I’m not arguing against common ancestry or some form of descent with modification. What I’m saying is that accidental processes cannot possibly have invented these things.
Professor Israel Hershkovitz (above) of the David-Manot Cave project compares a Neanderthal skull (R) and a Homo Sapiens skull (L), outside the excavation cave in Manot, Western Galilee in Northern Israel, on January 28, 2015. Archaeologists discovered a 55,000-year-old human skull in the Manot cave, which is the earliest fossilized evidence of an anatomically modern human […]
If fire indeed was invented in Israel, will the Boycott Israel movement stop lighting matches?
As this week's Parsha is Breishit (Genesis), we thought it would be interesting to run one of Rabbi Natan Slifkin's talks on Torah, Creation... and Dinosaurs. The photo above is from the site AllAboutJerusalem.com and the article there talks about the dinosaur footprints that were found in Beit Zayit in Jerusalem.
By Lisa Liel
Creating similar but different versions of a single thing, to serve different purposes, is a hallmark of creative action.
By Shalom Bear
Israel's rabbis don't see evolution as a threat, and some believe it will help the students add more depth and understanding to their Torah learning and faith.
Rabbi Slifkin gives us a Jewish view on Evolution.
By Shalom Bear
Grades 8 and 9 will begin learning about the theory of evolution starting next year.
By Fred Reed
One plausible explanation for this rigid evolutionary monotheism, though I think an incorrect one, is a fear that the children might come to believe in Creationism.
The school removed evolution related questions from 52 standardized tests.
