by By George » Wed Jun 11, 2014 3:45 pm
> Columbus's sailors thought the world was flat when they sailed west, but they came across another land that they thought was India.
No they did not. They though it was round, that was the whole point of the voyage. To show you could get to the East faster by going west. It is just his calculations on the size was off by quite a bit and there were some rather large pieces of land in the way he did not know about.
>In the ancient world, "the mountains" and even "all the high mountains" were the regional mountains of their locale.
Yes, but if the gods live in those high places and those high places were all covered then the water must be over all lower places. If that is the highest place they know, then they think all was covered. But still it says the whole world. It says all but Noah and family died.
> You'll notice in Scripture (as is common to all of us) that the purpose was to communicate, not to talk to them in scientific and geographical terms that would have been sheer nonsense to them.
See, that I can agree with. My problem, as an American, is the large amount of people who claim it IS scientific, factual, etc. The people who take it as stories to convey messages, similar to Aesop's fables are fine. But those that say it is literal and every world factually true are not. Saying it was to communicate ideas allows people to add the new information we learn to those stories. Saying it was fact limits us to knowing only what those people then knew.
> Secondly, the Bible contains no new revelation about the workings and understanding of the material world.
I agree, but the majority opinion here is that it does.
> The people Noah knew of ("every living creature on the earth") were all killed.
and
> The message (God judges sin, he favors righteousness, and he is the sovereign) comes through loud and clear.
Combined though with modern knowledge leads on to ask, "Were the tribes in the Americas less sinful than the ones in the Middle East since they did not get judged?" It would seem so since the descendants of them were slaughtered by the descendants of these "chosen" people.
> We are committed to the message, not to their faulty science.
I am fine with that too. It allows us to say this was right, and this was wrong about them and build on it. But those that say the message it literal, infallible, inerrant in all ways prevent this.
> What cannot be negotiated, and where the text has punch, is in that God judged the corruption and depravity of guilty parties before evil humans completely ruined everything.
Yet the people in the Americas, Australia, Africa, Asia, Europe did not get killed and judged. So apparently they were not quite so depraved and evil. Why let Noah live, when the flood did nothing about the "sin" and evil in his family and would spread again? Why not finish off that area and go work with one of the people not so bad you wanted to wipe them out? A lot of the holes in the messages still become more visible with time and knowledge.