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f you're a pastor, full-time Christian worker, or evangelist, I highly recommend this reference Bible. Not that I agree with everything Ray Comfort says in it, but his table of contents deals with every objection to the Christian faith that I've ever heard, or can imagine. It's a real work of scholarship and very readable.
Check out his quotes from Albert Einstein (below) !
"In view of such harmony in the cosmos which I, with my limited human mind, am able to recognize, there are yet people who say there is no God. But what makes me really angry is that they quote me for support of such views."
[The Expanded Quotable Einstein, Princeton U. Press, p. 214, quoted in The Evidence Bible, compiled by Ray Comfort, p.4, Bridge-Logos.
"We know nothing about God and the world at all. All our knowledge is the knowledge of schoolchildren. Possibly we shall know a little more than we know now. But the real nature of things, that we shall never know."
[Ibid., p. 207]
"I see a pattern, but my imagination cannot picture the maker of the pattern. I see a clock, but I cannot envision the clockmaker. The human mind is unable to conceive of the four dimensions, so how can it conceive of a God, before whom a thousand years and a thousand dimensions are as one?"
[Ibid., p. 208]
"I want to know how God created this world. I am not interested in this or that phenomenon, in the spectrum of this or that element. I want to know His thoughts. The rest are details."
[Ibid. p. 202]
Check out his quotes from Albert Einstein (below) !
"In view of such harmony in the cosmos which I, with my limited human mind, am able to recognize, there are yet people who say there is no God. But what makes me really angry is that they quote me for support of such views."
[The Expanded Quotable Einstein, Princeton U. Press, p. 214, quoted in The Evidence Bible, compiled by Ray Comfort, p.4, Bridge-Logos.
"We know nothing about God and the world at all. All our knowledge is the knowledge of schoolchildren. Possibly we shall know a little more than we know now. But the real nature of things, that we shall never know."
[Ibid., p. 207]
"I see a pattern, but my imagination cannot picture the maker of the pattern. I see a clock, but I cannot envision the clockmaker. The human mind is unable to conceive of the four dimensions, so how can it conceive of a God, before whom a thousand years and a thousand dimensions are as one?"
[Ibid., p. 208]
"I want to know how God created this world. I am not interested in this or that phenomenon, in the spectrum of this or that element. I want to know His thoughts. The rest are details."
[Ibid. p. 202]