,3 just disintegrate from the random motions of the molecules therein.

There are actually instances, mentioned in the same book, in which dinosaur bones in Alberta, Canada, were encased in ironstone nodules shortly after being buried. We are told:

‘The nodules prevented water from invading the bones, which for all intents and purposes cannot be distinguished from modern bone.’4

This is a stunning revelation. Evolutionists are convinced that all dinosaur bones must be at least 65 million years old. Those who take Genesis as real history would predict that no dinosaur bone is more than a few thousand years old, so the existence of such totally unmineralized dinosaur bones that have not disintegrated is perfectly consistent with our expectations.

We have previously told you about the unfossilized dinosaur bone which still contained red blood cells and hemoglobin.5 Also, we wrote about ‘fresh dinosaur bones’ in Alaska.6 Let the evolutionist experts writing this book confirm this:

‘An even more spectacular example was found on the North Shore of Alaska, where many thousands of bones lack any significant degree of permineralization. The bones look and feel like old cow bones, and the discoverers of the site did not report it for twenty years because they assumed they were bison, not dinosaur, bones.’

In summary, therefore:

1. Most fossil dinosaur bones still contain the original bone.
2. Even when heavily permineralized (‘fossilized’), this does not need to require more than a few weeks. The Creation/Flood scenario for fossilization would allow many centuries for such permineralization to occur, even under less than ideal conditions.
3. Where bones have not been protected by permineralization, they are sometimes found in a condition which to all intents and purpose looks as if they are at most centuries, not millions of years old.

The Bible’s account of the true history of the world makes it clear that no fossil can be more than a few thousand years old. Dinosaur bones give evidence strongly consistent with this.

2006-09-11 14:38:03 · answer #3 · answered by BrotherMichael 6 · 0 1

Dinosaurs lived at the same time as man and were domesticated.

2006-09-11 17:22:22 · answer #4 · answered by iknowtruthismine 7 · 0 0

Ridiculous. They come from the great flood of Noah. They only give physical evidence to the truth of God's Word.

2006-09-11 14:27:09 · answer #5 · answered by Jay Z 6 · 0 0

no, I believe in the Gap theory
there was something else created here on earth before man and the seven day creation mentioned in teh Bible, why else would God tell them to "re"plenish the earth, the "re" states that there was something here previously.

2006-09-11 14:28:19 · answer #6 · answered by sandrarosette 4 · 0 0

No the Flying Spaghetti Monster did.

2006-09-11 14:27:10 · answer #7 · answered by DontPanic 7 · 0 1

No, why would He bother testing us? You either believe or you don't. If your faith can be swayed by silly versions of science, then it wasn't very strong to begin with.

2006-09-11 14:29:04 · answer #8 · answered by p2of9 4 · 0 1

No, I don't have any problem believing there were dinosaurs.

2006-09-11 14:27:05 · answer #9 · answered by Char 7 · 1 0

check my answer to this previous question

I would have put it here, but well I didn't want to ruin any potential answers.

2006-09-11 14:27:33 · answer #10 · answered by Southpaw 7 · 0 0

fedest.com, questions and answers