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Old 05-31-2005, 04:13 AM   #81
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One aspect that I think so far hasn't been mentioned in this thread is that just 15 pages later (in my KJV) the same entity that manages to stop the sun and the moon (and/or the earth?) "could not drive out the inhabitants of the valley, because they had chariots of iron." (Jdg 1:19)
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Old 05-31-2005, 11:11 AM   #82
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Originally Posted by John A. Broussard
So far, I've been unable to shake the faith of any biblical inerrantist by bringing up the Joshua verse. They are all agreed that the sun stood still in the sky as a result of Joshua's request. None were able to explain away the consequences of that act for the rest of the world. Most didn't try.
The point I was trying to make is that Joshua 10 records what was thought to be an actual stopping of the sun. Some apologists realize the problems created by this interpretation, and so they posit explanations that seem more palatable to modern readers. You may find this entry from Blueletterbible.org to be of interest:

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We have seen that there are a variety of explanations to Joshuas [sic] long day without having to admit to scientific error. Although several of these views are possible, the theory that the sun actually slowed down its movement seems to be the best way of looking at the evidence. Leon Wood writes:

The traditional view must be maintained, however, for these alternate explanations do not do justice to the language of the text. Though it is true the verb dum (translated stand still in Joshuas call) means basically "be silent" and so could refer to being silent in other ways than retardation of movement, still the verb amadh is also used (twice in v. 13) and it definitely indicates a change in pattern of movement. Further, verse 13 closes with the expression "and hasted not to go down," where the word "hasted" (uz) again speaks of motion, and the phrase "to go down" (labho) is normally in reference to the sun setting. Still further, verse 14 states that this day was unique in history which suggests a major miracle occurred such as to the prolongation of a natural day. The extent of the prolongation can also be estimated. Since the hour was noon when Joshua voiced the call, and it was stated that the sun did not go down for "about a whole day" (keyom tamin), it is likely that the afternoon hours until sunset were prolonged twice their normal length. In other words, the total daylight hours of the day were one and one-half times normal (Leon Wood, A Survey of Israels [sic] History, Grand Rapids: Zondervan, 1970, p. 181).
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Old 05-31-2005, 11:52 AM   #83
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Default Velikovsky (what again?)

Many people have come up with so-called explanations for the Joshua story but I think most of us on posts such as this confuse the issues by commenting on the thing as if "God" had played a role. There is a major difference between the occurrence of an event and its interpretation. It doesn't make any difference whether the sun appeared to stand still or not. Velikovsky had one idea that, whether you accept any of his thinking or not, still may be viable. As I recall, his Worlds in Collision postulated that the planet of the crossing of the Red Sea and the 40 years in the wilderness returned some few years later and provided the light for the day standing still. He is, of course, condemned and refuted in the canons and his sources shot down, but he had the right idea that even if the cosmic events happened they were related in oral tradition by a people whose world view favored a "god did it" explanation. If our world collapsed today, and written and electronic histories disappeared to be replace by the oral, what would be said about the twin towers a hundred or more years from now? The ignorant would once again be blaming diabolical powers for punishing us by encouraging physical activities by enemies. You can see some of that occurring now in the internet.
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Old 05-31-2005, 03:26 PM   #84
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Quote:
Originally Posted by John Kesler
The point I was trying to make is that Joshua 10 records what was thought to be an actual stopping of the sun. Some apologists realize the problems created by this interpretation, and so they posit explanations that seem more palatable to modern readers. You may find this entry from Blueletterbible.org to be of interest:

Good source. It says the sun stood still.

I find that to be the standard answer of most theists, though they are uncomfortable with the implications of that belief.
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Old 05-31-2005, 03:28 PM   #85
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Originally Posted by Chuck Rightmire
It doesn't make any difference whether the sun appeared to stand still or not.
It doesn't?

Please explain.

Thanks.
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Old 05-31-2005, 07:32 PM   #86
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It doesn't? Please explain.
Literalists believe it happened and spend an inordinate amount of time discussing it as if it did. Non-literalists believe it didn't happen and....spend an inordinate amount of time discussing it as if it did.

Ergo, it doesn't matter if it did or didn't happen.

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Old 06-01-2005, 12:14 AM   #87
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Originally Posted by Wallener
Literalists believe it happened and spend an inordinate amount of time discussing it as if it did. Non-literalists believe it didn't happen and....spend an inordinate amount of time discussing it as if it did.

Ergo, it doesn't matter if it did or didn't happen.

You are very probably right.

But it still fascinates me to hear the explanations of what happened that day in a tiny little segment of an insignificant piece of ground on a speck of dirt in a third rate solar system two thirds of the way from the center of one out of hundreds of billions of galaxies.
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Old 06-01-2005, 11:46 AM   #88
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Default The event doesn't matter

Quote:
Originally Posted by John A. Broussard
It doesn't?

Please explain.

Thanks.
I say it really doesn't matter whether any of the supposedly physical events as reported in the xtian bible or any other religious text actually happened or not, because that is not what we are really looking at here. As I said in the earlier post, almost anything that happened recently, from the bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki to the fall of the twin towers and the recent Asian tsunami could be (and is) being presented in some circles as the wrath of some god reacting to the evil that men and women do. So it is not the event but the interpretation of those events that is important.

To a primitive people believing in god's wrath and role in their lives everything that happens to them happens because of a spirit or a god. So, all the events cited in religious literature may have happened or may not have happened. But if they did happen, the after-the-fact laying of blame on a god does not say anything about that god's existence. The great Lisbon earthquake of the 18th Century was not the handiwork of god although he or she or it was blamed for it by the xtians of the time.

This has become more and more evident to me with various archeological findings in the Fertile Crescent. Whether David or Saul or Solomon or Sodom and Gomorrah actually existed is interesting. But finding out by archeological evidence whether they did or not has absolutely nothing to say about the existence of a god. It just says that things happened and people blamed or credited their god for natural or human events. The fundamentalists hail any discovery that bolsters the bible's history as proof of god's existence. I say to them, it doesn't work that way.
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Old 06-02-2005, 03:20 PM   #89
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Originally Posted by Chuck Rightmire
The fundamentalists hail any discovery that bolsters the bible's history as proof of god's existence. I say to them, it doesn't work that way.
I hate to side with the fundies on anything, but I have to admit that a 100% support of the bible by the findings of reputable archeologist would go a long way in my estimation to indicate that god exists.

That would be especially true if Chinese, Indian, Egyptian records showed that the sun stood still for forty-eight hours right up there in the middle of the sky on that fateful day when Joshua and his nomads were scuffling with their neighbors.

Wouldn't you be persuaded?
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Old 06-02-2005, 03:57 PM   #90
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Doesn't it state the sun and the moon stood still for 24 hours? Last time I looked they had different orbits.....

How would the earth stood still stop them both?
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