Kurieuo wrote:That would pass as a refutation of the position, if a core link in believing the "sons of God" to be angels was that the flood was God's way of cleaning out the human race rather than merely destroying evil. However, even if there is an intermingling in the lines of Seth taking daughters of Cain, there is the same issue, since as you point out there were still Nephilim (the offspring) "also after".
That is sort o the point. And see your comment about the nephilim below being the sons of Anak. If "the sons of God" refers to angels, then the sons of Anak are also angels.
Corrupted gene pool talk, sounds like more modern speak of saying as in Genesis 6:4: "when the sons of God came in unto the daughters of men, and they bare children to them."
No. It doesn't. At all. Not even a little bit.
No, that's perhaps the most obvious interpolation given when Christians are challenged as to what they seriously believe. Mr. Skeptic comes along, perhaps even in our heads, and says to us: "What do you seriously believe? Do you really believe angels had sex with humans and like demon offspring?" And then we, the Christian, defiantly respond, "No, sons of God was the line of Seth." I can tell you, now, Seth is nowhere to be read in that text. My wife didn't know what to make of it, but was scratching her head, "Wha, who's Seth? Oh... brother to Cain and Abel?" Obvious reading? No, it requires some explaining, much explaining to get there.
Considering the fact that this view is found in the Dead Sea Scrolls, I'm going to tell you that I don't agree that this interpretation is an attempt to explain away modern challenges.
Let it be said that Noah was considered righteous by God, and make a covenant with him to not destroy all humanity, there's no covenant with any line of Seth mentioned anywhere. Further more, Noah was of the line of Seth and married a daughter of Cain, Naamah. So then, God's punishing a Seth lineage for corrupting themselves with Cain's? If that's the reason, however strange it seems, Noah isn't very pure himself according to that logic.
No, God isn't punishing them for marrying Cain's daughters. Read the text. God is punishing them or becoming violent. Moreover, there is no evidence that Noah married Naamah. That comes from a Hebrew midrash, not from the text of Scripture.
No, it also has "fallen" connotations also, as you say. Which you know, kind of perfectly ties in too with a reading that angels had fallen.
No, it does not tie perfectly. "Fall" in this context means "attack," not to lose one's status. "To fall
upon", not "to fall." The original interpretation of "giant" was based on a mistaken etymology that we now know is a mistake (and we have for a long time -- see Gesenius' entry
https://www.blueletterbible.org/lang/lexicon/lexicon.cfm?Strongs=H5303&t=KJV).
Except that "Nephilim" just happens to be used in talking of how small Moses' spies sent into Canaan felt: "We saw the Nephilim there (the descendants of Anak come from the Nephilim). We seemed like grasshoppers in our own eyes, and we looked the same to them." (Numbers 13:33)
Which, as stated above, stands against the stupid fallen angels interpretation. The sons of Anak were not sons of angels, and the "and also after" is absolute defeater. Moreover, the assumption that "we were like grasshoppers" means that they were giants is a stretch in and of itself. It just means that they were fierce warriors, an easy enough interpretation when you remember that these people had been slaves, their fathers had been slaves, their grandfathers had been slaves, and so on; and we do know, in fact, that the Canaanites of the time were very warlike. That's one of the reasons Joshua's conquest is so very astounding. But, again, the absolute key here is "the nephilim" are on the earth after the flood and found in the sons of Anak. If the nephilim are the product of fallen angels, then it happened again. So, no, it isn't something a modern skeptic dismisses because an anti-supernatural bias. It is something a man of Moses' stature would have dismissed because he was a literary genius, and to think he would make such a sophmoric mistake is a presentist fallacy of the highest degree. Have some respect for the author of the text.
Yes, perhaps. Interestingly, Jude 6-7 writes:
- 6 And angels who did not keep their own domain, but abandoned their proper abode, He has kept in eternal bonds under darkness for the judgment of the great day, 7 just as Sodom and Gomorrah and the cities around them, since they in the same way as these indulged in gross immorality and went after strange flesh, are exhibited as an example in undergoing the punishment of eternal fire.
No, there's nothing interesting about Jude 6-7. In the first place, then in and of itself is an obscure passage, and you simply do not use obscure passages to interpret obscure passages. In the second place, it is fifteen hundred years removed from Gen 6:4 and so bears absolutely no interpretive power whatsoever on our passage . . . as if Moses had this passage in mind when he wrote. And even if all that is not sufficient, you're already misinterpreting this obscure passage. The "they" in your second underlined passage doesn't go back to angels. It goes back to Sodom and Gomorrah.
2 Peter 2:4-7 also draws an interesting picture, lets not also forget in the story of Lot how the men of Sodom wanted to have their way sexually with the angels.
Again, it isn't interesting. It's bad hermeneutics. And even beyond those principles, the fact that the men of Sodom wanted to have sex with what they thought were men in no way proves that any angel could or ever did have sex with a woman.
It makes no sense to me either, but that's because it crosses too much of my natural sensibilities. Perhaps, sometimes, reality really is stranger than fiction. Who of us really knows except God.
Of course it crosses your natural sensibilities, but not because of angels having sex with women. Rather because it's a ridiculous interpretation. It's a fairy tale that makes a mockery of the text. It's a bad conspiracy theory that takes a bit of data here and a bit of data there, both of which unrelated, rips them out of their own contexts, and then applies them in ways that look like they tell some profound story. Read it like a 15th century Jew who didn't have Jude or Peter or Job. You see the "sons of God" you are going to interpret it exactly the way the Qumran community did: as the line of Seth. Don't treat them like they're fools.
edit: edited to take out unnecessarily inflammatory language