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06-15-2007, 08:38 AM | #1 |
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Levitius 11 13 - 19
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06-15-2007, 09:02 AM | #2 | |
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Quote:
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06-15-2007, 09:22 AM | #3 | ||
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http://www.billygraham.org/StatementOfFaith.asp How can you trust something with your eternal salvation that does not know birds and bats are different? Quote:
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06-15-2007, 09:32 AM | #4 |
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Might these interesting taxonomical understandings be used to date these writings? What natural history texts were around when and where that contained similar ideas?
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06-15-2007, 10:23 AM | #5 |
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06-15-2007, 10:43 AM | #6 | |
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"'These are the flying creatures you are to detest and not eat...'" The word used for 'birds' means 'anything that flies'; 'fliers'. |
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06-15-2007, 11:52 AM | #7 |
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Right.
In Hebrew it would be more of 'flyers', a flying creature. 'bird' is a english translation thing. |
06-15-2007, 12:03 PM | #8 |
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Are you saying translators are as inept as to allow a bat in a list of birds by mistranslating the word for bird?
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06-15-2007, 12:13 PM | #9 | |
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Bats technically do not fly - they glide. Are their appendages even counted as wings?
Another apologist has a more complex take on this passage: Quote:
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06-15-2007, 12:32 PM | #10 | |
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And it would help if people did not read into a list later knowledge - it does not matter if someone 2500 years ago puts a bat in a list of birds - it is actually interesting because it allows study of how people understood things. Again, what other natural history lists do we have from other cultures? Might this list have been borrowed from Egypt or Persia or even Greece or early Rome or Carthage? Might Leviticus be later than we assume? |
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