Athetotheist wrote: ↑Sat Dec 30, 2023 3:52 pm
For as in the days that were before the flood they were eating and drinking, marrying and giving in marriage, until the day that Noe entered into the ark,
and knew not until the flood came, and took them all away[/i]"
Knew is ginōskō.
know (196x), perceive (9x), understand (8x), miscellaneous (10x).
https://www.blueletterbible.org/lexicon ... jv/tr/0-1/
The question is know or understand what? At a minimum, they knew an ark was being built. Most likely it was just a subject of mocking. The very idea of some flood that needed to be saved from was ridiculous in everybody else's minds. So, they just continued on with what they've normally been doing - eating, drinking, marrying, and reveling.
I think what it refers to was nobody understood what the flood would be like. It was totally beyond anybody's guess of how catastrophic it was.
Other translations of Matt 24:39 hints also at this:
(EasyEnglish)
The people did not know what would happen. Then rain fell for a long time and all these people died in the deep water. When the Son of Man returns, it will be the same. People will not know that it is going to happen at that moment.
(FBV)
They didn't realize what was going to happen until the flood came and swept them all away. That's how the coming of the Son of man will be.
(NASB)
and they did not understand until the flood came and took them all away; so will the coming of the Son of Man be.
(NLT)
People didn't realize what was going to happen until the flood came and swept them all away. That is the way it will be when the Son of Man comes.
Yes, and I've pointed out that others spent time there with you countering your argument. Of particular interest I found this:
bluegreenearth wrote:Do you find it suspicious that these creationist arguments are almost never submitted for peer review by the consensus of experts in the field?
As for peer reviewed articles on the flood, I agree there aren't any. But even if there are peer reviewed articles on the flood in secular journals, would it even matter? Highly doubtful. There are many peer reviewed articles on the Shroud of Turin, and skeptics still reject the Shroud.
How can babies be warned? If babies are "warned", can they understand it?
That's exactly the point. They couldn't have understood, so they couldn't have been warned.
So it would then be the parent's responsibility since they were warned.
Again, it wouldn't matter since it's supposed to be the same at that time as in the days of Noah.
The issue is what is the same as now and back during the flood. Would it be the timing of it? No, there was a 120-year timing for the flood and there is no timing for Jesus's return.
What I believe is the same is the mocking and rejection of anything bad really going to happen to people during the day of judgment. "Jesus is not coming back, look at all these false predictions of his return. There is no judgment. There is no hell. There is no God. Even if there is a God, God will let me in because I'm a good person."
How can a god be able to create the universe and not be omnipotent, unless you mean a certain type of Deistic god?
I don't want to get into a dragged out debate over omnipotence here. I've already debated it in
Is the Christian God omnipotent?
What I claim God is like is what is described in the Bible and no more. Anything beyond that is either speculation or a strawman.
You still deflect to "skeptics". That doesn't address any issue I'm bringing up.
What issue have you brought up that I haven't addressed?
And you contradict your earlier statement that everyone is instilled with objective morality by virtue of being made in God's image.
Don't see how I contradicted myself. I'm simply making a claim on my position (everyone has objective morality) and defending it. The contradiction is for anybody who don't have a justification for objective morality and then claim they do have it since I claim all people have objective morality.
You keep saying that there wasn't any way so save them, but logically they wouldn't have to be put in such danger. Instead of a flood, how about a crop failure? How about an outbreak of leprosy which affects only the guilty adults? There would be who-knows-how-many ways to get such a message across, none of which would involve wiping out innocent children.
Actually, without the flood happening, we would not be where we are today. There would be no computers or airplanes or cars or even cooking on stoves. We would never get beyond using wood to provide fuel for anything. So, strangely, it was a huge blessing to humanity to actually have a global flood.
Remember also the biblical calculation, made by the pious Bishop Ussher, placing the flood in 2348 BCE. It's estimated that the human population of Earth in 3000 BCE was approximately 14 million.
https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File ... _curve.svg
If a warning had been given and everyone had repented, how many of those 14 million+ people could have been carried by a 450x75x45-foot ark?
I don't believe in Ussher's dates and I don't see how that figure was calculated. But whatever number was the population is a moot point since nobody believed that there would be any impending danger.
A god who let his judgement spill over onto those who didn't deserve it would be a god of criminal neglect and not perfectly just.
We'll have to agree to disagree on this.
Can any perfectly just god do something thoroughly unjust and then buy his way off the hook by offering some eternal reward as a bribe?
What bribe are you talking about? Where was it stated a bribe was offered by God?
The bribe of letting babies into heaven after unjustly drowning them.
Where was this bribe stated?
They put a Judaism-friendly spin on the story.
Please cite a Jewish source that holds to the position that you're claiming.
You can't turn it on me. They hold to the position
you're claiming, but do so to validate their religion, not yours.
My position is the Israelites invaded Canaan because God commanded them to do so. The Canaanites were sinners and were judged by God through their conquest.
Yes, the Jews agree with this. So it's not spinning on my part. If you disagree, then aren't you the one spinning the narrative?
You've already validated my morality as objective, so you can't duck out of the discussion by turning around and claiming that I have to "borrow" moral objectivity from you.
Of course you're borrowing the justification for objective morality from me. I've asked you to provide a justification for objective morality and all you've stated is:
Suffice it to say that I don't pretend to fully understand the nature of the Ultimate Source of Existence.
viewtopic.php?p=1138507#p1138507
Being made in God's image instills everyone with objective morality but, at the same time, "skeptics"----and apparently non-biblical theists like myself----have no moral objectivity because we "have no justification" for it. The only consistent thing I see in your position is a consistent denial of its own inconsistency.
There's nothing inconsistent with my position or arguments. I've never stated that skeptics have no moral objectivity. What I have stated is skeptics have no justification for objective morality.
In written form, the Genesis account is not the oldest, but it must've been in an oral form earlier. The question though is not what is the oldest, but did a global flood occur. And as I've shown, there are many extra-Biblical accounts that attests to this.
If you're going to pick one over the others, the question is very much about which is the oldest. You can't dismiss that question just because it doesn't swing things in your direction.
Even if I grant there are older stories (whether orally or written), it does not disprove the flood actually occurred. Rather, the totality of all the flood accounts around the world is best explained by a global flood actually occurring.