Metadatics 1 6 24

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Notes

  1. Metadatics 1 6 24 Tractor Tire

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  1. In the beginning (1:1-2:3)

    Compare with Gen 2:4-25 in which the order of events is entirely different.

    The Genesis 1 account conflicts with the order of events that are known to science.

    The earth and 'heaven' are created together 'in the beginning,' whereas according to current estimates, the earth and universe are about 4.6 and 13.8 billion years old, respectively.

    Also in the first creation account, the earth is created before light, sun and stars; birds and whales before reptiles and insects; and flowering plants before any animals. The order of events known from science is in each case just the opposite.

  2. Let there be light. (v.3)

    These are God's first spoken words. It's not clear who he was talking to.

    God continues to talk (to himself?) throughout the creation process. (See verses 6, 9, 11, 14-15, 20, 22, 24, and 26.)

    But after creating animals, God stops talking to himself and begins talking to them. (See verse 22.)

  3. God divided the light from the darkness. (v.4)

    Yet he didn't make the light producing objects (the sun and the stars) until the fourth day (1:14-19).

    And how could there be 'the evening and the morning' on the first day if there was no sun to mark them?

  4. The first day (v.5)

    When did the first day begin? Did God create heaven and earth before or during the first day? And when did his spirit move on the waters? Did day 1 begin with the creation of light?

    It's impossible to tell from the text, but it seems more likely that God began his workweek with with the creation of light. So I'm calling everything before that 'Day Zero'.

  5. A firmament (v.6)

    God spends one-sixth of his entire creative effort (the second day) working on a solid firmament. This strange structure, which God calls heaven, is intended to separate the higher waters from the lower waters.

  6. Let the earth bring forth grass. (v.11)

    Plants are made on the third day before there was a sun to drive their photosynthetic processes (1:14-19). Keycue 9 2 – displays all menu shortcut commands download.

    God lets 'the earth bring forth' the plants, rather than creating them directly. Maybe Genesis is not so anti-evolution after all.

  7. Let them be for signs. (v.14)

    God placed the sun, moon, and stars in the firmament so that they can be used 'for signs'. Cabinet 1 0 2. This, of course, is exactly what astrologers do: read 'the signs' in the Zodiac to predict what will happen on Earth.

  8. God made two great lights. (v.16)

    But the moon is not a light; it only reflects light from the sun. And why, if God made the moon to 'rule the night', does it spend half of its time moving through the daytime sky?

  9. He made the stars also. (v.16)

    God spends a day making light (before making the sun and stars) and separating light from darkness; then, at the end of a hard day's work, and almost as an afterthought, he makes 1024 stars.

  10. To give light upon the earth (v.17)

    Then why is only a tiny fraction of stars visible from earth? Under the best conditions, no more than a few thousand stars are visible with the unaided eye, yet there are hundreds of billions of stars in our galaxy and a hundred billion or so galaxies. Were they all created 'to give light upon the earth'?

  11. Let the waters bring forth abundantly the moving creature that hath life, and fowl. (v.20)

    Notice that the waters brought forth the living creatures -- God didn't create them directly.

    The same language is used to describe the origin of land animals verse 11 in and plants in verse 24.

  12. God made the beast of the earth. (v.25)
  13. God said, Let us make man in our image. (v.26)
  14. Let them have dominion. (v.26)

    This couldn't be true, of course, since millions of other species existed for millions of years before humans existed. But this verse is used by fundamentalist Christians to justify their mistreatment of other species and disregard for the environment. After all, they believe that God created the other species just for them, so they can do whatever they please with them.

  15. Male and female created he them. (v.27)

    God created humans -- male and female -- in his own image. So does this mean that God is both male and female?

  16. Be fruitful, and multiply (v.28)

    This verse is used to justify Christian opposition to birth control.

  17. I have given you every herb .. and every tree .. for meat. (v.29)

    Since many plants have evolved poisons to protect against animals that would like to eat them, God's advice is more than a little reckless. Would you tell your children to go out in the garden and eat whatever plants they encounter? Of course not. But then, you are much nicer and smarter than God.

  18. To every beast .. I have given every green herb for meat. (v.30)

    All animals were originally herbivores. Tapeworms, vampire bats, mosquitoes, and barracudas -- all were strict vegetarians, as created by God.

  19. Behold, it was very good. (v.31)

    God purposefully designed a system that ensures the suffering and death of all his creatures, parasite and host, predator and prey.

Have dominion over every living thing.
Let them have dominion over the fish of the sea, and over the fowl of the air, and over every living thing that moveth upon the earth. 1:26
Have dominion over the fish of the sea, and over the fowl of the air, and over every living thing that moveth upon the earth. 1:28
Be fruitful and multiply.
Be fruitful, and multiply. 1:28a
Replenish the earth.
Replenish the earth. 1:28b
Subdue the earth.
Subdue it [the earth]. 1:28c
Be a vegan.
And God said, Behold, I have given you every herb bearing seed, which is upon the face of all the earth, and every tree, in the which is the fruit of a tree yielding seed; to you it shall be for meat. 1:29

Habitify: habit tracker 4 2. Drunk With Blood: Genesis

OLYMPIA, Wash. (AP) — In response to a security breach that exposed personal information from around 1.6 million unemployment claims filed last year, the Washington Senate has unanimously passed a measure that creates a state Office of Cybersecurity.

The measure, passed by the chamber on Wednesday, creates the new office within the Office of the Chief Information Officer. The bill now heads to the House for consideration.

If passed by the full Legislature and signed by Gov. Jay Inslee, the office would set security policies and develop centralized protocols for managing the state's information technology assets.

Earlier this month, the state auditor's office said the breach involved third-party software used by the auditor's office to transmit files. The software vendor, Accellion, announced last month that it had been attacked in December.

Metadatics 1 6 24

The measure would direct all state entities — institutions of higher education, the Legislature, the judiciary, and state agencies — to adopt programs that incorporate cybersecurity standards set by the office and to report any major cybersecurity incident within 24 hours.

Metadatics 1 6 24

The measure would direct all state entities — institutions of higher education, the Legislature, the judiciary, and state agencies — to adopt programs that incorporate cybersecurity standards set by the office and to report any major cybersecurity incident within 24 hours.

Metadatics 1 6 24 Tractor Tire

The new office would be the point of contact for all policy related to data privacy and protection, and would be charged with investigating all major cybersecurity incidents.





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