PaulSacramento wrote:The debate is whether it was a global flood ( and what does that mean) or was it a massive local flood.Audie wrote:So it does. Not among geologists, tho.PaulSacramento wrote:Yes, the bible is divinely inspired.Audie wrote:
Hard to disagree with that.
Do you see the bible as divinely inspired? If so, why?
How does one reconcile something like the flood account
with the obvious fact that it didnt happen? I know its not a science
book but does that not go to credibility of the whole?
Of course that doesn't mean the same thing to everyone, so...
The flood account is an account of a massive flood and the history of the world is full of accounts of floods of a huge magnitude and there is evidence that a massive flood did happen in the geogprahical are referenced in the bible.
The issue is was it a GLOBAL flood and does the bible actually CLAIM it was?
The debate goes on.
Scientists believe that there was a massive flood in the local area of the bible ( Mesopotamia) AND insistence also believe there there have been massive local floods ALL OVER the world at given points in history.
The issue is not a scientific one but one of textual interpretation.
The views of geologists are important in dating events and the magnitude of events ( from a geological POV) not in discussion of biblical interpretation.
That there is no evidence of a massive SINGLE EVENT global flood is clear.
The issue for bible interpreters is, how do they reconcile that based on WHAT the bible says BUT HOW it speaks about the flood.
The debate about the Bibilcal flood, metaphorical, local or worldwide, is a debate among Christians.
Of course floods of many different orders of magnitude occur evey day, and have done for as fat back as one could find water.
The valley of the Tigris-Euphrates is classic flood plain, and I would think that the evidence would be of a good many large and small floods, with buried soil horizons between them.