Mgoblue201
Won't stop picking the right nation
I might as well respond to this video. This is an argument that sounds good on its surface but is filled with massive assumptions. The first deals with Daniel, which most scholars now agree was written after Alexander the Great had already lived (there is no proof in the old canard that rabbis greeted Alexander at the gate by saying that prophecy had predicted his arrival). There is no proof that it was written earlier, and there are parts of it that apparently contradict actual history.Game Analyst said:Jesus discussed Noah's story as fact not fiction:
When the Son of Man returns, it will be like it was in Noahs day. In those days before the flood, the people were enjoying banquets and parties and weddings right up to the time Noah entered his boat. People didnt realize what was going to happen until the flood came and swept them all away. That is the way it will be when the Son of Man comes."
We each must make the choice to either believe what Jesus said or believe he was a lunatic who was an expert at lying.
You might find this interesting on your search for truth:
Why the Bible? Ravi Zacharias at the University of Illinois
For two evenings, Ravi Zacharias answers hard-hitting questions from a student-packed auditorium at University of Illinois.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pHRP0I2SrVs
Second, there is also no contemporary proof outside of the Bible that most of the events of Jesus's life actually happened, and there is no good reason to trust the Bible due to contradictions and obvious stretches of OT verses that in no way actually represented prophecy (once again, the use of Psalm 16 in Acts 2).
Furthermore, if the Bible had all that much predictive power, then it should have been able to forecast modern world events, especially if it's so accurate that it predicted Alexander the Great. And before you bring up the statehood of Israel, the Bible was clearly talking about the Messiah coming down to rule Israel as the kingdom of God for all eternity. Those are slightly different things.