Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. Feb 8, 2024 · Biblical scholars, professional archaeologists, and even some creationists strongly criticized Wyatt, believing that he was naïve at best and a fraud at worst. Was there any truth at all behind his claims — or did he make everything up? Here’s a peek at the life and alleged discoveries of Ron Wyatt.

    • Donna Sarkar
  2. Jun 30, 2006 · Wyatt is so bad that other creationist and Christian groups have put up webpages debunking his work. Here are three major ones: Tentmaker , Christian Information Ministries and Answers in...

  3. Amateur archeologist Ron Wyatt is known for making sensational claims regarding alleged discoveries of Biblical site and artifacts. However, professional archeologists - Christians and non-christians alike - dismiss his claims as "junk science." Wyatt, in turn, dismisses criticism of his methods and conclusions as coming from Satan:

  4. Jun 15, 2021 · Ron Wyatt's Ark of the Covenant a Fraud (1) - YouTube. Our Future Today. 318 subscribers. Like. 57K views 2 years ago. Watch Dr Colin Standish (Hartland Institute) interview with Danny...

    • Jun 15, 2021
    • 59.5K
    • Our Future Today
  5. Those professionals who have seen the evidence (or lack thereof) and those who have had dealings with Ron Wyatt will make it plain to anyone that WAR's discoveries are hoaxes. Since this report has been published, Ron Wyatt died. Yet there are many individuals who are promoting Ron Wyatt's claims.

  6. There is no scientific evidence to support Ron Wyatt's claims that he found the Ark of the Covenant or Christ's blood on it. In fact, many experts have dismissed his claims as fraudulent or at best, unverifiable.

  7. Ron Wyatt is a fraud. He may be a well intentioned fraud, but a fraud nonetheless. The “chariot wheels” he found in the Red Sea are actually a type of coral indigenous to the region called table coral. Also Ron has found everything mentioned in the Bible from Noah’s Ark to Jesus’s cross.

  1. People also search for