The Mayan Calendar

 

There are three major calendars on the European continent that go back to the beginning. They are the Babylonian calendar, the Hebrew calendar, and the Egyptian calendar.

 

If a thinking person were to use the genealogies found in the Bible and calculate the average age of the father at birth of his firstborn son, those beginning dates are within reason. This is even more believable in light of the fact that firstborn female children were not recorded.

 

It was to my utter amazement to learn that the Mayans also had a calendar that goes back to the beginning. That beginning is within some two hundred years of the Hebrew calendar. The reader is invited to go into his favorite search engine and type in “Mayan Calendar” using quotation marks, and study the many web pages found there.

 

A popular mythological story explains the coming of man to the American continent by way of a supposed Alaskan land bridge; a hypothesis that disregards how slow moving creatures such as the sloth, as well as certain plant species, accomplished the journey.

 

One researcher points out that if the Alaskan Land Bridge hypothesis were true there should be an abundance of artifacts in the Northwest regions. The fact remains that the reverse of this is true.

 

Add to this the fact that when early explorers asked native inhabitants where there ancestors came from, they pointed out to sea. They never pointed north!

 

It is my prayer that the reader will consider this information when comparing the creation versus evolution picture.