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14 answers

Finding chariot parts in the red sea proves nothing. They found a wheel. You'd think there would be a little more evidence if an entire regime of an army chased the Jews into the red sea.

2007-12-08 09:06:56 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 2 0

No, the last thing I saw was a show that said the Red Sea was probably a mistranslation of an area called the Sea of Reeds, and that the water was parted as part of the drawback before a tsunami created by a large volcano in the Mediterranean.

2007-12-08 09:11:33 · answer #2 · answered by mommanuke 7 · 2 1

Many miracles in the Bible, as well as occurrences from the early books, are very hard to prove because of a lack of archaeological or other literary evidence. Moses' parting of the sea is similarly hard to prove scientifically, as well as mistranslations of the original Hebrew change the understanding of the passages in question.

2007-12-08 09:09:11 · answer #3 · answered by capt.harkness 1 · 1 0

The only thing there is, is a picture of something that might be a wheel under water. They aren't sure it is a wheel, much less what kind of wheel or the date because (surprise) it wasn't brought to the surface. Even if it IS a wheel, the odds are that it fell off a ship.

There is nothing that proves any such thing.

2007-12-08 09:06:14 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

there's a theory that says that moses might walked between two lakes and everyone thought that its the red sea, but those two lakes have similiar names as the red sea. I heard this theory somewhere.

2007-12-08 09:18:19 · answer #5 · answered by baywatch 3 · 0 1

I fail to see how ANY discovery could prove that moses parted the red sea.

2007-12-08 09:03:27 · answer #6 · answered by punch 7 · 5 3

Well if he did not part the red sea there was still a miracle that happend there that day, all the Egyptian army drown in the red sea. whether it was only 6 inches where they crossed, or they took a boat, or whether they flew, fact remains that Pharaoh and his army died that day in the sea

2007-12-08 09:06:48 · answer #7 · answered by john d 3 · 4 5

I hate to break it to you. One wheel does not make a Pharoah's army.

2007-12-08 09:10:36 · answer #8 · answered by Shawn B 7 · 1 0

if you CHOOSE to believe in something that remains constantly unprovable - whose fault is that?

Believe what you will. Disbelieve what you will.

What matters - live in peace, care for each other and don't let fanatics and idiots rule your peace.

2007-12-08 09:16:39 · answer #9 · answered by Anonymous · 0 1

Yeah, I'm with punch on this one...I don't know what you're talking about...

How can it be proven? Were there chariots and horse bones?

2007-12-08 09:05:40 · answer #10 · answered by Anonymous · 2 1

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