Story of Noah: Who believes it to be real?

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**There wasn’t a “worldwide” flood per se. As I posted before, there were several massive and destructive floods that consumed whole areas throughout the earth immediately following the ending of the last ice age. **
So you take it literally, but not really? Genesis 6:5 says "When God saw how corrupt the earth had become, since all mortals led depraved lives on earth, he said to Noah: “I have decided to put an end to all mortals on earth; the earth is full of lawlessness because of them. So I will destroy them and all life on earth.” That says nothing about regional floods. If the flooding wasn’t worldwide, how could all life on earth be destroyed?

Peace

Tim
 
  1. Wrong. Sedimentary rocks are the single biggest piece of evidence AGAINST a recent worldwide flood. If you knew anything about geology, that would be incredibly clear to you and you certainly wouldn’t use that to support your ideas. 2)You have intentionally mislead people with your bogus C14 testing. You should stop that. 3) Mars? What does that have to do with the flood of Genesis? Are you suggesting that the same flood occurred on Mars as well?
I deny that there is any evidence of a recent worldwide flood. What does 80% have to do with anything?

Censorship. Right. That’s the reason you can’t get even a letter to the editor published.

Peace

Tim
Tim old boy: You can bluster all you want as you did above. You can claim I have little knowledge about geology or tell me to stop deceiving folks about bogus C-14 dating but you will never prove St. Augustine was wrong in his support for scripture and an earth only 1000’s of years old. Keep in mind he was a Saint and a scholar and had access to historical material you and I did not. You and I have to depend primarily on research of other scientists.
I love field and lab research as hands-on-experience. I am heare to share my 12 field expeditions and C-14 dating lab work and collection of samples for which I have many lab reports.

Soooooooo I’d be happy to send all my “bogus” [as you call them] C-14 reports on dinosaur bones, amber and all the other fossils to a neutral group like CA HQ I’ll also include photos of the footprints excavated when I was there, video tapes of the exhibits at the Creation evidence museum www.creationevidence.org and photos of the many dinosaur depictions worldwide and much more. The only bogus theory I know of is the theory of descent from a common ancestor over giga years which you promote.😃

Catastrophism has been rampant on the earth and mankind has been going through a relative quiet period for the past few thousand years or so since the last rapid glacier melts as shown by C-14 dating. Natural dam breaks are postulated as having happened several thousand years ago by all scientists.

How did those immense 1000 to 2000 foot thick glaciers form? It is postulated by some meteorologists that the glaciers formed immediately after Noah’s world-wide flood due to the vast amount of snow built up in the polar regions down into the Candian provinces and the upper United States [only one glacier age]. The permafrost regions support that concept as do the C-14 dates for “un-fossilized wood buried deep in the permafrost.” The vast amount of sediments and direct C-14 dating of fossils in the sedimentary rocks, clay, and permafrost give much older RC dates than that for the melting of the glaciers time period. The famous Missoula Flood of Montana in the NW USA is evidence one of those “Natural dam breaks”. The formation of the Grand Canyon may be another event in the post flood period; that hypothesis is currently being investigated further as I understand…🙂
 
Again you are right on target. I’ve offered evidence after evidence to support the idea of a major world-wide flood: (1) the sedimentary rocks are in his face (2) C-14 dating of fossils in the sedimentary rock and clay strata indicate only 1000’s of years in age, not giga years. (3) NASA has similar evidence for a massive flood on Mars. Yet Orogeny [Tim} denys there is evidence on earth where 80% of the earth is water.

But he is not alone in his “delusion”. I sent the following letter to the editor of our local newspaper but they won’t print it because it is NOT main-stream science. You see, the censorship must be maintained even if they appear dilusional. Evolution is a multibillion dollar a year academic business — their religion of long ages and descent from a common ancestor is being rejected by 50 % of the American people and they are frustrated and can only resort to sarcasm and redicule.

Letters to the editor: Subject: Footprints in Stone

Upon returning from an early July vacation including a public excavation for fossil dinosaur and human footprints in Texas, I found many letters to the editor on the origin-of-life controversy. I respond to the latest letter (Steven Bornstein, July 11) who challenged someone for data that would support Intelligent Design (ID) or Creation. The following should help all readers grasp the monumental significance of these fossil footprints in stone:

(1) Where? Glen Rose Cretaceous limestone/clay formation (Central Texas) allegedly 110 million years old; yet, direct C-14 dating of purified burnt and carbonized wood ranged from 12,800 to 38,420 C-14 years BP.

(2) Measurements? Human ones (8, 11, 14 & 16 in. long series) often show five distinct toe tips. Aspect ratios are always the same as the modern human foot (except slide-ins). Dinosaur ones have three long distinct toes (mostly Acrocanthosaurus, C-14 dated at 23,760 +/-270 RC years BP) and both left trails.

(3) How? Impressions of both species are often side by side or in each other’s prints in the original limey mud and, like concrete, quickly turned to stone followed by clay deposition.

(4) Quantity?: More than 100 “pristine” human footprints (one distinct hand print, 1982) and 100’s of dinosaur ones have been excavated under tons of top rock in a river ledge stratum.

Four points: (a) It is impossible to fake these lab and field evidences. (b) The study of origins IS controversial and Evolution is simply an hypothesis like ID and Creation. (c) Academia should stop indoctrinating our children with Darwinian Naturalism and teach the controversies such as can be found by searching the Internet for: Fossil human footprints with dinosaurs, the age of the earth, C-14 dating of coal and diamond, Guy Berthault (sedimentology), and Dennis Swift (dinosaur depictions). (4) Practice what is preached by the 1976 NAS proclamation on freedom of enquiry by removing censorship and promoting open discussions on origin issues.

Sincerely,

PS: Mr. Bornstein asked for data. Thus I have made this letter as short as possible (only 350 words). So why not let Bornstein and your readership know about these key issues within the origins controversy. Don’t they have a right to know since the subject of origins is concerned with the key questions of life: (1) Who am I? (2) Where did I come from? (3) Why am I here? Where am I going? 🤷 🤷 🤷
Why don’t they print it? Easy. Because misery…which is what those that reject Jesus are living in…whether they accept or admit it or not…loves company. Anything that does not agree with them, anything that might move people out of this “misery” is censored.
God bless you for your work,
Cherie
[/quote]
 
So you take it literally, but not really? Genesis 6:5 says "When God saw how corrupt the earth had become, since all mortals led depraved lives on earth, he said to Noah: “I have decided to put an end to all mortals on earth; the earth is full of lawlessness because of them. So I will destroy them and all life on earth.” That says nothing about regional floods. If the flooding wasn’t worldwide, how could all life on earth be destroyed?

Peace

Tim
I do not take the story as verbatim, but I do accept the geological record. I believe that the story is based on a real event (but not worldwide). And you also fail to recognize what exactly was the “world” in the eyes of those writing Genesis. Do you actually think they thought of the world as a round orb as we know it to be today? Genesis is not a science book. It presents an ancient cosmology believed by a certain people at a particular time. However, this does not negate the fact that the bible is the written word of God.
 
There wasn’t a “worldwide” flood per se. As I posted before, there were several massive and destructive floods that consumed whole areas throughout the earth immediately following the ending of the last ice age. Practically every country today in the northern hemisphere has some type of flood mythology. The Chinese document an early deluge around 5000 BC that wiped out two-thirds of its civilization. Stories abound in both Indonesia and Australia among the aborigines; you have various geologically-proven floods in the Persian Gulf, a flood that consumed the Tigris-Euphrates river valley (and from where the story of Noah originated), around the Black Sea area, a deluge that inundated Turkey, Greece and Egypt, etc. All of these occurred roughly in the same time period - between 12,000 - 6000 BC. A period of massive flooding after the last ice age is geologically validated, but one which covered the entire planet and wiped out all living things, no. It just isn’t there in the planet’s geology.
Very interesting. I’m familiar with the C-14 dating of wood from the Black Sea basin and C-14 dating noted in Fr. O’Connell’s book, “Science of Today and the Problems of Genesis” for the Tigris River region but am wondering if there is C-14 dates from China regarding post glacier regional flooding noted above? I have access to a huge library and I would seek the original references as I’ve done many times. Any hypotheses on the cause of such rapid meltdowns? 👍
 
Very interesting. I’m familiar with the C-14 dating of wood from the Black Sea basin and C-14 dating noted in Fr. O’Connell’s book, “Science of Today and the Problems of Genesis” for the Tigris River region but am wondering if there is C-14 dates from China regarding post glacier regional flooding noted above? I have access to a huge library and I would seek the original references as I’ve done many times. Any hypotheses on the cause of such rapid meltdowns? 👍
How about underwater volcanoes in the Arctic region? There are several active ones there now which many geologists believe is causing the meltdown of arctic ice. It’s worth a look. 🤓
 
The more I read here, the more I see what’s going on and it’s disturbing. People, the pope was clear on this matter to me, but obviously is taken completely out of context for the opposing side on this debate. He was trying to spoon feed us the truth and it has been taken too literally on this account. Sure, there are parts of the bible that should not be taken as literal accounts, to me, it’s quite easy to discern those elements, I’ve never needed a church authority to point those elements out. According to the mistranslation along his perspective clearly shown here, let’s expand upon this context, ie. if it doesn’t fit in with scientific understanding, it is allegory. Christ being risen from the dead, that is unscientific, nothing which is clearly dead rises from that state, especially when the body is mutilated with severe mortal wounds, yet he was ressurrected. Matter that is heavier then air/water always sinks, yet Christ walked on the water. Loaves and fishes being held in a basket, no matter how compressed you place them into it will never feed the myriads of crowds, and yet again, in Christs hands they did. Water doesn’t turn to wine, and again, in Christs hands, it did. You see the logic that is missed by you guys here for your literal interpretations yourselves, you missed the message all together. According to your own logic, of which you think is the popes, since Christ’s birth, life, death and ressurrection is contradicting scientific understanding, then he must have been allegory, and the bulk of the NT is just that.

This issue is not one of “science” versus “faith”, or of “reason” versus “faith”, or even of “the Bible” versus “modern scholarship”- it’s none of these things, whatever the way in which one combines them.​

The Life of Christ is not the same kind of issue as the issue of the historicality (or not) of Gen. 6-8 - all they have common, is that both are concerned with incidents that are not matters of everyday experience.

One of the ways in which they are not alike at all is that belief in the Life of Christ does not require rejection of what is known about the world & the way it works: the miracles of Christ do not contradict how the world works, because they do not belong to the world at all; they could not be measured by anything in the world, even if we want to do that, because they are acts of the man Who is God. So they are utterly unique. They can no more be classed with events originating in the world, than God can be classed as man.

This BTW is why the Resurrection of Christ cannot be proved by historical evidence - it’s not a historical event; it is far too real for anything as dreamlike as mere history to contain it,because it is an unmediated Divine Act, an Act of God; so there is nothing in the world of human experience with which it can be compared; the study of history works by means of comparisons - with the miracles of Christ, & the Resurrection, there is nothoing for such a method to work with. So these great things can be believed only by faith: faith is what discloses their meaning, not history.
I just don’t buy it, not your perspective, nor your understanding of scripture, it simply does not wash well at all in my heart. There is an even higher authority then the Pope himself that obviously is not a prominent element in the opposing sides lives, it’s sad really, but I already gave this group a chance to reveal that one and as usual, the poll came out vastly short. Those with ears to hear will understand what I say, those without, stick to your microscopes…
The Flood is quite different. There is a great deal of evidence against the very idea that it took place as described in Gen. 6-8. This evidence from the natural world, based on knowledge of the world which has its foundation a realist philosophy that look on things as having natures in virtue of which they can do some things (& not others) because they are particular things (& not others). A fox behaves like a fox, because a fox is what the animal called a fox is. If it were a slice of cheese, and were left outside for a week, it would grow mould. This is one of the reasons foxes don’t grow mould - they are not slices of cheese, but foxes. Things act in accordance with the natures proper to them - not the natures proper to entirely different things. If this is not true, then the book of nature is being set against the books of the Bible; & that needs to be accounted for, since the One God is the Author of both.

So in the rest of the world God has created: men do not live until they are 600 hundred, let alone 950 as is recorded of Noah. Living things include camels, elephants, & microbes: the text makes no allowance for the fact (for fact it is) that many animals live thousands of miles apart, are of very various habits, & that different kinds of animal are so numerous that they simply couldn’t all be accommodated in the Ark. Even if they could be, the problems in looking after them, & protecting them from one another, would be enormous; & many of them are deadly to human beings.

If lions, tarantulas, alligators, giraffes, wolves, ichneumons, fleas, mosquitos, rats, vampire bats, & elephants had to live together in such close proximity, how many of them would survive so long & terrible a journey ? The narrative, to be plausible as a narration of real events, would need to have a very different content, because as it stands it requires the world to be a different world from the one it is, if words mean anything.

Positively, it is far more likely to be an Israelite variant of a familiar type of story that is recorded in several versions, all recognisably alike, that was current when the OT wasa being composed. And for this possibility, there is no shortage of evidence - which is where the other explanation is so weak; for it raises one problem after another, so that to solve one is to start another going.

Why should the Flood narrative not be a “sacred fiction”, as an OP has suggested, & be a variant of a familar story ? Why must it be an historical text ? What is lost, Biblically or doctrinally or devotionally or theologically or in our lives as Christian disciples, if it is not an historical text ?
A little more insight here, Cherie has not commented in this thread for quite some time, yet we still are getting people quoting her, attacking her. I look at what she wrote and she’ll correct me if I’m wrong, but I don’t think I am, she cares about the souls that reside on this board and she has prayed with a contrite heart about you people, regardless of the fact you ridicule her, she has nothing to gain personally. This is an individual God can work with, not because of her mightly knowledge of scripture, but because her heart is in the right place.

Good for her. That doesn’t guarantee that the position she is defending is a good one; or that she is right. This thread is not about the admirable (or even the deplorable) personalities of those posting on it: it’s about answering a question about a much-discussed part of the Bible. And different posters have very different views as to what that part of the Divine Word means: it’s all tosh to imagine that thinking the passage is not relating an historical event, must mean that people are denying that the passage is true or inspired. Truth =///= historicality.​

 
I see…
Well try explaining this quote from the current pope:
Quote:
Now, more reflective spirits have long been aware that there is no either-or here. We cannot say: creation or evolution, inasmuch as these two things respond to two different realities. The story of the dust of the earth and the breath of God, which we just heard, does not in fact explain how human persons come to be but rather what they are. … To that extent we are faced here with two complementary – rather than mutually exclusive – realities./quote

Hah, this is an easy one, and it’s good you posted it, it really helps me to understand your lack of interpretation as to what the pope is saying.

The worlds he’s discussing are that of the secular sciences, such as those that believe in evolution, trying to use the bible to back up their claims, using Genesis. The books in the bible are about theology, and as in all of the books in the bible, is not to be used to support the theory of evolution, for it is a different world all together.

Do I need to elaborate further on this, or did I just spell it out clearly enough for you to understand?
 
Quote:
Now, more reflective spirits have long been aware that there is no either-or here. We cannot say: creation or evolution, inasmuch as these two things respond to two different realities. The story of the dust of the earth and the breath of God, which we just heard, does not in fact explain how human persons come to be but rather what they are. … To that extent we are faced here with two complementary – rather than mutually exclusive – realities./quote

Hah, this is an easy one, and it’s good you posted it, it really helps me to understand your lack of interpretation as to what the pope is saying.

The worlds he’s discussing are that of the secular sciences, such as those that believe in evolution, trying to use the bible to back up their claims, using Genesis. The books in the bible are about theology, and as in all of the books in the bible, is not to be used to support the theory of evolution, for it is a different world all together.
Do I need to elaborate further on this, or did I just spell it out clearly enough for you to understand?
That’s the point Scripture is about theology, not history. If there were a reference to a family that was around before the flood and around after, would that disprove the global flood and destroying all humans idea?
 
There you go trying to fit God into the box called “what humans understand scientifically”.
The fire of God will destroy any and everything that He wants it to. And St. Peter used it to warn the people that just as God destroyed the world by means of the deluge in Noah’s time, so also He will destroy it by fire.

Believe it or not, as you see fit. If the Bible is not accurate, but you live your life acting as though it is, you lose nothing. If the Bible is accurate, but you live your life denying it, you lose everything.

The Bible doesn’t say it uses allegory to explain things. It is certainly my prerogative to believe in every word of the Bible…as surely as it is your God given right to deny it.

May Christ Jesus show you His Truth.
Cherie
Why would God burn the earth with fire? I thought God was benevolent.

God could just will the earth to cease.

Why use fire to destroy his creation?
 
I do not take the story as verbatim, but I do accept the geological record. I believe that the story is based on a real event (but not worldwide). And you also fail to recognize what exactly was the “world” in the eyes of those writing Genesis. Do you actually think they thought of the world as a round orb as we know it to be today? Genesis is not a science book. It presents an ancient cosmology believed by a certain people at a particular time. However, this does not negate the fact that the bible is the written word of God.
Anyone who looked at a body of water could see the curve.

The Myth of the Flat Earth
 
Ask Him if you see Him.
I still think it would be easier for God to simply cause everything to cease.

Why fire? Because it is what man can relate to and man wrote the Bible…inspired by the Holy spirit…but fire is a destructive force that people can relate to.
 
I still think it would be easier for God to simply cause everything to cease.

Why fire? Because it is what man can relate to and man wrote the Bible…inspired by the Holy spirit…but fire is a destructive force that people can relate to.
See the problem is we look at this with a man lens. How on earth would I know why God did it His way? I just know He did. If I had perfect knowledge then perhaps I could understand.
 
hmmmm :hmmm:

116 The literal sense is the meaning conveyed by the words of Scripture and discovered by exegesis, following the rules of sound interpretation: "All other senses of Sacred Scripture are based on the literal."83

Literal AKA proper, as opposed to non-proper or figurative meanings (which include, but are not identical with or limited to, allegory.​

A man is a man, a member of homo sapiens sapiens, & not a blowfly, so does not have wings. Even a man in a piece of fiction is not a blowfly - he is still a man. The sense of the word “man” is not altered by the relation to reality of the text in which it occurs, provided the text is using the word in its proper sense. And the fact that it is being used in its proper sense, does not amount to meaning that the text is a relation of fact: otherwise, every text in which men appear would be a relation of historical fact, which would mean that an awful lot of scientifictional films would have to be treated as historical. 🙂

When Amos says “The LORD roars from Zion”, he is not implying or stating that the Almighty is a lion. Even though we read:
  • And one of the elders saith unto me, Weep not: behold, the Lion of the tribe of Juda, the Root of David, hath prevailed to open the book, and to loose the seven seals thereof. [Rev 5:5]
    Nor can we conclude that the book teaches that lions are capable of reading. The presence of words in a text, does not in itself explain the sense which they are intended to bear.
Words can convey meaning without being used in their proper sense alone - so they can be used in:
  • their proper sense
  • figurative senses: allegory, anagogy, etc.
  • rhetorical & grammatical constructions: hyperbole, analogy, anaphora, chiasmus etc
  • the sense which the sort of literature in which they appear allows or requires (parable, epic, propaganda, allegory, sports report, financial texts etc.,
  • parts of speech: “man” is a verb as well as a noun
    Most of this is taken for granted, so doesn’t usually cause problems: a financial report in a newspaper is not mistaken for a description of a sporting event. “The Fly” is not likely to be treated as an historical text, & neither is “The Simpsons”. For some reason, it seems to cause problems when people read the Bible. And people do sometimes seem to have trouble distinguishing verisimilitude in a fiction from a record of historical events.
Some beings exist only in the “Secondary World” of the imagination: such as dragons - no amount of historical study will ever discover historical evidence of their existence in the “Primary World”, commonly miscalled the “real world”. Men OTOH can be found in both the PW & SW: God Alone inhabits both, as well as the RW. (Maybe the “supernatural” is a presence of the RW in the PW that man inhabits ?)

Just my 2d.
 

Literal AKA proper, as opposed to non-proper or figurative meanings (which include, but are not identical with or limited to, allegory.​

A man is a man, a member of homo sapiens sapiens, & not a blowfly, so does not have wings. Even a man in a piece of fiction is not a blowfly - he is still a man. The sense of the word “man” is not altered by the relation to reality of the text in which it occurs, provided the text is using the word in its proper sense. And the fact that it is being used in its proper sense, does not amount to meaning that the text is a relation of fact: otherwise, every text in which men appear would be a relation of historical fact, which would mean that an awful lot of scientifictional films would have to be treated as historical. 🙂

When Amos says “The LORD roars from Zion”, he is not implying or stating that the Almighty is a lion. Even though we read:
  • And one of the elders saith unto me, Weep not: behold, the Lion of the tribe of Juda, the Root of David, hath prevailed to open the book, and to loose the seven seals thereof. [Rev 5:5]
    Nor can we conclude that the book teaches that lions are capable of reading. The presence of words in a text, does not in itself explain the sense which they are intended to bear.
Words can convey meaning without being used in their proper sense alone - so they can be used in:
  • their proper sense
  • figurative senses: allegory, anagogy, etc.
  • rhetorical & grammatical constructions: hyperbole, analogy, anaphora, chiasmus etc
  • the sense which the sort of literature in which they appear allows or requires (parable, epic, propaganda, allegory, sports report, financial texts etc.,
  • parts of speech: “man” is a verb as well as a noun
    Most of this is taken for granted, so doesn’t usually cause problems: a financial report in a newspaper is not mistaken for a description of a sporting event. “The Fly” is not likely to be treated as an historical text, & neither is “The Simpsons”. For some reason, it seems to cause problems when people read the Bible. And people do sometimes seem to have trouble distinguishing verisimilitude in a fiction from a record of historical events.
Some beings exist only in the “Secondary World” of the imagination: such as dragons - no amount of historical study will ever discover historical evidence of their existence in the “Primary World”, commonly miscalled the “real world”. Men OTOH can be found in both the PW & SW: God Alone inhabits both, as well as the RW. (Maybe the “supernatural” is a presence of the RW in the PW that man inhabits ?)

Just my 2d.
There is one major difference - the Bible is a special case. It contains and transmits the truth God wants us to know. It applies to every age.

If you were going to write a book today to be relevant two thousand years from now to be consistently understood in the same manner would take a lot of thought and foreknowledge.
 
With modern scholarship, there isn’t much left of the literal.
🤷

How did you come to that conclusion 🙂 ? Without the literal sense, modern scholarship would have died out.​

Not everything that is literal, is existent - the “literal” translation of gigantes anthrōpophagoi is “giants that eat men” - the existence of the phrase, is not a reason to believe that such beings exist. Which is why nobody takes precautions against being eaten by hundred-foot high monsters in human form, even after hearing stories about them. The literal sense of the story of “Jack and the Beanstalk” includes references to a giant who dines on human beings. It’s not a story about giant spiders, or even a description of how to look after a pet spider. That a word can mean something intelligible, is not the same as meaning that the thing named really exists. Otherwise, it would be impossible to write fiction, & Klingons would be as real as flowerpots or Frenchmen. Literal =///= actually existing

Unless of course human words have the same omnipotent creative efficacy as the Words of God or of Christ 🙂
 
That’s the point Scripture is about theology, not history. If there were a reference to a family that was around before the flood and around after, would that disprove the global flood and destroying all humans idea?
I think you should read Job from cover to cover. Lots of history there as well as many observations like scientists try to do today. Of course Genesis 1-11 is history as well as theology; that’s why Christ needed to spend 33 years with us and started the Catholic Church.😉
 
How about underwater volcanoes in the Arctic region? There are several active ones there now which many geologists believe is causing the meltdown of arctic ice. It’s worth a look. 🤓
That can’t be a cause. Man is the cause of such melt downs because he has caused a 3% increase in CO2 etc. Ha. Someone may be right; Just the other day one of the Island volcanoes near Alaska sent up a huge cloud of dust after some ninor tremors were noted and there had to be some evacuations. Maybe the underwater ones are waking up also. Any references??? Come on, let’s all hit the sack; I’m off to slumber land. By all. 🙂
 
I guess neither did God when He inspired the authors to write His word. He didn’t figure His truth in word needed to stand the test of time.

Do you know anyone who thinks the rain comes down through sluices in the heavens, or that the earth has four corners ? I don’t - or rather, I didn’t. The world as it can now be known is far larger than that known to the authors of the Biblical books; & the value of π is not what 1 Kings says, either: inconvenient as that may be to someone who tries to rely on the Holy Bible as a guide to all human knowledge.​

It is not disrespectful to God or to His written Word to go elsewhere than the Bible for mathematics, geography, astronomy, & other sources, if one is trying to find out about such subjects: if the Bible is not the final word as to the discipline of the sacraments, the administration of dioceses, or the history of the Church in NW Australia, why must it be the final authority on architecture, mining, or botany ? If Genesis 6-8 fails to explain how three-toed sloths, anacondas & kangaroos could co-exist in an environment such as the Ark would be, if constructed as described in that part of Genesis, it is not an impiety, not pride, not atheism, not disbelief in Divine Revelation, to point such problems out.

If some people insist on adding to the difficulties by crediting the aged Patriarch & his aging sons with taking on board pair or septets of Brontosauruses, Plesiosaurs, Megatheria, Uintatheria, Tyrannosauruses, & other gigantic animals, yet want the Ark to be sea-worthy, habitable & unsunk, it is only right that the problems with such a proposition should be mentioned. Unless a miracle of conferring weightlessness on such gigantic beasts is to be expected - but if God is to be so prodigal of miracles, why did He not convert all the soon-to-be-inundated sinners to Himself, which is nothing for Him to do, since all hearts are wholly open to Him ?

People cannot insist on an historical Flood, & then wave away the details that an historical Flood requires if it is to be the Flood, historical, & in accord with the text of Genesis. They, & only they, are entirely & totally respoonsible for the upkeep of the Tyrannosaurs; they are responsible for feeding them; they are responsible for their habitat, they are responsible for ensuring they do not trample the spiders, stoats & sea-lions; they have to stop them panicking. And what they have to do for them, they have to do for all the other huge creatures they have put on the Ark. No one else insists that Diplodocuses were on the Ark; but if they were, some one has to muck them out: those who insist such creatures co-existed with men must do that, because it is a consequence of their doctrine, & of nobody else’s.

Or they can have a limited Flood, which does not cover the whole earth or every hill, notwithstanding the words of the text. Or some other explanation of the text - what they cannot do, & what nobody can do, is avoid responsibility for the interpretation chosen.
 
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