Soyeong
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- Mar 10, 2015
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That is human reasoning, but it is NOT written until Genesis 9.
That is the category of animals that Genesis 9 refers to as Noah being able to eat.
Again, your reasoning is your own is your assumption that the unclean animals were actually clean, and not clearly what was written. I find it interesting you don't care what God means.
There is much evidence throughout Genesis of many of God's Laws being in place before they were given at Sinai. For example, in Genesis 6:8, it says that Noah found grace in the eyes of God, and in Psalms 119:29, David asked God to be gracious to him by teaching him to obey His Law, so in other words, it is saying that Noah was trained by grace to obey God's Law. In Genesis 6:9, it says that Noah was a righteous man, and again, this is no accident, but rather God had given Him instructions for how to do what is righteous, which he obeyed by faith. Genesis 7:2, Noah was told what to do with clean and unclean animals without being told how to distinguish them, so it is reasonable that he had been given prior instructions, which is consistent with Genesis 8:20, where Noah knew that he should only use clean animals as offerings, so it is not unreasonable to think that he also been instructed not to eat unclean animals. As God said in Leviticus 11:44-45, refraining from eating unclean animals is a way to act according to God's holiness, and God's holiness is eternal, so the way to act according to it is likewise eternal, but if at one point it was not in accordance to with God's holiness to refrain from eating unclean animals, then God's holiness changed as is not eternal.
It is not clear to me why you think that I said unclean animals were actually clean or that I don't care what God means.
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