by jimwalton » Wed Nov 11, 2020 6:41 pm
> I'm fine with the notion that the story in the Bible maybe was somewhat based on reality
Yeah, I wouldn't agree with this. I would say that it's a historical narrative with the theological explanation attached. Everyone in the area could see the flood, everyone in the area knew about the boat, but Genesis tells us that Noah built the boat because God spoke to him, and the flood was God's judgment on the corrupt people. It doesn't change the history, but it gives the reasons.
> I'd argue that the way it's described in the Bible it's probably very impossible
If you take it as a global flood, yes, but I don't because the Bible doesn't require it. For instance, we know from the Bible that "all" doesn't always mean "all." This is where a little more probing beyond the simple words of the text is beneficial.
In Gn. 41.57 (same book, same author), we read that "all the countries came to Egypt to buy grain from Joseph because the famine was severe in all the world." Was Brazil experiencing famine? Did the Australians come to Joseph? No. "All" means the countries of the immediate vicinity in the ancient Near East.
Also, Deut. 2.25 (same author): "I will put the...fear of you on all the nations under heaven." Did that include the Mayans? The people of Madagascar? I don't think anyone would argue that this refers to more than the nations of Canaan, and perhaps a few others.
Another example is from Exodus. In Ex. 9.6 we learn that the plague on livestock killed "all" of the Egyptian livestock. Or did it? In the very next plague, the animals get the boils too. But aren't they all dead? Nope.
There are plenty of other references like this throughout the Bible (Acts 17.6; 19.35; 24.5; Rom. 1.8). We have to give serious consideration that quite possibly "all" doesn't mean "global". We have to take "all" in context and figure out what the author meant by it. In this case, it's hyperbole to make a theological point.
In our era, one might say, "All the Biden supporters flooded the streets to celebrate his election." We'd say that, but we know it wasn't "all." It's hyperbolic to express our joy and make a point. In the Bible, it's hyperbolic to express God's judgment and to make a point.
> Now, I see no reason to believe God had anything to do with a local flood.
Because it accomplishes what God wants to accomplish. The people around Noah were hopelessly corrupt and thoroughly incorrigible. Noah had preached to them (2 Pet. 2.5), but to no avail. So God judged them, just as He did Sodom and Gomorrah (not all the corrupt people in the world, but those of this particular focus).
Noah was a living parable, and it's instructive even for us. God used him to represent many different truths, and as such the ark represented other realities. Some of those are:
1. The ark was shaped like a coffin, and so Noah was "subjected to death" and then "risen out of the tomb." It was a picture of resurrection common to the Bible and eventually literally with Jesus.
2. The deluge of water represents baptism, and again, the idea of being saved from death (for those who belong to God). Salvation from death is probably THE prominent theme in the entire Bible, and the flood, even a regional one, expresses that same thought.
3. Being saved through the storm is a spiritual truth; running away from danger is not. The flood, even if regional, expresses a common biblical spiritual truth.
There are plenty of people in the Bible whose literal lives are also parables for the rest of us: Abraham, Joseph, Moses, Jonah, even the nation of Israel. Noah is the same. God instructs him to do the ark thing because of all it's going to represent.
> just that we have no good reason to believe such a thing
I think we have plenty of good reasons to believe it, and very few, if any, to not believe it. Floods happen all the time. Even large floods. The geology of the Black Sea suggests a flooding that occurred when the then-small lake in the center of the Sea rapidly became a large sea. This happened when waters from the Mediterranean found a pathway to the much lower Black Sea area. This change in the lake has been known since the 1920s. Since then, it has become clear that the flooding occurred about 7500 years ago (5500 BC) and that about 60,000 square miles (more than 100,000 square km) of the coastal areas of the lake became part of the sea in a relatively short time. Human settlements were destroyed. (BAR, Nov/Dec 2007 p. 74). A flood “burst through Bosporus in 5600 BC so violently [that it] cleaved Europe from Anatolia.” The flood was so overpowering that it turned a freshwater lake into what is now the Black Sea. Many who lived on the shores of that non-longer existent freshwater lake and in the general vicinity either were killed or displaced from their homes. This actually could have been Noah's flood. It's in the right vicinity and possibly in the right era. But Noah's flood could have been something else. The point is that the narrative has many good reasons to believe in it.
Another possibility: Recent disclosures concerning the geological background of Lower Mesopotamia claim that not very long ago, as geological ages are reckoned, waters from the Persian Gulf submerged a large coastland area, owing probably to a sudden rise in the sea level. If that rise was precipitated by extraordinary undersea eruption, the same phenomenon could also have brought on extremely heavy rains, the whole leaving an indelible impression on the survivors. (Speiser, Genesis, the Anchor Bible, Vol. 1 p. 56).
> That story is a myth.
I disagree, as you can tell. I'm convinced it's a historical narrative with a theological interpretation, and there are good reasons to believe it.
> I'm fine with the notion that the story in the Bible maybe was somewhat based on reality
Yeah, I wouldn't agree with this. I would say that it's a historical narrative with the theological explanation attached. Everyone in the area could see the flood, everyone in the area knew about the boat, but Genesis tells us that Noah built the boat because God spoke to him, and the flood was God's judgment on the corrupt people. It doesn't change the history, but it gives the reasons.
> I'd argue that the way it's described in the Bible it's probably very impossible
If you take it as a global flood, yes, but I don't because the Bible doesn't require it. For instance, we know from the Bible that "all" doesn't always mean "all." This is where a little more probing beyond the simple words of the text is beneficial.
In Gn. 41.57 (same book, same author), we read that "all the countries came to Egypt to buy grain from Joseph because the famine was severe in all the world." Was Brazil experiencing famine? Did the Australians come to Joseph? No. "All" means the countries of the immediate vicinity in the ancient Near East.
Also, Deut. 2.25 (same author): "I will put the...fear of you on all the nations under heaven." Did that include the Mayans? The people of Madagascar? I don't think anyone would argue that this refers to more than the nations of Canaan, and perhaps a few others.
Another example is from Exodus. In Ex. 9.6 we learn that the plague on livestock killed "all" of the Egyptian livestock. Or did it? In the very next plague, the animals get the boils too. But aren't they all dead? Nope.
There are plenty of other references like this throughout the Bible (Acts 17.6; 19.35; 24.5; Rom. 1.8). We have to give serious consideration that quite possibly "all" doesn't mean "global". We have to take "all" in context and figure out what the author meant by it. In this case, it's hyperbole to make a theological point.
In our era, one might say, "All the Biden supporters flooded the streets to celebrate his election." We'd say that, but we know it wasn't "all." It's hyperbolic to express our joy and make a point. In the Bible, it's hyperbolic to express God's judgment and to make a point.
> Now, I see no reason to believe God had anything to do with a local flood.
Because it accomplishes what God wants to accomplish. The people around Noah were hopelessly corrupt and thoroughly incorrigible. Noah had preached to them (2 Pet. 2.5), but to no avail. So God judged them, just as He did Sodom and Gomorrah (not all the corrupt people in the world, but those of this particular focus).
Noah was a living parable, and it's instructive even for us. God used him to represent many different truths, and as such the ark represented other realities. Some of those are:
1. The ark was shaped like a coffin, and so Noah was "subjected to death" and then "risen out of the tomb." It was a picture of resurrection common to the Bible and eventually literally with Jesus.
2. The deluge of water represents baptism, and again, the idea of being saved from death (for those who belong to God). Salvation from death is probably THE prominent theme in the entire Bible, and the flood, even a regional one, expresses that same thought.
3. Being saved through the storm is a spiritual truth; running away from danger is not. The flood, even if regional, expresses a common biblical spiritual truth.
There are plenty of people in the Bible whose literal lives are also parables for the rest of us: Abraham, Joseph, Moses, Jonah, even the nation of Israel. Noah is the same. God instructs him to do the ark thing because of all it's going to represent.
> just that we have no good reason to believe such a thing
I think we have plenty of good reasons to believe it, and very few, if any, to not believe it. Floods happen all the time. Even large floods. The geology of the Black Sea suggests a flooding that occurred when the then-small lake in the center of the Sea rapidly became a large sea. This happened when waters from the Mediterranean found a pathway to the much lower Black Sea area. This change in the lake has been known since the 1920s. Since then, it has become clear that the flooding occurred about 7500 years ago (5500 BC) and that about 60,000 square miles (more than 100,000 square km) of the coastal areas of the lake became part of the sea in a relatively short time. Human settlements were destroyed. (BAR, Nov/Dec 2007 p. 74). A flood “burst through Bosporus in 5600 BC so violently [that it] cleaved Europe from Anatolia.” The flood was so overpowering that it turned a freshwater lake into what is now the Black Sea. Many who lived on the shores of that non-longer existent freshwater lake and in the general vicinity either were killed or displaced from their homes. This actually could have been Noah's flood. It's in the right vicinity and possibly in the right era. But Noah's flood could have been something else. The point is that the narrative has many good reasons to believe in it.
Another possibility: Recent disclosures concerning the geological background of Lower Mesopotamia claim that not very long ago, as geological ages are reckoned, waters from the Persian Gulf submerged a large coastland area, owing probably to a sudden rise in the sea level. If that rise was precipitated by extraordinary undersea eruption, the same phenomenon could also have brought on extremely heavy rains, the whole leaving an indelible impression on the survivors. (Speiser, Genesis, the Anchor Bible, Vol. 1 p. 56).
> That story is a myth.
I disagree, as you can tell. I'm convinced it's a historical narrative with a theological interpretation, and there are good reasons to believe it.