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May 18th , 2024

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TODAY EVIDENCE THAT LOT WIFE TURNED INTO A PILLAR OF SALT BY PAT ROBERTSON

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Presently THE RECORD. The accompanying short sections are from the GodSaidManSaid include, "Parcel's Wife:"

 

 One of the old world's most noted and cited history specialists, Joseph ben Matthias, all the more ordinarily known as Flavius Josephus, was a Jew brought into the world at the estimated season of the execution of the Lord Jesus Christ. Josephus was the child of a religious family and could make a case for the heredity of King David through his mom's legacy. He was a Jewish General in the Jewish rebel against Rome where he was likewise taken prisoner. He was subsequently charged by Rome to compose a background marked by the Jewish public. This is his record of Lot's better half:

 

In any case, Lot's better half constantly turning around to see the city as she went from it, and being too pleasantly curious what might happen to it, in spite of the fact that God had taboo her to do as such, was changed into a mainstay of salt; for I have seen it, and it stays at this day.

 

Very much kept in history was Clement, a Roman general and contemporary of Jesephus, who said that he likewise saw Lot's significant other, who was transformed into a mainstay of salt. In the following hundred years, the Roman speaker Irenaeus authenticated the presence of Lot's better half and remarked with amazement on how it had persevered for such a long time with every one of its individuals flawless.

 

Today, on the Jordan Valley Road, while heading to Eilat, you can look and see a huge, unfavorable mainstay of salt that looks like a shrouded lady thinking back to where Sodom and Gommorah once flourished… a spot called the Vale of Siddim. The old Phoenician minister, Sanchuniathon, composed of this spot and said, "The Vale of Sidimus sank and turned into a lake, continuously dissipating and containing no fish, an image of retaliation and of death for the violator." This "shrouded woman" neglecting the Vale of Siddim is referred to by the Bedouins of today as "Part's Wife." [End of quote]

 

The accompanying portions are from a May/June 2009 issue of Biblical Archeology Review. The title of the element is "The way Lot's Wife Became a Pillar of Salt:"

 

An exceptional mainstay of salt at the southern finish of the Dead Sea — it is 65 feet high! — can without much of a stretch be viewed as having a human structure, particularly when drawn closer from the north. Long recognized as Lot's Wife, this salt support point may maybe be taken as the remaining parts of the one who thought back by the people who decipher the Holy Words in a real sense. [End of quote]

 

(It ought to be noticed that the creator of this element isn't a simpleton.)

 

The mainstay of salt known as Lot's Wife is situated on Mt. Sedom close to the southwestern shore of the Dead Sea. The current Hebrew articulation for Sedom is "Sodom." obviously, Lot and his family were escaping the evil city of Sodom. The component article proceeds:

 

Also, we can now try and date the production of the salt support point — to around a long time back, or 2000 BC. What's more, a surprising part of its creation is that it showed up out of nowhere — close to the time generally ascribed to the obliteration of Sodom and Gomorrah.

 

THE WOMAN ON THE HILL. Since Lot's Wife is roosted on the slant of a steadily rising heap of salt, the support point is additionally rising comparative with ground level as the foundation of the mountain subsides. Frumkin found that Lot's Wife rises around 0.3 inches each year, implying that when the landmark initially seemed a long time back, it would have been 100 feet further down the slant than it is presently. In those days, the stone would have been all the more straightforwardly apparent to passing voyagers and its odd, human-like structure almost certainly mixed the antiquated creative mind. [End of quote]

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