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sephardic-male
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17 Feb 2013, 7:46 pm

I competely forgot that this forum existed so i am back. I no longer believe Judaism and God after i did some archaeological and historical research so i will change the link in my profile which linkes to a jewish religious website



Sylkat
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18 Feb 2013, 5:44 am

Welcome back!

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Krabo
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18 Feb 2013, 6:14 am

How deep did you dig in eight years?



daydreamer84
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18 Feb 2013, 3:30 pm

welcome back to WP



sephardic-male
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18 Feb 2013, 4:22 pm

Krabo wrote:
How deep did you dig in eight years?


i read stuff like the bible unearthed by Israel Finkelstein

watch documentaries like the bible's buried secrets the PBS Nova version

and do a lot of research which shows that the Jewish bible is a plagiarism of Egyptian, Caananite and Mesopotamian Myths

and found out that Israelites are originally Caananites. there was no exodus and no invasion of Caanan. the so called Torah was written by 3-4 different authors. and come to it's present form during and after the Babylonian Exile. the Jewish bible was written between 900 and 400 BCE the book of Daniel was written around 160 BCE.



richardbenson
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01 Mar 2013, 7:03 pm

Welcome back. All religions do is copycat each other, I used to be religious aswell until I actually did some investigating myself



Ichinin
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01 Mar 2013, 7:16 pm

Congrats, you have seen the light... and realised that it was just a LED flashlight.


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"It is far better to grasp the Universe as it really is than to persist in delusion, however satisfying and reassuring" (Carl Sagan)


sephardic-male
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05 Nov 2013, 2:35 pm

[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qalTJzk4kO0[/youtube]

The producers surveyed the evidence and take positions that are mainstream among archaeologists and historians, although they continue to raise objections among both Christians who believe in the bible as literal truth and minimalists who assert that the Bible has no historical validation.

The program airs archaeologists' assertions that:[2]
On the Origins of Israel
There is no archaeological evidence to corroborate the stories of Adam and Eve, Noah's flood and Abraham.
There is no evidence to support the mass exodus of the Israelites from Egypt, although some now believe that a small group did escape from Egypt; however, they were not Israelites but, rather, Canaanite slaves. On their journey back to Canaan they pass through Midian, where they are inspired by stories of the Shasu's god, Yhw.
The Land of Canaan (called the Promised Land in the Hebrew Bible) was not taken over by conquest as described in the Book of Joshua – rather, the Israelites actually might have been Canaanites who migrated into the highlands and created a new identity for themselves. Of the 31 sites the Bible says that Joshua conquered, few showed any signs of war. "Joshua really didn't fight the Battle of Jericho," William G. Dever said.
Some events of the Israelite kingdom given in the Book of Kings are more or less accurate as history.

On the development of the Hebrew Bible or Tanakh
The Bible's first books have been traced back to multiple authors writing over a span of centuries. (See Documentary hypothesis.)
The early books of the Bible, Genesis, Exodus, Leviticus, Numbers, Deuteronomy, Joshua, Samuel and Kings, reached almost their present form during the Babylonian exile of the 6th century BCE.

On the development of monotheism in Israel
The Israelite religion was not exclusively monotheistic from the beginning as suggested in the Hebrew Bible, rather, the archaeological evidence indicates that, before the Babylonian exile in the 6th century BCE, the early Israelites were polytheistic and worshipped the local god Yahweh alongside his "wife," a fertility goddess named Asherah.
The emergence of monotheism and the belief in the universality of Yahweh was a response to the tragic experience of the Babylonian exile of the Israelites in the 6th century BCE. According to Dever, "It's out of this that comes the reflection that polytheism was our [the Israelites'] downfall."