

One example of this is the Moses controversy. Many of these questions seem decided by mainstream scholarly opinion, but actually still have much research and debate occurring around them. Content:įor seminarians, biblical scholars and other historical, theological, archeological experts, there are outstanding questions about the world’s most famous book, the Bible. That said, Mahoney’s journey in THE MOSES CONTROVERSY to prove the Bible’s truthfulness is an important one that’s worth watching and considering. Also, Mahoney chooses some bizarre shots that are obviously staged and seem to take away from the documentary’s authenticity. Mahoney’s argument and presentation is interesting and engaging, but it contains some logical fallacies that undermine his final conclusion. PATTERNS OF EVIDENCE: THE MOSES CONTROVERSY has a strong Christian worldview, with a grounded, passionate view of the Bible’s inerrancy.

As Mahoney travels around the world meeting with various experts and examining ancient writings firsthand, he provides viewers with many beautiful shots of the Middle East.

Using archeological, historical and biblical evidence, Mahoney lays out his case that there was, in fact, an alphabetic language available to Moses. Did Moses really write the Torah, the first five books of the Bible? Mainstream scholars believe Moses could not have written the Torah because they claim there wasn’t an alphabetic language available for him. Maybe followed by Tixati and BiglyBT.īitTorrent / uTorrent (current versions are essentially the same client nowadays)Īlso see the sidebar Related Links list under "Client Software".Writer/Director Timothy Mahoney’s new documentary PATTERNS OF EVIDENCE: THE MOSES CONTROVERSY explores an important question of biblical study. That aside the "main" ones in use tend to be Deluge, qBittorrent, rTorrent, Transmission, uTorrent 2.2.1.

Most people do not recommend using the current BitTorrent/uTorrent clients nowadays.
