Ignoring the mystery of how Noah got two penguins all the way from Antarctica to the Middle East, don't you find it odd that he could determine the male and female of EVERYTHING?
And when the flood dissipated Noah let down the ramp of the ark. Standing at the bottom he farewelled each pair of animals with the words "go forth and multiply". When he said this to two adder snakes they crossly retorted "we are adders not multipliers".
A year later Noah was on the grand tour admiring the gambolling baby giraffe, the romping raccoon, the wallowing water beast and turning over a stone he found the adders complete with a large litter. "So" said Noah " you worked it out", "yes" said mother adder "we used log tables".
But god did it. He made it ok.
Stop trying to debunk th bible.......
The penguins took an Uber.
Noah did the "flick test" to determine the sex.
The story of Noah and the ark is so outlandish that I'm embarrassed for anyone who believes it. Just a few of the problems:
The reason for biblical literalness isn't surprising, despite the hoops fundamentalist, young-earth creationist Christians have to jump through to justify something this ridiculous, even though it seems it would be so much easier to do what other Christians have done and just call it an allegory — but in a strange way it kind of makes sense: For the sacrifice of Jesus to make sense, there needs to be a stain of sin that his blood sacrifice removes from humanity, meaning the creation story needs to be true so there can be an actual fall from grace. Without biblical literalness, the creation myth is called into question, which casts doubt upon the legitimacy of the crucifixion sacrifice. To preserve one myth, they feel the need to preserve the full body of myth, no matter how ridiculous or implausible.
@AxeElf I'd say that the story isn't true, even if seen as allegorical and it happens to point to something true about human nature. It's like thinking of the story of the the tortoise and the hare as true because some people are less consistent in their work than others are. I'd also reject the idea that somehow a blood sacrifice is a measured response or a viable solution to an innate human nature that remains at odds with God after said sacrifice. I see no reason to think of it as anything more than a barbaric holdover from the superstitious beliefs of earlier cultures.
No, this question doesn't interest me. It only makes sense if the Ark was a Tartis, or that the genetics of the animals was saved. In some of the stories, it is the essence of the animal that was saved.
And before you throw all myths under the bus, I suggest that you read The Memory Code
by Lynne Kelly and understand how our ancestors remembered tons of information.
Tardis.
Not really, because it probably didn't happen. But the interesting part of the story is that by the time the Gilgamesh flood (rain only) made it to Genesis, ground-level flooding took the lead. The actual circumstances of the glacial melt at the end of MIS 2 started as the Missoula / Spokane floods, which were 2,000 years of on and off groundwater flooding. No connection to anybody's boat in Mesopotamia, just something I found interesting.
Ridiculous to hear the phony excuses from The Ark in Kentucky. The biggest fictional story that 2 of each species went on the ark. A nursery tale.
Purina Lion Chow.