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I was thinking about the flood, and I came to wonder whether or not it was plausible for only eight people in the world to be innocent enough to be worth saving. Surely even the wicked had children? Unborns, newborns, toddlers? Did God kill these people, too?
I was thinking about the flood, and I came to wonder whether or not it was plausible for only eight people in the world to be innocent enough to be worth saving. Surely even the wicked had children? Unborns, newborns, toddlers? Did God kill these people, too?
Some see Noah's flood as worldwide and others as a regional flood. Everyone was killed where the flood was except for Noah, his family and two, a male and female, of all races.
There was a world-wide flood before that. That was the flood that ended the first world age. Everything was destroyed then and it's cause was Satan's rebellion.
There are many little eccentricities in the story of Noah's flood that have changed my whole perception of what went down.
In The bible, humans are referred to as the sons or daughters of man. When God came in Human form as Christ, he called himself, the son of man.
Genesis 6
When men began to increase in number on the earth and daughters were born to them, 2 the sons of God saw that the daughters of men were beautiful, and they married any of them they chose. 3 Then the LORD said, "My Spirit will not contend with man forever, for he is mortal ; his days will be a hundred and twenty years."
4 The Nephilim were on the earth in those daysand also afterwardwhen the sons of God went to the daughters of men and had children by them. They were the heroes of old, men of renown. 5 The LORD saw how great man's wickedness on the earth had become, and that every inclination of the thoughts of his heart was only evil all the time. 6 The LORD was grieved that he had made man on the earth, and his heart was filled with pain. 7 So the LORD said, "I will wipe mankind, whom I have created, from the face of the earthmen and animals, and creatures that move along the ground, and birds of the airfor I am grieved that I have made them." 8 But Noah found favor in the eyes of the LORD.
So we see a few things in Noah's flood. The first is that there was some sort of species of Non-human that the bible referred to as the sons of God. This species also seemed to be capable of reproducing with humans to have giant children.
It also seems that God found this practice completely abhorrent and sinful. It seems there was a lot more going on in the days of Noah then what we initially read. This passage also opens the door to a lot of questions. Are there aliens? Are the sons of God aliens?
"As it was in the days of Noah, so shall it be in the days of the Son of man, They did eat, they drank, they married wives, they were given in marriage, until the day that Noah entered into the ark, and the flood came, and destroyed them all (Luke 17:26-27)."
^
You should probably back up this claim.
What we do know though, is that all the first civilized human nations (Babylon, Sumer, etc.) had stories about a great flood that wiped out humanity. So I dunno... if many ancient cultures can recall this story, I would assume it's because the people of these civlizations may have been Noah's grandchildren spread out to different areas.
In the story, yes.I was thinking about the flood, and I came to wonder whether or not it was plausible for only eight people in the world to be innocent enough to be worth saving. Surely even the wicked had children? Unborns, newborns, toddlers? Did God kill these people, too?
In the story, yes.
But, IMO, that's not what the story is about. One needs to consider where it sits within Genesis and the bible.
Genesis 1 and 2 describe a world created very good. Genesis 3 describes how human behaviour messed up and messes up that world. Chapters 4-5 lay out the consequences for that.
Then we have the story of Noah, which does not end with the rainbow as the children's versions of it do, but with everything going wrong all over again.
Then (after some linking material) we have the call of Abraham.
IMO, then, the story of Noah is the explanation of why God cannot just wipe out evil - because it runs down the middle of each one of us, including Noah. We need to know that before we begin the story of how God will sort out the world through the long, messy business of working through Abraham and his descendents climaxing in Jesus and continuing in the church.
In other words, the story of Noah is the biblical answer to the commonly asked question "If God is all powerful, why doesn't he wipe out evil?".
What does one mean by 'innocence'?So, if God did indeed wipe out the unborn, the newborn, young children, etc., then it raises a couple of questions for me, especially in light of your point that the flood demonstrates how futile it is for God to attempt to wipe evil out.
1. Where does innocence end and begin? Are we born innocent? Is good something that we lack when we are born, and must acquire/choose by moving closer to God?
You seem to be trying to ask questions the story isn't written to try to answer. The story isn't really about punishment, but about the problem of getting rid of evil.Is this what places Noah worthy of saving over people that never had a chance to choose at all?
Again, that isn't a question the Noah story is designed to answer.2. How do we define good and evil? Are good and evil absolutes that can not possibly change, and God is merely a representation of that pure, absolute, good? Or, is good simply God and whatever he deems it to be? If God commits an act that by common human standards would be immoral, is it still good simply because he is the one doing it?
Well, I dare say it's based on a real flood - either in Mesopotamia or the Black Sea - but its a myth, not a piece of history.So, the account of the flood is not a description of something that actually happened, but merely a story fabricated to demonstrate that particular point?
What do you mean "just"?Okay.
How about the tale of Sodom and Gomorrah? Fairly similar story, with, I think, similar implications. Is this just another story as well?
I'm agnostic as to whether there really ever were two such cities - the names themselves look mythical. But if there was, divine judgement and natural or man-made causes are not an either/or. If the story has a basis in history it has certainly been mythologised.If there were two cities, Sodom and Gomorrah, and they were destroyed, was it due to divine intervention from God to punish their wickedness? Or was it more likely caused by a natural disaster or even other people, and the account was greatly exaggerated?
Myths are true. But they aren't history. It's also a false dichotomy to think that's a clear-cut either/or when the boundaries are blurred. The bible starts to become rooted in history with the call of Abraham, but one cannot draw a sharp line.Maybe I should just be asking where the truth ends and begins in general, in Biblical accounts.
apparently God thought soI was thinking about the flood, and I came to wonder whether or not it was plausible for only eight people in the world to be innocent enough to be worth saving. Surely even the wicked had children? Unborns, newborns, toddlers? Did God kill these people, too?
I was thinking about the flood, and I came to wonder whether or not it was plausible for only eight people in the world to be innocent enough to be worth saving. Surely even the wicked had children? Unborns, newborns, toddlers? Did God kill these people, too?
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