Review of The Biblical Clock

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Evelyn Bioseh
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Review of The Biblical Clock

Post by Evelyn Bioseh »

[Following is a volunteer review of "The Biblical Clock" by Daniel Friedmann and Dania Sheldon.]
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4 out of 4 stars
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Daniel Friedmann is a physics engineer, CEO and a thinker and he loves looking for problematic issues and solving them. The Biblical Clock talks about one such problem: what if religion and science are both right in what they preach and believe in? What if the biblical timeline syncronizes with the scientific timeline? The Biblical Clock was written by two people: Daniel Friedmann, a retired CEO and an engineer who studied engineering physics, and Dania Sheldon, who writes professionally and is an independent researcher. 

The Biblical Clock is a book that tries to prove that both science and religion could be joined together. It tries to prove that both the things that the scientific community believes in and what religion preaches can somehow be harmonized. There are a couple of biblical comments and questions that The Biblical Clock tries to answer, including the history of Earth and how the six-day creation account could possibly link with the proposed billion-year timeline given by the scientific community for the age of the Earth. It also talks about the creation or evolution of life on earth and how the big bang theory can be harmonized by the creation theory.

The Biblical Clock is a fascinating and unique book that tries to do something that I thought was pretty much impossible to do. This book tries to do a lot, and I liked how well written it was. This book was written as a thought-provoking book, and it does that incredibly well. From a Jewish perspective, Daniel tries hard to hormonize the birth and origin of the universe from a Jewish perspective to the perspective of an evolutionalist. One thing I liked about this book was the historical tales scattered throughout it. The author uses tales from history, including tales from the town of Acre, to prove that science and religion could be two sides of the same coin.

As a Christian, I have to agree that this book was definetely thought-provoking, it made me think deep about my believes. It was a little confusing to read though, and that was the only thing I disliked about the book. This book was incredibly well written. The author talked more about Judaism and the Jewish traditions in his comparisons, so I was only able to understand part of what he talked about. 

This book was free of grammatical errors and was professionally edited, which is not surprising because the second author is a professional writer and editor. I would rate The Biblical Clock four stars out of four. This book was incredibly fascinating and intriguing. The author tried to match scientific factors with religion, and I agree that he did an amazing job of that.

I would recommend The Biblical Clock to anyone who is interested in the origin of the universe. I would also recommend this book to theists who would love to have a scientific view of their beliefs.

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The Biblical Clock
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