bjs wrote:
This argument comes up semi-regularly on this forum, but I have never been able to make much sense of it.
If we take the account in the sixth chapter of Genesis as worldwide flood or as a more localized event, it clearly describes God killing a specific group of people. But then, God kills everybody. Anyone who dies does so because God, at the very least, allows them to die. If someone dies in a flood sent by God, or dies in a flood when a dike breaks, or dies in childbirth, or dies from a heart attack, or dies in any fashion at all it is because God allowed it.
So what specifically is the issue you are upset with? Is it:
1. There is death at all?
2. Death is caused by drowning?
3. A large group of people died at the same time?
4. Some people die at a younger age than other people?
5. God sometimes explicitly states that He had a hand in certain deaths instead of sitting back and assuming that we will remember that He has a hand in all deaths?
6. This specific set of deaths as opposed to all others, and if so what makes this different in your mind?
7. Something else entirely, and if so what?
Without knowing what specifically you upset with it is hard to give a complete response.
I'm not so concerned with the idea of a God killing his own creation. If there exists a God who truly does represent some absolute morality and within that context he is somehow vindicated by killing his entire creation fine. However, I have extreme difficulties even with that scenario.
On the Issue of Morality
Since this is the main objection in this thread, I'll speak to the issue of morality.
Why continually create new souls in the babies of this evil culture? Why not just make everyone sterile? They wouldn't be able to have anymore babies and they would all be dead naturally within the span of a single generation.
The very idea that this God feels a need to rush and kill them all right now with a flood seems pretty desperate. Also, why wait until things had gotten this far out of control in the first place?
Why not act earlier to prevent this from getting so far out of hand. The Old Testament has God himself commanding men to stone the sinners to death amongst them for the specific purpose of "
putting evil way from amongst you".
If God wants sinners to be killed why doesn't he do this himself on a regular basis? God is the only one who can know who is evil. God is omniscient, not man. The very idea that this God would allocate the killing of sinners to men who can't even know who's evil and who isn't seems to me to be very good reason to believe that these scriptures were actually written by men who knew that there is no omniscient omnipotent God. That's why they commanded their readers to kills "sinners".
Anyway, this may seem like it's getting away from the flood story, but it's not. After all why should a God have allowed things to get this far out of control in the first place? I think that is a very legitimate question.
On the Concept of Intelligent Solutions
Now, for me, other main reasons why I reject this flood story is because IMHO it's simply not an intelligent solution to begin with.
Like I've already pointed out: Why not nip it in the bud? Why allow things to get this far out of control in the first place? That's not intelligent IMHO.
Also, if we're going with the idea that it's already out of control then again: Why not just make them sterile? That would solve the problem within a single generation and not require the killing of any babies or animals.
Finally, if we're not going to nip it in the bud, and we're not going to stop placing "new souls" in the babies of this evil culture then why not do something more constructive as a solution?
I have offered the following:
Why not create a nursery instead of an ark?
Instead of having Noah and his family build an ark to save the animals from a flood, why not have Noah and his family build a nursery instead?
Then just turn on these evil people into pillars of salt, and have Noah and his family go around collecting all the leftover babies and innocent children and bring them back to the nursery? Surely that couldn't be anymore difficult than rounding up every species of animals over the whole globe.
I think that would have made for a far cuter story at least.
That would have been a story of a God who at least has mercy on babies.
But alas, that's not the Biblical story so there's no point in even pondering it. But the point is that the current Biblical story is simply not believable on any level.
So My Reasons for Rejecting the Flood Story are as follows:
1. It's not believable to me that a God would have allowed things to get this far out of control in the first place.
2. It's not believable to me that a God would have continue to place new souls in the babies of this horribly evil culture. Why would a God do such a thing?
3. It's not believable to me that a God would have used such a crude means of trying to solve this 'problem' either. I can imagine many far more intelligent solutions. And besides, according to the Bible this didn't end up solving the problem anyway. So it's an example of a God failing to solve a problem. Supposedly the world is still full of sin to this very day. Nothing was solved.
4. It's not believable to me that a God would be such a huge contradiction. And by this I mean that this story claims that God was sorry, and had 'repented' that he had ever created man. How in the world does this match up with the idea that this God has a Master Plan and everything is going according to that Master Plan? It clearly doesn't. On the contrary, this is a God who clearly has no Master Plan at all and is shocked and surprised that things didn't work out the way he had hoped. This is proof positive that these fables are nothing but poorly written fables.
5. And finally, we actually have evidence that no such global flood that reduced humans to just a handful of people has ever occurred. The human genome project has been able to trace mankind's DNA from out of Africa throughout the entire history up to modern man. Had there been a global flood at a time when men could build entire cities that reduced mankind to just a handful of people that bottle neck would show up in the genome history like a sore thumb. It's not there. On the contrary, just the opposite had been revealed.
So not only does this flood story not make any sense, but it clearly never happened and we have evidence that it never happened.
Therefore arguments that focus solely on trying to "justify" why a creator God could be somehow be morally sound whilst drowning out all of humanity including babies is futile anyway. I think that's a hard argument to make in any case, but even if such an argument could be made, we still have evidence that no such genetic bottleneck flood ever occurred in the development of humankind.