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2007-01-30 09:57:47 · 28 answers · asked by Anonymous in Society & Culture Religion & Spirituality

28 answers

Yes.

Jesus rode into Jerusalem on a T-Rex.

2007-01-30 10:02:27 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 3 3

first of all GO BEARS!! but yes they did, man's footprints and dinosaur footprints have been found in the same layers of rock. there is no evidence suggesting that they didn't live contemporaniously. There is even a human footpring inside a dinosaur footprint with a lot of detail suggesting that the rock fossilized very fast. many creationists have done excellent studies on this including Dr Kent Hovind and Dr Carl Baugh. there have been many cave paintings found with depictions of dinosaurs made by ancient man. these include the "neandrithal man" paintings in France, when they saw the dinosaur, that part of the cave was blocked off to the public. lots of native american paintings include dinosaurs. some of them show didnosaurs that we didn't know about at the time, but have found the fossils. these art works of dinosaurs have been proven autheuentic and note that the dinosaurs bodies are anotomically correct and consistent with the fossils we find. there are many legends by natives describing dinosaur like creatures. some people believe that the lock ness monster and other mysterious creatures are remaining dinosaurs. it also fits in with the Bible. the Bible talks about Leviathan and Behemoth which cannot be animals that are alive today even though some try to argue this. you can also say that because everything lived longer before Noah's flood, and reptiles never stop growing, lizards would be huge in those days. fresh dinosaur meat was found in africa that was estimated to be 80 years old. the Icca stones of peru have depicitons of dinosaurs. the reason the public doesn't know about this is that it disproves evolution and that is not allowed. check it out yourself, you will find lots of proof towards God creating the dinosaur along with man and that dinos might still be around today.

2007-01-30 10:20:46 · answer #2 · answered by My son the Creation Scientist 2 · 0 0

Malone's excellent book, Search for the Truth.
Is this a scene from the blockbuster movie, Jurassic Park? It could be, but it isn't. This description, which perfectly fits an Apatosaurus, is a paraphrased description taken from one of the oldest books of the Bible, Job 40:15-24. If dinosaurs have been extinct for 65 million years, how could a writer of the Bible have accurately described the appearance, food, and habitat of this creature?
The vast majority of books on dinosaurs are written from an evolutionary perspective which assumes that the dinosaurs died out 65 million years ago. The leading model for the demise of the dinosaur involves a large asteroid hitting the earth. Yet the most obvious alternative explanation is almost always ignored. Almost all fossils are the remains of creatures buried by water-borne sediment which has subsequently turned to rock. If this is due to the flood of worldwide extent, as the water flowed over all the land surfaces, animals would have been drowned and been buried by massive amounts of rapidly accumulating sediment. It is not all surprising to find a general lack of burial mixing between these very different kinds of animals due to local or ecological grouping.
Genesis 7:2 states that Noah saved two of every representative "kind" of land animal on the ark. Noah would have taken young specimens, not huge, older creatures. Dinosaurs would have emerged from the ark to inhabit an entirely different world. Instead of a warm, mild climate worldwide, they would have found a harsh climate which soon settled into an ice age. If climatic hardships did not cause the dinosaur's extinction, man's tendency to destroy probably did.
In the early 1900's on the Doheny expedition into the Grand Canyon, Indian cave drawings were found which closely resembled a duck-billed dinosaur. Legends from ancient China to ancient England have recorded descriptions of dinosaur-like creatures. The Kuku Yalanji aboriginal people have paintings which look exactly like plesiosaurs. These and other intriguing evidences seem to indicate that perhaps that age of the dinosaurs ended more recently than is commonly taught. Christians do not need to feel foolish about standing on Scripture in their understanding of the world around us. There is ample evidence to support the Biblical record. Evolution serves as the foundation basis for the religions of humanism and atheism. These world views are popular because man, instead of God, decides on rules and moral standards. Creation serves as the foundational basis for Christianity which acknowledges that all things were created by God, that we live in a fallen universe, and that it will be restored to perfection in the future.

2007-01-30 11:56:53 · answer #3 · answered by Freedom 7 · 0 0

No. Dinosaurs lived and became extinct long before the earliest man appeared. Of course, many bible literalists will tell you that A) there never were dinosaurs or B) they were here at the same time early man was here. Neither is correct though. I think the reason they believe this is because they believe that Earth is only 6000 years old. I don't know how they came up with this. Maybe there are some fundamentalist bible literalists here who could tell us. In fact, maybe I'll ask them in a question. They'll probably just call me an atheist though. That's usually what they do when you question them.

2007-01-30 10:09:54 · answer #4 · answered by tychobrahe 3 · 0 1

What I hear on the shows I've watched on Discover and TLC is this: once the dinosaurs became extinct, the small (think mouse size) mammals were able to start living, thriving and evolving on the surface rather in caves. Eventually, some of these mammals evolved into homo sapiens.

So in principal we did co-exist but not as humanoids and dinosaurs as I think you are asking.

2007-01-30 10:27:03 · answer #5 · answered by txkathidy 4 · 0 1

There have been some ancient paintings found of what looks like dinosaurs and humans together, but the evidence is inconclusive. Ask paleontologists and they will more than likely say dinosaurs were long dead before humans came about. So, it's best to ask the experts than the religious nuts in here.

2007-01-30 10:01:32 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 2 3

No, dinosaurs were long gone before the emergence of man.

2007-01-30 11:16:36 · answer #7 · answered by Anonymous · 0 1

Sure. I saw it in the newspaper. It was in BC.

There used to be a documentary on TV, called the Flintstones, which explained it.

What I want to know is how Fred could slide all the way down the dinosaur's tail? Did they have rollerblades back then?

2007-01-30 10:00:57 · answer #8 · answered by Dave P 7 · 2 2

Why yes they did. Gravity was also different then, which is why 180 ton dinosaurs like the Ultrasaur could lift their head off the ground without breaking their necks, and birds like the Teratorn with 25 foot wingspans could fly.

2007-01-30 10:00:56 · answer #9 · answered by Atlas 6 · 1 2

I doubt it. But I just really wanted to say that I hope Da Bears kick some Colt a** this Sunday!!!

A fellow Bears fanatic

2007-01-30 10:10:25 · answer #10 · answered by Emily & her mommy love Da Bears! 6 · 1 1

No,dinosaurs were long gone before God created Adam.

2007-01-30 10:03:59 · answer #11 · answered by gwhiz1052 7 · 0 2

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