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View Full Version : Did Moses Use Alien Technology to Part the Red Sea?



SSanf
November 24th, 2007, 10:45 AM
The Hebrew account in the Torah (Old Testament) tells us the Ten Plagues of Exodus were God's punishment upon Pharaoh for being a hard-hearted. However, the newly revealed historical accounts of the Egyptians offer a natural explanation. They tell us the plagues were the result of a global cataclysm that lasted for months. What is of vital importance to those of us living today is the what actually caused the Ten Plagues of Exodus.

The Egyptians tells us it was a massive object called the Destroyer. As it passed through the core of our solar system, the Earth was pelted with a deadly hail of meteorites and shuddered from numerous catastrophic volcanic and seismic events. The Egyptians tell us it also caused Noah's Flood, and their prophecies tell us it will return in our time with equally destructive results.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nF5UiN3GQ1Y&feature=related

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fWWLVFs4swo&feature=related

omar
November 27th, 2007, 03:51 PM
Moses was a Master Magician. If you read he fought a dual with the Roman Emporer's Court Magician. The other guy turned Moses's staff into a snake,but Moses turned it back into a staff, the other guy turned water into wine, Moses turned the wine into blood.

BlackLili
November 27th, 2007, 03:54 PM
Please tell me you folks are joking. :hutone:

Phoenix Blue
November 27th, 2007, 03:56 PM
I think SSanf's just passing along the link for discussion ... :)

Moving to Paranormal.

Toby Stimpson
November 27th, 2007, 04:33 PM
Random fact... apparently the english translation of the Bible was flawed... it wasn't the 'Red Sea' but instead...the 'Reed Sea". The Reed sea is a marshy area in between egypt proper and the middle east.

banondraig
November 27th, 2007, 04:35 PM
i haven't watched the video, but only some of the plagues make sense with that scenario.
the taking of the first-born children in particular doesn't wash, you'd think younger children would be more vulnerable.

banondraig
November 27th, 2007, 04:37 PM
Random fact... apparently the english translation of the Bible was flawed... it wasn't the 'Red Sea' but instead...the 'Reed Sea". The Reed sea is a marshy area in between egypt proper and the middle east.

sort of around the Sinai peninsula?

map (http://www.worldatlas.com/webimage/countrys/me.htm)

omar
November 28th, 2007, 06:58 PM
I thought it was the Dead Sea, so full of salt you could walk across it.

Sequoia
November 28th, 2007, 09:41 PM
I thought it was the Dead Sea, so full of salt you could walk across it.

The Dead Sea is near Isreal and Jordan... not Egypt. That, and it's an actual body of water, famous for it's salinity and other properties.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dead_sea

I hope you were joking about the Moses stuff? To my memory, from the Bibles that I've read, he never traveled to Rome. What version of the Bible are you referring to? By the way... Jesus is the "guy" who turned water into wine... Long after Moses turned the rivers of Egypt to blood. (All according to the mythology, of course.)

David19
November 29th, 2007, 12:35 PM
The Dead Sea is near Isreal and Jordan... not Egypt. That, and it's an actual body of water, famous for it's salinity and other properties.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dead_sea

I hope you were joking about the Moses stuff? To my memory, from the Bibles that I've read, he never traveled to Rome. What version of the Bible are you referring to? By the way... Jesus is the "guy" who turned water into wine... Long after Moses turned the rivers of Egypt to blood. (All according to the mythology, of course.)

I agree with you, Moses never, ever, went to Rome, so hopefully it was a joke.

As for Moses and alien technology, I doubt it, if Moses did use anything, it was supernatural power/magic.

I find a lot of the "Ancient Astraunaught" fans really sound crazy (not their belief, just they sound like extreme Star Trek fans).

Like the people who say aliens "built" or helped build the Pyramids, the Zigguarats of Mesopotamia, the pyramids of South America and ancient Mexico, Stonehenge, etc, I personally think they're saying humans can't possibly have built those great monuments by themselves, so of course it has to be aliens, which is quite limiting and insulting to humanity.

Sorry if I kind of got OT towards the end.

omar
September 5th, 2008, 05:25 PM
The Dead Sea is near Isreal and Jordan... not Egypt. That, and it's an actual body of water, famous for it's salinity and other properties.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dead_sea

I hope you were joking about the Moses stuff? To my memory, from the Bibles that I've read, he never traveled to Rome. What version of the Bible are you referring to? By the way... Jesus is the "guy" who turned water into wine... Long after Moses turned the rivers of Egypt to blood. (All according to the mythology, of course.)

You are right it was the Egyptian court magician that Moses fought the magical dual with. But like the vidio says as a Prince Preist he new all about magic & the latest technolege. The magical dual is listed Exodus 7...10 - 24.

WokeUpDead
September 6th, 2008, 03:53 PM
Uhhh...yeah. I guess an alien invasion makes about as much sense as the rest of the bible. Does this mean we have to worship ET?

Infinite Grey
September 6th, 2008, 05:27 PM
Sure why not? Moses using Goa'uld technology to part the Red Sea is about as plausible as having Hebrews in Egypt during that era.

omar
September 12th, 2008, 07:52 PM
According to Z. Sitchin's book our gods name was Enki. I am looking for the book, The Lost Book of Enki.

Gareth
September 12th, 2008, 09:11 PM
I saw something about this on the Discovery channel a few years back.

The snake thing can be done by any snake charmer.
How?
When the snake was wrapped around the staff, strangely it stayed there.
When the staff was dropped, the snake would slither off.

I don't remember the thing about the parting of the Red sea.

Copperhead_Slinger
September 21st, 2008, 01:42 PM
Moses was a Master Magician. If you read he fought a dual with the Roman Emporer's Court Magician. The other guy turned Moses's staff into a snake,but Moses turned it back into a staff, the other guy turned water into wine, Moses turned the wine into blood.

Agreed. Also Moses did not spend all that time in Egypt and not learn some magic....in Pow Wow, folk magic the 6th and 7th books of Moses are used. Yeah Moses wrote books 6 and 7 but they were never put in the Bible.

PeatBog
February 24th, 2010, 12:14 PM
Moses parting the Red Sea was allegorical myth, and he was a mythical figure.

Toby Stimpson
February 24th, 2010, 12:46 PM
The story of parting the Red Sea is wrong. It was proven a few years ago that the original texts were mistranslated, and that now the root word points to the sea of reeds, which was a marshy area between Judea and Egypt. So, one possible explanation if you take the account to be truth, is that dry land was created in the marshes somehow to allow the people to cross.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Reed_Sea

Nicholas
February 24th, 2010, 03:54 PM
Or it is fiction, purely written for the mythological aspect of it.

Toby Stimpson
February 25th, 2010, 12:47 AM
Or it is fiction, purely written for the mythological aspect of it.

It depends. Myth is never usually just fiction, there is always some kernel of truth in there somewhere. What that is, is debatable. I think it would be a fallacy to say something is entirely fictional when people and places can be placed in the context of the real or historical world.

Then again, I'm not saying that I believe the myth because there is evidence to suggest that Jews were never slaves in Egypt and did not build the major Pyramids as slaves.

Nicholas
February 25th, 2010, 03:17 AM
There has been little in any biblical text which has been scientifically proven, or is even testable. Some general themes and ideas are correct given the context in which it is written but very little can be taken from it.

Personally given the current evidence I will hold the bible and other Christian/Jewish texts as the same as I view Mythology from Greeks, Romans, and Every other miraculous myth across history.

Infinite Grey
February 25th, 2010, 06:33 AM
It depends. Myth is never usually just fiction, there is always some kernel of truth in there somewhere. What that is, is debatable. I think it would be a fallacy to say something is entirely fictional when people and places can be placed in the context of the real or historical world.

Then again, I'm not saying that I believe the myth because there is evidence to suggest that Jews were never slaves in Egypt and did not build the major Pyramids as slaves.

Yeah the Hebrews were/are real, the Egyptians were/are real, the Red sea was/is real, the Pyramids were/are real - beyond these basic facts (and maybe a few additional but largely superficial facts), the story is fictional.

Selah
February 25th, 2010, 07:17 AM
The story itself is probably fictional, as already stated here.

I've always wondered, too, why aliens from another planet, galaxy, solar system...would care about what's going on on another planet. The idea and/or explination is just silly.