Daily Lynx
Daily-ish....very Lynx-y, though
Have you heard of primary water? I hadn’t until I was sort of watching Webbon and the Haunted Cosmos guys talk about it. Well, “Science!” is jumping on board and they’ve found a whole bunch of it way underground somehow. This is obviously not a surprise since there’s this book that told us this was how everything was set up. The Word of God is undefeated and true.
The Falcons spent a whole bunch of money to sign Kirk Cousins for 4 years and then they went and drafted his replacement at pick 8. Falcons GM is not being hailed as a genius, but that doesn’t mean it was the wrong move. I think Penix is as good as any other QB in this draft. The Falcons were competitive last season and have good offensive players and a pretty good defense. If you think Penix is going to be a star, then it’s not crazy to grab him when you have the chance. Cousins is 36 and coming off a pretty severe injury. They can fill needs through the rest of the draft. It’s not crazy. It’s odd, but it’s really only odd because of the contract they just gave Cousins. That contract was probably never going the full 4 years, though, and now the guy they think could keep them competitive after Cousins is cut for a bunch of money in 2 years.
There’s a lot of rapture talk these days. This isn’t a rapture post or a “what mil” post, but, rather, a dating of Revelation post. I’m an early-dated Revelation guy, but I also recognize that there are many faithful Christians who know a lot more than me about the Bible that hold to a later-dating of Revelation. This matters because it will affect theological and eschatological views. Someone’s right and someone’s mistaken. The later dating of Revelation seems to stem mostly from the testimony of the early Christian writer, Irenaeus, who lived in the late second century AD. In his work 'Against Heresies,' Irenaeus states that the Apostle John wrote Revelation during Domitian's reign(95-96 AD). While this dating is not universally accepted, it remains a widely held view among many biblical scholars. However, Irenaeus also argues that Jesus' public ministry lasted for a full 20 years, from the age of 30 to 50. This is a departure from the traditional view that Jesus' ministry lasted for approximately three years, as suggested by the Synoptic Gospels (Matthew, Mark, and Luke). Irenaeus' longer duration is based on his interpretation of John 8:57, where the Jews say to Jesus, 'You are not yet fifty years old, and have you seen Abraham?' Irenaeus takes this passage literally, suggesting that Jesus was indeed 50 years old at the time. I think this has to at least cast a little doubt on the accuracy of his late-dated Revelation claim.

