I.P. Freley
I like people food
- Joined
- Dec 26, 2001
- Posts
- 2,038
>>>But I do not expect seriousness from someone that dismisses the Bible as you have.<<<
Nor do I expect you to come to any other conclusion than that... Your statement "the miracles in the Bible are larger than life: they have been validated" tells me all I need to know, and all I have come to know, about your desire to see the Bible as anything other than fact. Even questioning it is an affront to you.
Simply, I disgree. Vehemently, categorically, and without a question in my mind. I don't share your faith. Period. This perplexes you, but I make no apologies for it. I find it curious that you use a document I don't accept as absolute truth or "proof" of your position when you try to prove me wrong, as in my estimation it just moves you further away from anything that I will accept as a valid argument.
What more can I say? I'm already composing your response to the above paragraph in my head, since it's pretty predictable. You've shown no respect for any position other than your own. Your accusing me of thinking myself an "expert" makes me giggle helplessly, since your level of self-awareness is so totally lacking I simply can't help it. Pot calling the kettle black, you know. I ask questions, I don't offer judgments beyond pointing out that attacking the BOM is head-scratchingly weird to someone who doesn't share YOUR faith in the Old and New Testaments.
>>>I find this criticism just as distasteful a rant as any allegation you've raised.<<<
Ummm, my suggestion that we shouldn't take the word "day" (or, perhaps, "horses") should not be taken literally is "distasteful"? This allegation of yours is totally preposterous. If any simple question is "distasteful", you'd better stop reading... It only gets worse below....
>>>perhaps you can give us all the definite reading of the Hebrew word for day, yom <<<
In case you hadn't gathered this already, I have never read any of the Bible in Hebrew. King James, yes. If you wish to twist my point to say something other than what it did, feel free. The Bible that I read says "day"... As in "On the fifth day.." So, am I to take this literally? No.
Is it possible that someone ELSE'S holy book has passages that are also not meant to be taken literally? Distastefully of me, my answer is YES.
>>>I would also challenge you with all the ways that God has used water through Moses and Elijah to show that it was not necessary to flood the entire Earth to a depth of 30,000 feet, but only that the water had to be piled up to cover all the earth that was inhabited.<<<
Challenge away. Although the Noah story is a little vague about how high the hills are (there is mention of 15 cubits rise in the water level), but the following is pretty unmistakable:
>>>And the waters prevailed exceedingly upon the earth; and ALL the high hills, that were under the WHOLE heaven, were covered.<<< (emphasis added)
So sure, it doesn't SAY that Everest and K2 were covered, thus coming up with a rise of some 30,000 feet, but how about the native americans who lived in the Rockies? The Andes? The peoples of the foothills of Everest? Surely the flood would have to be well over 5000ft above current sea levels to flood all inhabitable areas of the Earth.
Either way, the language saying ALL the high hills under the WHOLE heaven is pretty unmistakable... As is the assertion that every living thing that walked or crawled or flew over the earth was extinguished, save that which was on the Ark.
If your answer is "well, that's not what it said in the original Hebrew", I officially give up. You have thousands of years of partisan Bible scholarship backing you up, you have the desire to search through it to stomp down on anyone who disagrees with you... And the desire to make light of someone else's Holy Book, basically calling it a fraud. If you don't recognize how "distasteful" it is to attack the COLDS, I can't help you any further.
Nor do I expect you to come to any other conclusion than that... Your statement "the miracles in the Bible are larger than life: they have been validated" tells me all I need to know, and all I have come to know, about your desire to see the Bible as anything other than fact. Even questioning it is an affront to you.
Simply, I disgree. Vehemently, categorically, and without a question in my mind. I don't share your faith. Period. This perplexes you, but I make no apologies for it. I find it curious that you use a document I don't accept as absolute truth or "proof" of your position when you try to prove me wrong, as in my estimation it just moves you further away from anything that I will accept as a valid argument.
What more can I say? I'm already composing your response to the above paragraph in my head, since it's pretty predictable. You've shown no respect for any position other than your own. Your accusing me of thinking myself an "expert" makes me giggle helplessly, since your level of self-awareness is so totally lacking I simply can't help it. Pot calling the kettle black, you know. I ask questions, I don't offer judgments beyond pointing out that attacking the BOM is head-scratchingly weird to someone who doesn't share YOUR faith in the Old and New Testaments.
>>>I find this criticism just as distasteful a rant as any allegation you've raised.<<<
Ummm, my suggestion that we shouldn't take the word "day" (or, perhaps, "horses") should not be taken literally is "distasteful"? This allegation of yours is totally preposterous. If any simple question is "distasteful", you'd better stop reading... It only gets worse below....
>>>perhaps you can give us all the definite reading of the Hebrew word for day, yom <<<
In case you hadn't gathered this already, I have never read any of the Bible in Hebrew. King James, yes. If you wish to twist my point to say something other than what it did, feel free. The Bible that I read says "day"... As in "On the fifth day.." So, am I to take this literally? No.
Is it possible that someone ELSE'S holy book has passages that are also not meant to be taken literally? Distastefully of me, my answer is YES.
>>>I would also challenge you with all the ways that God has used water through Moses and Elijah to show that it was not necessary to flood the entire Earth to a depth of 30,000 feet, but only that the water had to be piled up to cover all the earth that was inhabited.<<<
Challenge away. Although the Noah story is a little vague about how high the hills are (there is mention of 15 cubits rise in the water level), but the following is pretty unmistakable:
>>>And the waters prevailed exceedingly upon the earth; and ALL the high hills, that were under the WHOLE heaven, were covered.<<< (emphasis added)
So sure, it doesn't SAY that Everest and K2 were covered, thus coming up with a rise of some 30,000 feet, but how about the native americans who lived in the Rockies? The Andes? The peoples of the foothills of Everest? Surely the flood would have to be well over 5000ft above current sea levels to flood all inhabitable areas of the Earth.
Either way, the language saying ALL the high hills under the WHOLE heaven is pretty unmistakable... As is the assertion that every living thing that walked or crawled or flew over the earth was extinguished, save that which was on the Ark.
If your answer is "well, that's not what it said in the original Hebrew", I officially give up. You have thousands of years of partisan Bible scholarship backing you up, you have the desire to search through it to stomp down on anyone who disagrees with you... And the desire to make light of someone else's Holy Book, basically calling it a fraud. If you don't recognize how "distasteful" it is to attack the COLDS, I can't help you any further.