The Jewish War Series (Part 9): Ananus the High Priest vs. The Zealots (and further betrayal by John of Gischala)

After the zealots had seized control of the temple complex and thrown out all the established priests, the high priest Ananus made one last effort to regain control of the city and crush the zealot revolutionaries. The fact was the majority of the citizens in Jerusalem, although they had no love for Rome, quickly saw…

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The Jewish War Series (Part 8: The Revolutionaries in Jerusalem)

Upon coming to Jerusalem, John of Gischala attempted to rally the populace to engage the Roman army in battle. He had seen the difficulty the Roman soldiers had when they attempted to take some of the more fortified cities in Galilee—and he was convinced that Jerusalem was big enough and vastly more fortified than any…

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The Jewish War Series (Part 7): Vespasian Conquers Galilee

After the taking of Jotapata, Vespasian dispatched the 5th and 10th legions to secure Scythopolis in Samaria, while he took two other legions to the coastal city of Caesarea. From there, he marched down the coast to Joppa, and promptly destroyed it. Meanwhile, some of the Jews who had escaped from Jotapata made their way…

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Two Easter Poems…

I thought I’d share two poems I wrote quite awhile ago. The first one is 25 years old–I wrote it on the Easter my sister and I were stranded in Colby, Kansas, with a broken down truck that was in the shop over the Easter weekend. The second one is 20 years old–I wrote it…

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An Extended Analysis of Ken Ham’s Book “Six Days” (Part 7: Death and Disease, and How Ham’s Intepretation of Genesis 1-11 Promotes Biblical Illiteracy and Destroys the Harvest)

What better way to conclude my analysis of Ken Ham’s Six Days: The Age of the Earth and the Decline of the Church than with a seventh post? On this seventh post, I will rest from my critique of Ken Ham. The final chapter of Ham’s book is entitled, “Implications of Accepting Evolutionary Ideas.” In…

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An Extended Analysis of Ken Ham’s Book “Six Days” (Part 6: A Historical Adam, More Pot Shots at Christian Academics…and Brawndo! It’s What Plants Crave!)

Here in my second-to-last installment in my blog series looking at Ken Ham’s book, Six Days: The Age of the Earth and the Decline of the Church, I am going to take a look at chapters 9 and 10…Enjoy. Chapter 9: The Necessity of a Historical Adam If you have been keeping up with this…

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An Extended Book Analysis of Ken Ham’s “Six Days” (Part 5: Pot Shots at Christians…and a Really Big Blender)

In this next post of my book analysis of Ken Ham’s book, Six Days: The Age of the Earth and the Decline of the Church, I am going to take a look at chapter 7 (“Genesis and Evolutionary Ideas”) and chapter 8 (“Was There a Global Flood?”). Chapter 7: Pot Shots at Christians who know…

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The Jewish War Series (Part 6: Vespasian Begins the Roman Advance into Galilee)

By AD 67, the emperor Nero had chosen the old, proven general Vespasian to go in and subdue Judea. Vespasian had a proven war record from his successes in Germania and Britannia. And once chosen by Nero, Vespasian then called for his son Titus to bring the 5th and 10th legions from Alexandria assist him….

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An Extended Analysis of Ken Ham’s Book “Six Days” (Part 4: Genesis, Millions of Years, and Ham’s Affinity for Richard Dawkins and Bill Maher)

In my last post look at his book Six Days: The Age of the Earth and the Decline of the Church, I looked at Ken Ham’s attempt to explain proper biblical exegesis and noted that although Ken Ham correctly explains some of the key principles when it comes to proper exegesis, when the rubber hits…

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An Extended Analysis of Ken Ham’s Book, “Six Days” (Part 3: Biblical Exegesis, Fire-Breathing Dinosaurs, and Why Not Interpreting “Day” as a Literal 24-Hour Day is a Greater Attack on the Gospel Than Denying the Resurrection…yes, Ken Ham really said that)

Chapters 4-5 in Ken Ham’s book, Six Days: The Age of the Earth and the Decline of the Church, is right up my alley, for in them, Ken Ham tries to make the exegetical case for interpreting Genesis 1-11 as literal history. As someone who teaches Biblical Studies for a living, it is fascinating to…

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