Genesis Revisited Quotes
Genesis Revisited
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Zecharia Sitchin1,132 ratings, 4.12 average rating, 67 reviews
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Genesis Revisited Quotes
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“Genesis represents not just religion but also science—one”
― Genesis Revisited: Is Modern Science Catching Up With Ancient Knowledge?
― Genesis Revisited: Is Modern Science Catching Up With Ancient Knowledge?
“the creation tales of Genesis are edited and abbreviated versions of much more detailed Mesopotamian texts, which were in turn versions of an original Sumerian text.”
― Genesis Revisited: Is Modern Science Catching Up With Ancient Knowledge?
― Genesis Revisited: Is Modern Science Catching Up With Ancient Knowledge?
“from publicly available documents. But now it is also evident that when the mists of leaks, rumors, and denials are pierced, if not the public, then the world's leaders have been aware for some time first, that there is one more planet in our Solar System and second, that we are not alone.”
― Genesis Revisited: Is Modern Science Catching Up With Ancient Knowledge?
― Genesis Revisited: Is Modern Science Catching Up With Ancient Knowledge?
“The biblical tale of Man's creation is, of course, the crux of the debate—at times bitter—between Creationists and Evolutionists and of the ongoing confrontation between them—at times in courts, always on school boards. As previously stated, both sides had better read the Bible again (and in its Hebrew original);”
― Genesis Revisited: Is Modern Science Catching Up With Ancient Knowledge?
― Genesis Revisited: Is Modern Science Catching Up With Ancient Knowledge?
“Ordinary clay, it seems, has two basic properties essential to life. It can store energy and also transmit it. So, the scientists reason, clay could have acted as a "chemical factory" for turning inorganic raw materials into more complex molecules. Out of those complex molecules arose life—and, one”
― Genesis Revisited: Is Modern Science Catching Up With Ancient Knowledge?
― Genesis Revisited: Is Modern Science Catching Up With Ancient Knowledge?
“Life" is defined as the ability to absorb nutrients (of any kind) and to replicate, not just to exist.”
― Genesis Revisited: Is Modern Science Catching Up With Ancient Knowledge?
― Genesis Revisited: Is Modern Science Catching Up With Ancient Knowledge?
“day, us. That the Bible's been saying so all along, clay being what Genesis meant by the "dust of the ground" that formed man, is obvious. What is not so obvious is how often we have been saying it to one another, and without knowing it.”
― Genesis Revisited: Is Modern Science Catching Up With Ancient Knowledge?
― Genesis Revisited: Is Modern Science Catching Up With Ancient Knowledge?
“There the original Sumerian Epic of Creation was translated and revised so that Marduk, the Babylonian national god, was assigned a celestial counterpart. By renaming Nibiru "Marduk" in the Babylonian versions of the creation story, the Babylonians usurped for Marduk the attributes of a supreme "God of Heaven and Earth." This version—the most intact one found so far—is known as Enuma elish”
― Genesis Revisited: Is Modern Science Catching Up With Ancient Knowledge?
― Genesis Revisited: Is Modern Science Catching Up With Ancient Knowledge?
“explains why "The Adam" was created: "For there was no Adam to till the land.”
― Genesis Revisited: Is Modern Science Catching Up With Ancient Knowledge?
― Genesis Revisited: Is Modern Science Catching Up With Ancient Knowledge?
“correct reading emerges: When, in the beginning, The Lord created the Heaven and the Earth, The Earth, not yet formed, was in the void, and there was darkness upon Tiamat. Then the Wind of the Lord swept upon its waters and the Lord commanded, "Let there be lightning!" and there was a bright light.”
― Genesis Revisited: Is Modern Science Catching Up With Ancient Knowledge?
― Genesis Revisited: Is Modern Science Catching Up With Ancient Knowledge?
“they recorded a tale of creation that matches, in some parts word for word, the tale of Genesis. George Smith of the British Museum pieced together the broken tablets that held the creation texts and published, in 1876, The Chaldean Genesis; it conclusively established that there indeed existed an Akkadian text of the Genesis tale, written in the Old Babylonian dialect, that preceded the biblical text by at least a thousand years.”
― Genesis Revisited: Is Modern Science Catching Up With Ancient Knowledge?
― Genesis Revisited: Is Modern Science Catching Up With Ancient Knowledge?
“Clay, they discovered, has two basic properties essential to life: the capacity to store and the ability to transfer energy.”
― Genesis Revisited: Is Modern Science Catching Up With Ancient Knowledge?
― Genesis Revisited: Is Modern Science Catching Up With Ancient Knowledge?
“when civilization began, the gods who were worshipped—the focus of the act of being "religious"—were none other than the Anunnaki/Nefilim, who were the source of all manner of knowledge, alias science, on Earth.”
― Genesis Revisited: Is Modern Science Catching Up With Ancient Knowledge?
― Genesis Revisited: Is Modern Science Catching Up With Ancient Knowledge?
