by jimwalton » Wed May 03, 2023 10:43 am
Scape, I have no problem with God using a natural event to accomplish His purposes. It could have been an earthquake that knocked a hole in Jericho's wall defense, an easterly wind that pushed back the Red Sea, and an airburst that burned Sodom and Gomorrah. In these cases, the miracle would consist of the perfect timing and the accurate target of the phenomenon, executing God's purposes exactly where, when, and for whom it was targeted.
As far as Noah's flood, it could possibly be the same thing, something like the expansion of the Black Sea.* I have a harder time perceiving such a cataclysmic natural event, in this case, as a result of human causation, and therefore, as you are wondering, they caused their own judgment. These people weren't generating greenhouse gasses, depleting the ozone layer, increasing carbon emissions, etc. etc. They were common farmers, hunters, and craftsmen. While we may be participating in ruining our environmental balances, it's harder to see them as doing this. Estimates of the population of the world at the time of the flood, which I take to be around 5500 BC, range from 1-10 million, less than the current population of New York City. It's hard to imagine they could effect some natural occurrence like the Flood. And if the population of the world were 1-10 million, and the Flood was regional, the population of the entire Middle East may have been around 200,000. The region of the Flood, then, may have only been a few thousand people—not a large enough population to have caused the Flood that brought about their demise.
Even in the other cases I mentioned, though God's miracle used natural events, none of those events could have been caused by human behavior.
* 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 (Longman and Walton, pp. 147-148).
Scape, I have no problem with God using a natural event to accomplish His purposes. It could have been an earthquake that knocked a hole in Jericho's wall defense, an easterly wind that pushed back the Red Sea, and an airburst that burned Sodom and Gomorrah. In these cases, the miracle would consist of the perfect timing and the accurate target of the phenomenon, executing God's purposes exactly where, when, and for whom it was targeted.
As far as Noah's flood, it could possibly be the same thing, something like the expansion of the Black Sea.* I have a harder time perceiving such a cataclysmic natural event, in this case, as a result of human causation, and therefore, as you are wondering, they caused their own judgment. These people weren't generating greenhouse gasses, depleting the ozone layer, increasing carbon emissions, etc. etc. They were common farmers, hunters, and craftsmen. While we may be participating in ruining our environmental balances, it's harder to see them as doing this. Estimates of the population of the world at the time of the flood, which I take to be around 5500 BC, range from 1-10 million, less than the current population of New York City. It's hard to imagine they could effect some natural occurrence like the Flood. And if the population of the world were 1-10 million, and the Flood was regional, the population of the entire Middle East may have been around 200,000. The region of the Flood, then, may have only been a few thousand people—not a large enough population to have caused the Flood that brought about their demise.
Even in the other cases I mentioned, though God's miracle used natural events, none of those events could have been caused by human behavior.
* 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 (Longman and Walton, pp. 147-148).