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I just checked. There appears to be a problem with Catholic Answers home page.
The error seems to be with their server.
The error seems to be with their server.
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Will it possibly work in the future?I just checked. There appears to be a problem with Catholic Answers home page.
The error seems to be with their server.
It should. Server has problems from time to time. Remind me periodically and I’ll try the link.Will it possibly work in the future?
Looks like they need to renew their security certificate. The whole site is down. (I’m guessing this is what happens when you convert to https and then don’t keep your cert up to date?)I just checked. There appears to be a problem with Catholic Answers home page.
The error seems to be with their server.
Its okay now.The link doesn’t work.
Read it. Thanks.Its okay now.
Small regional event where a man succeeded in floating his choicest livestock on a wooden structure he already had built, avoiding the total financial ruin that befell most everyone else in his region.How do we interpret the story of the Noahic flood? (assuming that evolution is true and that the earth is not 6000 years old) Was the flood just a local flood? Was there even a flood at all? Was Noah a historical person?
I want to hear anyones thoughts on this. Thanks.
That doesn’t really explain why the story took root in a variety of cultures, though, does it? I mean “ya’ll thought I was crazy till I saved my pigs and chickens” isn’t exactly a compelling storyline…Small regional event where a man succeeded in floating his choicest livestock on a wooden structure he already had built, avoiding the total financial ruin that befell most everyone else in his region.
Oh… so, then, your take on it is that the Scriptural narrative is merely a tall tale, and worse yet, one that grew and grew in the retelling?But to spice it up a little, the driftwood turned into an ark. A couple days turned to forty. His livestock turned into all the animals on the earth.
We do the same thing when we talk about our ancestors. They walked 20 miles to school. Up hill. Both ways.
Sure. And I’m not trying to say that you’re lumping all Scripture into one description. What I think I’m trying to ask is how you can juxtapose the notion of the truth of Scripture with a process of redaction that presupposes that the details of the narrative undergo significant change.I don’t refer to “the narrative of scripture” because they’re all different books. Written in different times by different people for different purposes.
Fair enough, but do we say that Scriptural accounts work like “virtually every other ancient story or mythos”?My take on the story of Noah is that it’s probably a grain of truth wrapped in layers of hyperbole and exaggeration - similar to virtually every other ancient story or mythos.
Everyone knows the context.We do the same thing when we talk about our ancestors. They walked 20 miles to school. Up hill. Both ways.
Fair question.What I think I’m trying to ask is how you can juxtapose the notion of the truth of Scripture with a process of redaction that presupposes that the details of the narrative undergo significant change.
Because unless proven otherwise, the unattached rationalist would assume the Naive Hypothesis which in this case approximates to “It’s most likely similar to other tales of this era unless otherwise proven”.Fair enough, but do we say that Scriptural accounts work like “virtually every other ancient story or mythos”?
I don’t think it’s particularly difficult to glean the moral of the story… Either way, as a religious matter (rather than a historical matter) the RCC circumvents the problem by being an episcopal religion rather than individual, textual one. As least as it pertains to religious interpretive authority.The big question would be where we should put down our fingers and say, “here! Here’s the spot where we assign the ‘intent of the Scriptural author’!”
That’s a great question for a devout Catholic to answer. How does one hold to religious inerrancy AND theological development?So – just as devil’s advocate – I’m asking you how you can hold on to both notions (ongoing modification and inerrancy) simultaneously.
That’s not a difficult problem. The ancient tendency for superstitious exaggeration and hyperbole (even if not deliberate) certainly appears universal to me. And ancient Mesopotamia certainly wasn’t the only place to experience flooding on disaster-levels. Humanity arose near water, for obvious reasons. There are no rivers that don’t occasionally flood. There are no coasts that don’t occasionally experience an inundation.Let’s go one step further, and address only the flood epic.
Sure. How different can flood-survival stories really get?The version in all cultures shares certain descriptions and characteristics.
Depends on how loosey-goosey you want to get with “concurrently”. The Hindu flood stories are probably based on a meteor impact in the Indian ocean. The Norse one is probably based on the inundation of Dogger Bank at the end of the last Ice Age. So if the period can be defined as “After the advent of spoken language but before the advent of sophisticated writing”, then yes. They all developed concurrently by naturally superstitious, pre-enlightenment people.Are you saying that these developed independently and concurrently?
In fairness, if we go with yours it has a pre-requisite of faith were we decide information from a given source is undeniably true even before the information is granted. The investigative horse-and-cart are switched.If we’re going to go with your approach, much depends on the answers to these questions…
I think the question really is “how similar can flood-survival stories get before the thesis of ‘independent development’ becomes untenable?”Sure. How different can flood-survival stories really get?
No, that’s not “concurrently”, I don’t think, unless you’re doing a lot of hand waving. Remember, though, that it’s not just concurrently, it’s independently and concurrently. Do you think that the “naturally superstitious, pre-enlightenment” dynamic accounts for the common elements – advance warning by God, inclusion of land-based animals, etc?Depends on how loosey-goosey you want to get with “concurrently”. … So if the period can be defined as “After the advent of spoken language but before the advent of sophisticated writing”, then yes. They all developed concurrently by naturally superstitious, pre-enlightenment people.
Well, if we really want to be fair – and if we consider the Scriptures ‘inspired’ – then we really do have a different chicken-and-egg question, don’t we? There are now at least three prongs to the question – origin of the narrative, sources/timeline of redaction, and ‘ossification’ into “inspired text”…In fairness, if we go with yours it has a pre-requisite of faith were we decide information from a given source is undeniably true even before the information is granted. The investigative horse-and-cart are switched.
When you invent a way to measure tenability, let me know.I think the question really is “how similar can flood-survival stories get before the thesis of ‘independent development’ becomes untenable?”
*shrugNo, that’s not “concurrently”, I don’t think, unless you’re doing a lot of hand waving.
Sure. Again, how different can floods be to pre-enlightenment folks?Remember, though, that it’s not just concurrently, it’s independently and concurrently. Do you think that the “naturally superstitious, pre-enlightenment” dynamic accounts for the common elements
It really depends on what baggage you attached to “inspired”. In itself, it’s just a demurral to vagueness so you never can be demonstrably wrong.Well, if we really want to be fair – and if we consider the Scriptures ‘inspired’ – then we really do have a different chicken-and-egg question, don’t we?
Not difficult prongs to address, depending on how much specificity you require.There are now at least three prongs to the question – origin of the narrative, sources/timeline of redaction, and ‘ossification’ into “inspired text”…
LOL! I guess it all depends on how gullible you are. You asked the question yourself – it all depends on how loosey-goosey you’re willing to be!When you invent a way to measure tenability, let me know.
God (or His rep) told me the dimensions of the boat? God asked me to gather my extended family? God asked me to cram all the kinds of animals in the boat? C’mon… it’s starting to strain credulity, don’t you think?But again, they can’t get terribly different. There was a flood. I survived while many died. God must have chosen me because I was faithful.
Right. That’s why you asked about ‘loosey-goosey’. If you want to be really loose in your definition, you could say that Jesus’ lifetime, the Crusades, the man on the moon, and 9/11 were all ‘concurrent’.*shrug
The span of time between verbal and written language being invented is when these stories happened. I don’t really know how else to reply to that.
No, I don’t think so. Hence the questions. How do we say “inspired” and “redacted” and “concurrently, independently developing” all in the same breath?It really depends on what baggage you attached to “inspired”. In itself, it’s just a demurral to vagueness so you never can be demonstrably wrong.
Agreed.It can still be inspired and be an allegorical tale.
OK. That’s certainly one approach, and it’s a valid one. Let’s go back to your original comment, then: you cited a “small regional event” that was a “grain of truth wrapped in layers of hyperbole and exaggeration.” I guess that I looked at that and said, “wait a minute… that’s not an interpretation, that’s an account of how the story came to be.” If, by that description, you simply mean “allegorical account of pre-historical incident, meant by the inspired author to tell a theological truth”, well… then I could say that that’s an “interpretation under a non-fundamentalist view.”When did it become sacred? When it was old enough that the origin was beyond living memory.
“Gather round children for the tale of our glorious long-dead ancestors.”