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USER COMMENTS BY BACKWOODS DUCK FARMER |
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Page 1 | Page 6 · Found: 415 user comments posted recently. |
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11/29/18 12:17 AM |
Backwoods Duck Farmer | | Mississippi | | | |
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Dying churches are not just a sign of dying souls, they are a sign of dying communities, families, businesses, schools, governments, and ultimately, nations. This is a stark reminder that we're heading into a nightmare that will make all the trials this nation has seen look like a cakewalk. Such is the nature of apostasy. Even though it can be hard to see most of the time, the Lord is preserving a faithful remnant - even among my generation. A generation that is the most lazy, selfish, arrogant, rebellious generation in history. That makes myself and people like me (true Christians who by God's grace and mercy still have heads on their shoulders) stick out like sore thumbs, and there's no doubt in my mind that we'll get in trouble for being different from the herds. But then again, Christ will use those troubles to further purify His church. It all works out for the best in the end! "This day the noise of battle, the next the victor's song." |
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11/27/18 9:38 AM |
Backwoods Duck Farmer | | Mississippi | | | |
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The Quiet Christian Writes: "It is interesting that the researchers also found a commonality in the Animal Kingdom that points to common ancestry, albeit quite recent on the geologic time scale. One might expect commonality among kinds but not all."I've often wondered how after the flood there was suddenly an abundance of new species from the two (or seven) that were on the ark. For example, the fossil record indicates that just a couple centuries (or less) after the flood the world was filled with a massive diversity of species from the elephant kind - wooly mammoths, mastodons, pygmy elephants, the elephants we're familiar with today, and many other round, skinny, tall, short, furry and bald members of the elephant kind. The same goes for many other kinds (including humans). However, we don't see many examples of rapid species appearance today. My theory (and I don't claim to be an authority by any means on the subject) is that the creatures on the ark had a rich genetic make up still relatively fresh amd untainted from the days of creation. This allowed for somewhat drastic changes (what is called "microevolution) within a generation or two. Combine that with a world such as the post-flood world was - one empty of life and biologic competition - and it's the perfect recip |
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