God's Garments and Human Origin God's Garments

by Rhett Stuart

Published 2018: 144 pages

Buy from Amazon.com

 

 

FROM Amazon:


God had His master plan in place long before creating and destroying the dinosaurs of the Mesozoic Era, leaving their fossils as evidence of this anciently folded garment of God. God’s current conflict in Heaven, of Satan’s loss of the power of death and the emptying of Paradise, the exposure of Satan’s hidden involvement in religious organizations, God’s Book of Life with our names, the importance of the genealogy of Jesus and the supernatural abilities our new spiritual bodies will have, are all part of God’s master plan. He already knows how this all ends and about the post-apocalyptic years yet to come. Even some wealthy hedge fund managers can sense the “big event” coming at the end of our current Era as God prepares planet Earth for His seventh Era.

 

Does Science and the Bible agree on Human Origin? The inconsistencies in Genesis are resolved when Genesis is understood as being written in the same order as the events happened, with the creation of ancient humans about 150 thousand years ago on God’s sixth day, well before Adam was made with farm animals and modern crop plants to assist them about 6 thousand years ago. This explains who Cain was afraid of and who he married, and why Adam, the field animals and Eve were made in a different order than the animals and created humans of the sixth day. Is the 1 in 40,320 chance of modern science and archeology matching the six days of Genesis, and human origin, just a major coincidence? What are the seven clues in Noah’s account that this flood wasn’t planet-wide? —

 

The Bible, as originally written, really is infallible and inerrant: While avoiding the spiritual dangers in presenting a creation view as a strongly held belief, the Gap Theory, Day-Age, Analogical Day and 24 Hour Day views all play a converging role in this biblical and scientific investigation and analysis of Genesis and God’s master plan, and why is it exactly that we think God should be fair.