(SWGO)SirPepsi wrote:I love how you have ignore every legitimate detracting argument hurled at Noah's Ark and continue to stretch the boundaries of what is enumerated within the Bible to conform to what you know can't be true today. Every claim that proves without credible doubt that a Biblical story is metaphorical or fictitious, ex. Dating and tracing the development of language for thousands of years completely nullifies any possibility that there was one world tongue that was mixed up at a single time and place a few thousand years ago (Tower of Babel), you seem to ignore or rationalize - ex. God cannot be both immortal and omnipotent because those characteristics contradict one another (suicide). You say something like "Oh, God does not act within the constraints of what our mind can fathom," and when you do that, you basically say that human logic and God are not always compatible. If I'm willing to buy that, I can then turn around and ask you why you are trying to defend the fact that the flood existed with evidence (that doesn't exist, by the way), if God is so unfathomably great that nothing he does can be explained, that the impossible can be done on a whim. Heck, when the evidence proves beyond a shadow of a doubt that some Biblical accounts are inaccurate, you might turn around and say, "The Devil laid the evidence there to sway our faith." Do you see the never-ending loop?
What about every detracting argument I've thrown at evolution? Did you ignore or counter those?
I am ignoring nothing. Do the math on the internal capacity of the ark. It works in a Creationist perspective.
So if tracing languages nullifies a mixed up world tongue, why is it that we can trace language development back to only a few languages as would make sense?
Omnipotence, omniscience, and immortality are all tied up together. If there is something one does not know, then one is incapable of knowing that without seeking it, and thus is not omnipotent (because they were not capable of knowing that one thing immediately). If one is incapable of existing forever, then that is another thing they cannot do and thus they are not omnipotent. There is no contradiction here as there would be if one attribute existed without the others.
There is evidence for a flood, it's some of the same evidence that you use to say the earth is old. Since you refuse to admit an alternative explanation for it, of course it looks like I have no evidence. Concerning radiometric dating, you have to make several assumptions, namely, that the decay process has been proceeding at a constant rate. Now if you take, say, a giant flood, into account, do you really think the decay process would remain constant? It would cause it to accelerate, making it look like the rocks are older than they are.
Please give me some evidence that "proves beyond a shadow of a doubt that some Biblical accounts are inaccurate." I don't believe you have done that yet except to say that it contradicts some of what you believe.
There is no never ending loop. What you are frustrated with is the fact that I have already determined what I believe and thus interpret everything around me in accordance with that. I refuse to be swayed, but I can modify my theory to better fit my observations.
Now recognize that you do the same.
Mandalore wrote:You would think that getting a blueprint directly from God would have made its way into scripture. They certainly aren't stingy about directly invoking his involvement. But the blueprint isn't even the largest problem. Wood simply isn't a strong enough material to hold a ship together that large. Iron and steel are required.
Wrong, you can build some very large ships out of wood. Go look up how big the wooden ships were during the 1500's-1700s.
And it does give a blueprint of sorts, but it wasn't necessary to go into extensive technical detail because the design was rather simple. It wasn't designed for speed but for safety and capacity.