You do realize that the definition of locusts and grasshoppers is a "best guess" translation of the original language into English. The text may have completely different insects in mind. Either way, I took this from
Grasshoppers vs. Locusts: What Makes a Swarm? | LiveScience
Green grasshoppers and brown locusts are close cousins, both in the grasshopper family. But while grasshoppers hop like mad and can be abundant and pesky, locusts can fly.
Weren't you trying to say that locusts and grasshoppers are one in the same?
From Wikipedia:
The grasshopper is an insect of the suborder Caelifera in the order Orthoptera. To distinguish it from bush crickets or katydids, it is sometimes referred to as the short-horned grasshopper. Species that change colour and behaviour at high population densities are called locusts.
That is, not all grasshoppers are locusts, but all locusts are grasshoppers. And the text is fairly specific:
Yet among the winged insects that go on all fours you may eat those that have jointed legs above their feet, with which to hop on the ground. (Lev 11:21, ESV)
It's hard to see what else these critters could be.
So I could use context to argue that the days of Genesis 1 are not 24-hour days?
Cool.
My point still stands: The distinction between operational and historical science does not fail simply because some operation events are observed indirectly. And this is what you originally argued for.
In a past post, I made mention that the farther removed in time or distance an indirect observation is, the greater the opportunity for distorted perception. This is also still a valid point.
Events in the vast past must be indirectly observed because no recorded direct observation took place. This is not the case with my example within operational science: atomic patterns. Direct observation is impossible, even though the event is occurring in the present. These unobservable events produce direct observable effects, that can be studied concurrently as the events happen. This lessens the potential for distorted perception. Also, a historical event cannot be recreated - it is not repeatable. This is not the case for operational science examples.
If the atomic scientist's observation is indirect, then
how do you know that it is being caused by a present, repeatable event?
After all, you've never seen atoms before, and you can't be bothered to learn why atomic scientists believe their evidence proves the existence of atoms. (Neither can I, sometimes.) They keep churning out data, but they can't photograph an atom, and even if they could photograph an atom they could never prove that their camera doesn't have some flaw in it that makes those images simply imaginary.
Your comment also failed to address one of my biggest concerns with historical science. In historical science, an occasional miracle could have significant consequences in natural history. These consequences could be important when naturalist trying to develop an accurate historical science that finds the truth of what actually happened in history. Methodological naturalism might not ignore this possibility but it requires that hypotheses be explained and tested only by reference to natural causes and events. Any science that uses methodological naturalism to gain knowledge of the vast past may not be able to garnish the full truth. Of course this is assuming supernatural events happened in the past.
Do you believe supernatural events happened in the past?
Sure I do, and so does Assyrian no doubt. Thing is, we believe that miracles are given to be seen. When the widow's dead son was resurrected, it wasn't the case that some observers believed he was alive and some believed he was dead; when Jesus healed the blind man on the Sabbath, the Pharisees had to admit that he could see, even though they refused to believe in Jesus the healer. When Jesus fed the five thousand, the bread and the fish did not flicker in and out of existence when they passed from the hands of a firm believer to someone who may have been having doubts about His Messiahship.
Let's say the Bible gave us the coordinates of Sodom and Gomorrah. Wouldn't we expect to find, if we dug deep enough, the remnants of fire and brimstone and a charred city? Here's the problem with your invisible miracles:
even though miracles are supernatural, they leave physical remains, which interact naturally with the rest of the natural world. Even you creationists believe that, which is why you try to concoct disciplines like flood geology and baraminology.
So why can't we find any evidence, say, that the whole earth was recently covered with water? It doesn't matter for our purposes that all the water was miraculously supplied: for
the water itself was normal water (if you interpret the passages literally, at least), and once it had been miraculously poofed into existence, it would just do all the things normal water does. Like drown people and animals, and float boats, and get dried up by large winds, and recede to the lowest point. And this didn't happen far in the distant past either: it happened, by your reckoning, anywhere from four to five thousand years ago. That's only just over twice as long ago as Jesus' death and resurrection, and you're not about to question that despite the immense uncertainty you accede to historical science. Indeed, according to your views,
it was observed by Noah in an account which was passed down to Moses, and so finding out about the Flood today really shouldn't be historical science, it should more be delayed observational science of the kind I can do when I ask my grandmother about World War 2 in Malaysia.
You see, it's not enough for you to prove that science stops working a few million years in the past. The "operational / historical science" argument only comes up when creationists have no more empirical evidence for their particular view. (If evolutionism was abandoned by the scientific community tomorrow, which creationist would still say that evolutionism was an equally valid interpretation of historical science as creationism?)
The problem for creationism is that there is little to no physical evidence for what are, according to them, numerous physically significant miracles occurring under ten thousand years ago. As such, your arguments need to show that science stops working as soon as ten thousand years ago - but if it doesn't work then, then it need not work for when the Bible was being written, or when the Israelites were being exiled, or when Jesus was crucified, or when Martin Luther nailed his theses to the church door, and we might as well believe that the universe could have been created five minutes ago - because that is an equally valid interpretation of the evidence we have.
The event happened exactly how it was stated. The sun literally stopped in the sky. The text does not get into how or what is occurring for this to happen.
The sun isn't even literally
in the sky, for one.