What do you think of other Ancient Flood stories and the Bible?

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Magenta

Senior Member
Jul 3, 2015
59,982
29,341
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#21
I believe you have a bright and promising future :)
 
Jun 10, 2019
4,304
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#22
They have found great flood stories all over the world in China, North America and South America.. This should not be surprising to Christians because we know from the OT that the populations of the world where divided after the flood when they gathered together to build the tower of Babel.. So when these people where separated and dispersed all over the world they would have taken stories of the flood with then and those stories would have passed down through oral tradition from generation to generation and would have slowly changed to have a local flavor to them.. All these stories of a great flood all over the world is actual evidence supporting the Biblical claim that there was once a great flood..

As for older and younger stories.. Just because a story was put down in writing before another does not mean the story was older.. many of these stories as i said above where passed down by word of mouth .. maybe for many generations before they where put into writing.. What we Bible believers believe is that God inspired the writers of the Genesis account to give an accurate story of the actual flood while other traditions wrote stories inspired by the real event but that became altered over the centuries and thus inaccurate..
Nice read thanks for posting, speaking on writings I’ve just learned about the silver scrolls dated to be around the 6th to 7th century BCE before the destruction of the first temple. two tiny scrolls found in a tomb on a old road between Jerusalem and Bethlehem pretty cool read it took three years to unravel the scrolls to prevent them from falling apart so old.

clip from wiki.
A major re-examination of the scrolls was therefore undertaken by the University of Southern California's West Semitic Research Project, using advanced photographic and computer enhancement techniques which enabled the script to be read more easily and the paleography to be dated more confidently. The results confirmed a date immediately prior to the destruction of Jerusalem by the Babylonians in 586/7 BCE.

https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ketef_Hinnom
 

Lachlan

New member
Apr 18, 2020
11
11
3
#23
Nice read thanks for posting, speaking on writings I’ve just learned about the silver scrolls dated to be around the 6th to 7th century BCE before the destruction of the first temple. two tiny scrolls found in a tomb on a old road between Jerusalem and Bethlehem pretty cool read it took three years to unravel the scrolls to prevent them from falling apart so old.

clip from wiki.
A major re-examination of the scrolls was therefore undertaken by the University of Southern California's West Semitic Research Project, using advanced photographic and computer enhancement techniques which enabled the script to be read more easily and the paleography to be dated more confidently. The results confirmed a date immediately prior to the destruction of Jerusalem by the Babylonians in 586/7 BCE.

https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ketef_Hinnom
Yeah that's interesting, I'll be checking that out thanks.
 
L

Locoponydirtman

Guest
#24
It's not surprising that every culture would have a flood story. All descended from the three sons of Noah. It's also not surprising that those stories would be twisted as each group got further from God.
 
J

jaybird88

Guest
#25
if you believe there was a global flood, it only makes sense the story was told by others outside Israel.
 

Magenta

Senior Member
Jul 3, 2015
59,982
29,341
113
#26
if you believe there was a global flood, it only makes sense the story was told by others outside Israel.
It is interesting that some will deny the truth of Biblical stories such as a world-wide flood when such stories are common across a wide range of cultures :geek:
 
J

jaybird88

Guest
#27
It is interesting that some will deny the truth of Biblical stories such as a world-wide flood when such stories are common across a wide range of cultures :geek:
i agree, the flood story is by far the most popular but there are lots of these stories retold all over the world. when missionaries were working in Peru back in the 1700s they heard the locals version of Sodom and Gomorrah.
 

Nehemiah6

Senior Member
Jul 18, 2017
26,074
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#28
What are you're thoughts on the topic?
The title of the video is a slap in the face of God. To even think that the Bible needed to borrow from pagan legends, when it is God who directed Noah, is totally blasphemous.

The Torah -- the five books of Moses -- has always been regarded as divinely inspired by both Jews and conservative Christians. Which means that God gave Moses the words to write, and Moses faithfully recorded everything. So it should be clear that the Bible is the final authority on this subject.

No doubt the pagans had made their own records of the Flood, but they have no bearing on the fact that God (the one true God) was involved throughout.
 

Lucy-Pevensie

Senior Member
Dec 20, 2017
9,386
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#29
Atra-Hasis is simply the earlier source for Gilgamesh.
In the Gilgamesh flood account the ark was a big cube roughly 197ft each side with 6 decks.
He built this 'ark' in a week.
The Gilgamesh flood lasted 6 days.
The flood was ordered by multiple gods that were starving for want of human sacrifice.

It just isn't credible that Gilgamesh was the original story & the Biblical account came later.
 

JaumeJ

Senior Member
Jul 2, 2011
21,428
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#30
You must bear always inmind, the Bible, itself, admits it is not the only account of what we know as history.

Mankind had drifted away from hi relationship with Go favoring idols and other things formed by their own hands in place of th eliving God. Because of this there are many renditions of a deluge, however the text of the Word was given toman to set man back on course with the true and lving El..God.

So YES, there are many stories of a deluge but afte man was good and confused He chose Abraham, Isaac, Jacob called Israel, and finally yet before the Messiah, Moses to set a few thns straight.

Previous to MOses writing down the history since Adam, oral tradition had been the way, but even that was beginning to drift...ergo, the Written Word from our Father began.