hughfarey wrote:Kurieuo wrote:hughfarey wrote:Kurieuo wrote:I'd place the flood between 40-50k ago before humanity spread out upon the face of all the earth. The world at that time was destroyed by a flood. (2 Peter 3:6)
Humanity had spread out over most of Africa before the little group that would eventually populate the other continents set off, well before the invention of boats or the domestication of animals.
Yes, and?
If the flood was 40-50k years ago, before humanity spread out of Africa, there were nevertheless people all over Africa, so the 'local flood' would have had to cover all of Africa in order to kill them all. Is that what you understand?
I invite you to put on the table what you believe Hugh re: modern humanities origins. Timings, Neaderthal-human relationships, etc. You seem very confident in your knowledge, give me something, I'm open to re-education but I fear things aren't as certain here as you might believe.
hughfarey wrote:Except domestication animals, or perhaps you mean animal husbandry?
No; I mean before any any animals were domesticated or any boats had been built. The story of Noah clearly predicates some kind of pastoral or agricultural way of life, which had not developed anywhere by 40k years ago.
Either way, animals are easily domesticated, especially if you're a creature with intelligence to work the land and depend upon such for survival.
They are, but there is no evidence that they were, until much later than 40k years ago.
You're grasping straws Hugh with the animal thing. It's not a stretch to think humanity would have easily domesticated animals as soon as they came onto the scene as a matter of survival. In fact, I think it foolishness to think otherwise given human intelligence. The burden of proof, I think is on you to show humans wouldn't naturally domesticate animals.
Re: boats, you know the ark wasn't a boat right?! Not in modern sense. Consider the ark of the covenant. It was a container, a vessel intended to contain contents. God's presence is said to have resided upon such. In Scripture, it's said God was also the one who sealed Noah's ark. What is important to the narrative surrounding Noah is that God made a covenant with him and his family, and Noah faithfully obeyed God doing as said, and God did the rest. It was God who shut them in (Gen 7:16 KJV), so you know, there was a bit of God involved in the process (heaven forbid Christianity include God right!?)
The interesting thing about this Hugh, is the Bible is full of the miraculous, Christianity is full of God involving Himself in human affairs, in particular Israel's, and then with Christ who was and is God, the resurrection and the miracles that followed the Apostles and which enabled Christian to spread despite the persecutions early on. You cannot naturalize everything and still be Christian. In doing so, you also logically reject the very foundations which gives what we consider to be "natural laws" their structure and predictability -- God.
Understand Paul's words that the carnal cannot accept spiritual things, and indeed, God's enclosing the ark was likely a spiritual act, just like the angels who lead Israel out of Egypt of spiritual, indeed our being born again in Christ is spiritual. You are so entangled in the carnal Hugh, that you are unable to shed it.
Paul said that, "
your faith should not be in the wisdom of men but in the power of God." (1 Cor 2:5) Understand, "
the natural man does not receive the things of the Spirit of God, for they are foolishness to him; nor can he know them, because they are spiritually discerned." (1 Cor 2:14) What are you missing? Is it any wonder, as you say, people question your Christianity?
I'm not blind, I'm fully aware we are into an age where Naturalism more-so Materialism reigns. It won't last, it'll come and go as a fad, and indeed it is already dying when I scout leading thinkers of our time and lay people are catching up. Yet, many Christians since Darwin's time, including Darwin, sought to reconcile God with nature, and nature's viciousness and apparent indiscriminate nature. Interventions of God became unthinkable, and yet, if God doesn't intervene at all then I guarantee you none of us have any hope with our Maker. The best we might hope for is that God cares so little about us, that we will let us fade into oblivion at death.
Furthermore, belief in God, and indeed Christ, is arrived at going forward. Yet, with scoffers like Audie here, they attack the end bits and pieces ignoring that
they have no real foundations to anything that they accept about reality. They have no real justifications for anything they accept in life. They're just an insignificant speck in the world which somehow became aware and will pass on by out of existence, nothing important at all. If you want to be like them, then join their club Hugh and don't half-**** or be around the bush with your supremacist Naturalist-Christianity however you reconcile such.
So then,
to lay out a basic framework for accepting God's intervention throughout history... I'm sure you are aware, that many strong logical arguments exist for God, and that is easy I think to arrive at. Otherwise I dare say you'd not even care to hang onto any belief in God whatsoever. The next step going forward is whether this God is is personal? If God isn't personal, then God doesn't care what happens, but just created for no real reason except for the sake of it. In which case, there is nothing more between God and us to be had.
Yet, in the world there is much good and beauty. If "evil" in the world in an argument against a good God, then the reverse (modus tollens form) must equally be evidence for a good God. Which is it? It can't be both. We've already reached the conclusion of God's existence based on other arguments, so it isn't logical to here just deny because we witness both and that God doesn't intervene to stop the bad, that God doesn't exist or care after David Hume. No, if we witness good in the world, indeed can experience love and see much beauty, such shows God does care. The intended design is for us to be born into families, nurtured and raised. So reaching the conclusion that God is personal seems to be an easy step.
Now, what's next? If God is personal then we ought to expect God would make Himself known to us, that God should have have revealed Himself... and interestingly, monotheism all seems to point to Israel's God. Right? We don't have many options here. And then, furthermore, we shouldn't be at all surprised to find this God injecting Himself into the world and intervening here and there. Only blanket acceptance of Materialism would say otherwise, and yet the fog of materialism is thick and it may make you feel stupid for accepting something like Christ's resurrection, or say shutting up Noah's vessel and keeping all within safe -- yet, there is nothing otherwise truly absurd or illogical about such. What is the height of absurdity, is a belief that everything exists in a vacuum and is hung up upon nothing at all.