Question number 1.
In Genesis 1: 29-30, God quite clearly gives man and woman leave to eat EVERYTHING he has placed upon the earth. Yet in Genesis 2:16 He quite clearly gives man restrictions on what he may eat.
Wazzup wit dat?
Question 1 and 1/3
Furthermore, He never gives woman the restriction, yet punishes her for something He did not tell her. Only the man knew.
Question number 1 and 2/3
However, also in Leviticus 11 (and possibly more of the books of Law), God again forbids people to eat certain things. What happened to eating everything?
Question number two.
In Genesis 6:19-21, God clearly tells Noah that he is to bring two of all living creatures except humans into the Ark. Very specifically two. Yet in Gen. 7: 2-3 God clearly tell Noah to take 7 pairs of clean animals and only one pair of unclean animals. Similarly, in both 6:22 and in 7:5, it states that Noah followed the Lord's commands.
Which one? They contradict.
Note: The NAB says 7 pairs, while the KJV says 7 total. Either way, it is still more than two, so Bible version isn't really a big deal here.
Question number 2 and 1/3
Come to think of it, clean and unclean animals also aren't described until Leviticus 11. How's that work?
Question number 2 and 2/3
In 8:1, it says God remembered Noah. Does that mean God forgot Noah for 150 days?
Question number 3
According to Genesis 8, how long was the Flood? (not counting the raining. That was a flat 40 days. I mean after it stopped raining.) These seems to be the options, but I never figured it out straight for myself:
54
164
204
314
354
The verses I use for these are 7:24 (150), 8:3 (150, not sure if it's the same 150 as from 7:24), 8:6 (40), +14(8:9 and 8:14 indicate 14 days for the dove).
Also, why do none of them add up to either 335 or 336 (dependant on leap year) since it also specifically says it started raining on the 17th day of the second month of Noah's 600th year, it rained for 40 days, and then they emerged on the 27th day of the 2nd month of Noah's 601st year (1 year=365 or 366, +10 for the 27th-17th, and -40 from the raining=335 or 336, not given in the options above).
This is important because...
Question 3 and 1/2
Various animals have different times to have babies be born. Here is a link to a table:
http://www.infoplease.com/ipa/A0004723.html
Now, according to 8:20, Noah sacrificed from the clean animals. Not all of them (looking at the horse and ass here) can have babies in that short a time, which means they'd've died out!
And that does open up the room in the Ark theory since sexually mature adults had been brought in, not babies and eggs, but that is for another thread.
No, I'm not trying to troll. I am seriously confused about how these work with a literal interpretation. Especially number three, since I can never figure out whether to add 150 once or twice, and how the 40 fit in there, and why it doesn't add up to what it says it does about the 2nd year and Xth day.
Metherion
In Genesis 1: 29-30, God quite clearly gives man and woman leave to eat EVERYTHING he has placed upon the earth. Yet in Genesis 2:16 He quite clearly gives man restrictions on what he may eat.
Wazzup wit dat?
Question 1 and 1/3
Furthermore, He never gives woman the restriction, yet punishes her for something He did not tell her. Only the man knew.
Question number 1 and 2/3
However, also in Leviticus 11 (and possibly more of the books of Law), God again forbids people to eat certain things. What happened to eating everything?
Question number two.
In Genesis 6:19-21, God clearly tells Noah that he is to bring two of all living creatures except humans into the Ark. Very specifically two. Yet in Gen. 7: 2-3 God clearly tell Noah to take 7 pairs of clean animals and only one pair of unclean animals. Similarly, in both 6:22 and in 7:5, it states that Noah followed the Lord's commands.
Which one? They contradict.
Note: The NAB says 7 pairs, while the KJV says 7 total. Either way, it is still more than two, so Bible version isn't really a big deal here.
Question number 2 and 1/3
Come to think of it, clean and unclean animals also aren't described until Leviticus 11. How's that work?
Question number 2 and 2/3
In 8:1, it says God remembered Noah. Does that mean God forgot Noah for 150 days?
Question number 3
According to Genesis 8, how long was the Flood? (not counting the raining. That was a flat 40 days. I mean after it stopped raining.) These seems to be the options, but I never figured it out straight for myself:
54
164
204
314
354
The verses I use for these are 7:24 (150), 8:3 (150, not sure if it's the same 150 as from 7:24), 8:6 (40), +14(8:9 and 8:14 indicate 14 days for the dove).
Also, why do none of them add up to either 335 or 336 (dependant on leap year) since it also specifically says it started raining on the 17th day of the second month of Noah's 600th year, it rained for 40 days, and then they emerged on the 27th day of the 2nd month of Noah's 601st year (1 year=365 or 366, +10 for the 27th-17th, and -40 from the raining=335 or 336, not given in the options above).
This is important because...
Question 3 and 1/2
Various animals have different times to have babies be born. Here is a link to a table:
http://www.infoplease.com/ipa/A0004723.html
Now, according to 8:20, Noah sacrificed from the clean animals. Not all of them (looking at the horse and ass here) can have babies in that short a time, which means they'd've died out!
And that does open up the room in the Ark theory since sexually mature adults had been brought in, not babies and eggs, but that is for another thread.
No, I'm not trying to troll. I am seriously confused about how these work with a literal interpretation. Especially number three, since I can never figure out whether to add 150 once or twice, and how the 40 fit in there, and why it doesn't add up to what it says it does about the 2nd year and Xth day.
Metherion