Where was the garden of Eden?
Wouldn't that be an awesome historical find if we could locate it? And the fossils of the fruit tree and snake?
回答 (15)
I'm sure the church would love to find that location to turn it into a tourist attraction to get even more money from believers
Presumably in central Africa, since science tells us that is where the earliest humans lived.
I would say: in the mind of people who think these imaginary places are real.
It was located in the eastern part of the region called Eden. It was watered by a river that became the source for four rivers. Each of the four is named, and a brief description about its course provided. Two of the four rivers mentioned in the account—the Euphrates and the Tigris, or Hiddekel—flow today, and some of their source waters are very close together. The account even names the lands through which those rivers flowed and specifies the natural resources well-known in the area.
Humans originated in Afrika and the oldest hominin fossils are found in the Afar Triangle. It's possible that they originated on an island in the Gulf of Aden. The fossil of the snake is deep in our brains in the form of the limbic system, and the fruit is actually the absence of fruit.
The serpent was a dragon, not a snake.
Best guess would be the Garden of Gethsemane on the Mount of Olives, where Jesus used to like hanging out and where Jacob's Ladder was said to be. Word is, a parking lot has taken over much of that site.
We know full well the garden of Eden went from Babylon in the North to The gates of Egypt, the Sinai in the south
It is very unlikely that even if Eden existed that the tree and snake would be fossilized. However, if I remember correctly the Bible is fairly accurate about locations and it does give a description of where Eden was located.
收錄日期: 2021-05-04 03:03:36
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