T.G.G. Moogly
Traditional Atheist
Thanks for the response. Right. The global flood in the bible is fiction. There isn't an historical biblical global flood. That's why I say that the biblical Jesus is fiction, which I assume you would also agree. For me it's the use of the word "historical" and the fact that people use it to legitimize biblical tales about same.Yes, it's fiction. Floods are very easy to spot. There is no evidence for a global flood. The Black Seas flood referenced above wasn't noticed by most of the world.Is that the same as saying that a biblical global flood is 100% fiction?But the point here is that there is no evidence of a global flood.
So when I hear about the "historical Jesus" it's an anonymous author telling a story. If we want to defictionalize the story we need proof that certain things happened such as you and others have submitted with regards to the biblical global flood. Without that proof it's still fiction just as a biblical global flood is fiction.
You make it sound like you are ready to believe something as fantastic as the claim that the earth was completely inundated with water in 7000BCE and that you would except that it's just too remote a time in the past to be sure, that we have no contemporaneous records to verify it. I'm left to wonder if you even appreciate the difference between saying something is historical and something is fictional.Agreed. There was no global flood. The problem with the Noah story is that it is just too remote in time to verify. Same with the Iliad. I believe the flood was sometime around 7000 BC or so. We have no other supporting historical records from that time. We don’t know of anyone alive at that time. The new testament and other apocrypha though are full of undeniable historical characters and events that we have extensive documentation Of.