by jimwalton » Wed May 21, 2014 4:28 pm
The Bible contains literary forms just as all literature does. It's filled with irony, hyperbole, parable, satire, poetry, etc. There are many many cultural idioms and figures of speech, and we would normally expect that, since it was written in a linguistic and cultural context. If you were to go to a party and say, "Yo, EVERYBODY was there!" none of us would accuse you of lying. We understand the idiom: the place was packed out with awesome people. The Bible uses idioms, too, and figures of speech. From Biblical study and cultural analysis (and we can go into those further), we understand that what God was ordering was that the Canaanites either be conquered or driven from the land, and their false religious system put to a stop. If a city surrendered, fine. No need to kill them. The point wasn't extermination, but possession of the land. The Bible is very clear about that. The vernacular of "kill every man, woman, and child" has been shown to be warfare rhetoric, and no one in Israel would have taken it to be genocide. This can be substantially evidenced.
> [the flood is not global] The bible seems pretty clear...And this what all readers of the bible believed until science proved them wrong
It's a case of hyperbole. Look at Gn. 41.57 (same author, traditionally). Joseph is doling out food because the famine is severe. "And all the countries came to Egypt to buy grain..." Seriously? Were the Australians there? The Chinese? The Eskimos? I think not. "All" is hyperbole for "all the nations in the immediate region."
Look at Deut. 2.25 (same author, traditionally). God was commanding the Israelites to take the land of Canaan back. "This very day I will begin to put the terror and fear of you on all the nations under heaven..." Here we are again. Were the Native Americans afraid? The Anglo-Saxons in the British Isles? Nope. "All" is hyperbole for all the nations in the Canaan/Mesopotamian region.
Back to Genesis 6. The Nephilim were a regional people group (Num. 13.33). Genesis 10: all of those listed in the table of nations are the Middle Eastern peoples, representing "all mankind" (Gn. 10.32).
So it's quite likely that the word "all" is hyperbole, that the Flood was MASSIVELY regional (continental?), took care of the ones about which God was speaking, and life went on from there. Makes sense to me.
> And this what all readers of the bible believed until science proved them wrong
Now, I'd be fairly certain that you can't give evidence of that. The Enlightenment changed the way people think, in scientific terms (to some extent). Isn't it quite possible, if you're going to be objective, that up until the 1700s or so, all readers of the Bible believed it was not a global flood until people in the 1700s and beyond interpreted it that way and started writing it in books (when writing was becoming more economically practical)? Maybe it's a 300-year problem, and not a biblical one...
The Bible contains literary forms just as all literature does. It's filled with irony, hyperbole, parable, satire, poetry, etc. There are many many cultural idioms and figures of speech, and we would normally expect that, since it was written in a linguistic and cultural context. If you were to go to a party and say, "Yo, EVERYBODY was there!" none of us would accuse you of lying. We understand the idiom: the place was packed out with awesome people. The Bible uses idioms, too, and figures of speech. From Biblical study and cultural analysis (and we can go into those further), we understand that what God was ordering was that the Canaanites either be conquered or driven from the land, and their false religious system put to a stop. If a city surrendered, fine. No need to kill them. The point wasn't extermination, but possession of the land. The Bible is very clear about that. The vernacular of "kill every man, woman, and child" has been shown to be warfare rhetoric, and no one in Israel would have taken it to be genocide. This can be substantially evidenced.
> [the flood is not global] The bible seems pretty clear...And this what all readers of the bible believed until science proved them wrong
It's a case of hyperbole. Look at Gn. 41.57 (same author, traditionally). Joseph is doling out food because the famine is severe. "And all the countries came to Egypt to buy grain..." Seriously? Were the Australians there? The Chinese? The Eskimos? I think not. "All" is hyperbole for "all the nations in the immediate region."
Look at Deut. 2.25 (same author, traditionally). God was commanding the Israelites to take the land of Canaan back. "This very day I will begin to put the terror and fear of you on all the nations under heaven..." Here we are again. Were the Native Americans afraid? The Anglo-Saxons in the British Isles? Nope. "All" is hyperbole for all the nations in the Canaan/Mesopotamian region.
Back to Genesis 6. The Nephilim were a regional people group (Num. 13.33). Genesis 10: all of those listed in the table of nations are the Middle Eastern peoples, representing "all mankind" (Gn. 10.32).
So it's quite likely that the word "all" is hyperbole, that the Flood was MASSIVELY regional (continental?), took care of the ones about which God was speaking, and life went on from there. Makes sense to me.
> And this what all readers of the bible believed until science proved them wrong
Now, I'd be fairly certain that you can't give evidence of that. The Enlightenment changed the way people think, in scientific terms (to some extent). Isn't it quite possible, if you're going to be objective, that up until the 1700s or so, all readers of the Bible believed it was not a global flood until people in the 1700s and beyond interpreted it that way and started writing it in books (when writing was becoming more economically practical)? Maybe it's a 300-year problem, and not a biblical one...