H
Hope1960
Guest
What are your thoughts about question #3 and my quote?your first point about the storm… if the wind force is low you can walk on ice
What are your thoughts about question #3 and my quote?your first point about the storm… if the wind force is low you can walk on ice
Was He skating? Maybe? But He never slipped? He wore sandals, right?I looked it up and found an article suggesting a theory I’ve read before, which is that Jesus was really walking on ice. Thoughts?
The articles include the possibility there were ice floes or chunks of ice.That means it had to be significantly cold. For the Sea of Galilee has salt. How cold does have to be for salt water to freeze? But then again, who is on a boat on ice? The Apostle’s? What a strange sense of reasoning.
Why not???The story of Christ wouldn’t make sense if it was ice. Because, a boat, sinking, and salt water just don’t add up.
Does anyone know if that’s true? Because I doubt ice could’ve been solid, able to be walked upon for a mile or more. Correct?I was told by another poster that Jesus walked at least a mile on the Sea of Galilee.
How do theologians know that the ice wasn’t formed days before Jesus prayed?Ice strong enough to walk on takes time to form… scientist use a ‘freezing degree days’ factor to predict it… yes DAYS… the Bible story implies Jesus was praying for HOURS… of course ice also takes days to thaw… and Peter sinking would have been less than an hour of Jesus walking… so the time frames alone do not support this ‘theory’
In the first link I posted it says this, about the temperatures there:But even in the winter it doesn’t get down below double digits Celsius.
Is this, above, (in the arrows) true?Also, below it says (from my second link) pretty much what you also said. This isn’t a Catholic site, but is it correct?
<<<<<<<<<<<<<But the Sea of Galilee does not have ice floes, and the idea that it has had them in the past is outrageous speculation. This idea is not based on historical records or scientific observation. There are no records at all, ancient or modern, of ice floes ever having occurred on the Sea of Galilee (as these academics admit in their paper). Their claim involves the most tenuous and esoteric of reasoning.>>>>>>>>>>>>
This is the 2006 Nof paper, right? If by same decades Nof means the 1,000 year period where he says temperatures may have dropped that low for two days once or twice, and then it actually did, and significant ice actually managed to form, and coincidentally it happened in the same few years of Jesus’ ministry, and one of those “blocks” of ice was large enough to hold a person, and Jesus was crazy enough like a fox to ride one of these blocks out into the middle of the lake having never seen ice before, and was able to stay on the ice without proper equipment like ice shoes, and there was at the same time not enough ice to damage the apostles’ boat. … Then we still can’t account for Peter’s walking on water nor can we account for why none of the Gospel accounts record this ice forming on the lake in connection with this event.<<<<<<<<< The results suggest temperatures dropped to 25 degrees Fahrenheit (-4 degrees Celsius) during one of the two cold periods 2,500 to 1,500 years ago for up to two days, the same decades during which Jesus lived.>>>>>>>>
No, it’s from MSNBC, linked in my OP.This is the 2006 Nof paper, right?
Yes, they weren’t that much cooler.Is it impossible even for the days of Christ, when days and nights were cooler than now?
And even then, if those weather conditions happened, it wouldn’t have lasted long enough for the ice to form so thick and widespread that a man could walk on it, correct?Nof only claims that there is a possibility that the correct weather conditions to bring the surface temperatures below freezing
could feasibly occur once a millenia or so.
Were they out on the Sea for two days?the minimum considered safe for ice skating, at -4 Celsius. In a week. 2 days wouldn’t make an inch of the stuff.