@krissmith777: Why wouldn’t it qualify? There were no Nephilim on …

Comment on Panda’s Thumb: ‘SDAs are split over evolution’ by Sean Pitman.

@krissmith777:

Why wouldn’t it qualify? There were no Nephilim on the ark. How else could they have survived?

The term “Nephilim” is a general term like “giant”. Besides the original mention of the existence of Nephilim or “giants” before the Flood in Genesis, the only other mention of the term “Nephilim” is found in Numbers 13:32-33, where the Hebrew spies report that they have seen fearsome “Nephilim” or “giants” in Canaan. It is obviously a descriptive term that the spies were using to put a bit of extra drama into their report by comparing the size of the Canaanites to the famous giants of old that existed before the Flood.

So you believe that God told Noah to spend 120 years building a huge boat to save all the animals because he was going to flood a land basin?

Look at it this way: He built the ark for mesopotamian animals. And as for the number, look here: http://www.asa3.org/ASA/PSCF/2003/PSCF12-03Hill.pdf

Why the need to save the mesopotamian animals in a boat in particular if all he needed to do was move out of the area until the local Flood was over? Also, why the need to preach for 120 and build an Ark if all he needed to do was to tell the people to move out of the local area?

You see, local Flood arguments make the story internally inconsistent. It would be more rational to simply believe the author intended to tell an allegory than to believe that it had anything to do with historical reality. Clearly though most Hebrew scholars, to include liberal as well as conservative scholars, believe that the author of the Flood account intended to write a true historical narrative of literal historical events… and that the author believe that the Flood was in fact universal in nature and did in fact kill off all land animal life on the entire planet.

You missed the point of what I was trying to say: The point is that we have an olive tree growing a year after the flood started, but considering that the Bible says that everything in the flooded area was killed, 1) the olive tree could not possibly have survived it, so it must have been out of the bounds of the flood. It could not have grown so fast because olive trees do not grow so fast, so the only explanation is that it was out of the flooded area.

The bird brought back a leaf, not a tree. Olive shoots can grow very fast and produce leaves in very short order…

And as for Noah not traveling outside the flood’s reach, there would have been no point to the flood. –Picture this: Noah preaches there will be a flood, then when it starts to rain he goes for a journey out of Mesopotamia…and the people he preached to follow him. There would have been no point if he traveled out of the region.

Exactly… no point in building a local Flood to save man and beast. All he would have had to do is tell everyone to leave the local area until after the Flood was over…

The problem is (and I’ve studies geology) is that plate tectonics doesn’t work that way. There is no mechanism to make mountains grow that fast. Besides, it would have caused massive earthquakes causing tsunamis, and it would have released tremendous amounts of heat…enough heat to actually boil the oceans since the interiours of the earth are extremely hot.

Actually, there is no known mechanism to make the plates move slowly over vast periods of time. Erosion rates and sedimentation rates also support the conclusion that plate tectonics has a catastrophic origin within recent history – i.e., the plates were moving much faster originally than they are currently moving.

Sean Pitman
www.DetectingDesign.com

Sean Pitman Also Commented

Panda’s Thumb: ‘SDAs are split over evolution’
@Phil Mills:

One of these frequent posters claims to be a Young Earth Creationists, but believes in creation based on what he refers to as “faith.” One could get the idea that he fears that anything scientifically shown to support creation is actually bad since it would then somehow require less faith to believe. His faith, however, is more akin to the Catholic student who is reported to have said, “Faith is what you believe that you know ain’t so.”

This is not Biblical faith. Neither is it the faith of the Adventist pioneers. It certainly doesn’t build faith, it actually destroys genuine faith. This pseudofaith more closely resembles a mere superstitious belief. It is no surprise that agnostics, evolutionists, and other doubters have such an affinity for those who possess this kind of “faith” on this site. Why wouldn’t they agree with it. It doesn’t threaten them in any way. It bolsters their ranks. It confirms their unbelief since they already believe faith is unreasonable.

I couldn’t have said it better myself…

Sean Pitman
www.DetectingDesign.com


Panda’s Thumb: ‘SDAs are split over evolution’
@Professor Kent:

Of course it’s a good thing; I never said it was bad. The problem is when you and Pitman maintain that empirical evidence from nature is essential to validate the Bible–and that is heresy and blasphemy.

You yourself made this “blasphemous” claim when you listed off several empirical evidences, like fulfilled prophecy (based on empirical investigation of real history), as reasons why you believe the Bible to be superior to other books claiming to be the true Word of God.

Here is what you wrote:

In short, there is ample evidence to support the Bible and Christianity, including fulfilled prophecy, the lives and testimony of the apostles, archeology, the impact of the Bible on personal lives, and so forth. All of this is “empirical evidence” that goes beyond what is needed to establish the validity of scripture. The other religions are confronted with serious shortcomings on these issues, in my opinion… – Professor Kent

Now, if the Holy Spirit is enough, as the Latter-day Saints believe, to lead you into all truth without having to use your brain, why did you appeal to these empirical evidences to support your belief or faith in the superior credibility of the Bible vs. other competing options held in higher regard by other faiths? Why didn’t you just appeal to the voice of the Holy Spirit speaking directly to you as evidence enough?

So, the argument here isn’t really over the need for an empirical basis for one’s faith in the Bible before it can be considered rational. You yourself appeal to such. You admit to the need for an empirical argument as the basis for choosing the Bible over other competing options. You’ve made this argument several times now. Therefore, the real argument here is in regard to your notion that the empirical basis, or “weight of empirical evidence” for faith never changes or needs to be re-examined in any way over time – despite the discovery of new evidence and information?

Sean Pitman
www.DetectingDesign.com


Panda’s Thumb: ‘SDAs are split over evolution’
@krissmith777:

You missed my overall point. The first sentence I quoted from it was: The rates at which sediments accumulate vary enormously, owing to the natural variability of the processes that produce and transport sediments. — The rates vary greatly depending on the conditions… Your argument pre-supposes that the rate has not changed, and you have not demonstrated that it has. — And frankly, it doesn’t have to be.

You misunderstand the “rate” that the author is talking about here. This rate is not the overall rate of ocean sedimentation which is in fact fairly constant at ~30 billion tons per year. I’ve already tried to explain this to you, but the variability your reference is talking about is the local variability that is indeed due to many factors of sediment transport within the oceans themselves. This local variability does not affect the overall sediment load that is consistently delivered to the oceans.

— David E. Thomas says it much better than I ever could:

…much sediment never gets to the ocean floor, but is trapped instead on continental slopes and shelves, or in huge river deltas. Over the years, some of these continental slopes can accumulate several kilometers of sediment, while others can even become part of mountain ranges in continental plate-to-plate collisions. Neither erosion nor subduction are expected to be constant processes over millions of years, and they are simply not good clocks.

Indeed, and my calculations take into account all the sediment currently in the oceans, to include the sediment on continental slopes and shelves and river deltas. The total amount of sediment, taking all of these factors into account, is only 10^17 tons. That tonnage can be explained in just 15 million years. That’s a huge problem for mainstream theories of plate tectonics and the proposed age of ocean basins. Your arguments about the variability of sedimentation for different parts of the ocean floor are completely irrelevant to explaining the total tonnage that is currently in the oceans regardless of its location.

I heard one geologist call it a “crude” dating method. Looks more related to “relative dating,” not “absolute dating.”

Again, you’re looking at local rates of accumulation over time, not the overall rate of accumulation over time. You’re confusing two separate concepts here. They aren’t the same thing.

Again, that is completely irrelevant to the point that the total amount of sediment, the total tonnage that is current in the oceans, irrespective of its location within the ocean basins, can be explained given just 15 million years… – Sean Pitman

And the paper I linked a while ago using the current rate gave the figure of 100 million years: (“At a rate of 0.5 cm (.2 in)/1000 years, it takes only 100 million years to accumulate 500 m (1600 ft) of sediment,”)

Indeed – the local rate of sediment accumulation on some areas of the ocean floor may indeed be this slow. Again, however, this is completely irrelevant to the fact that the total sediment contained by all the oceans in the whole world, to include the sediment that is on or close to the continent shelves, is far far too low for them to be nearly as old as mainstream scientists propose…

Sean Pitman
www.DetectingDesign.com


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I fail to see where you have convincingly supported your claim that the GC leadership contributed to the harm of anyone’s personal religious liberties? – given that the GC leadership does not and could not override personal religious liberties in this country, nor substantively change the outcome of those who lost their jobs over various vaccine mandates. That’s just not how it works here in this country. Religious liberties are personally derived. Again, they simply are not based on a corporate or church position, but rely solely upon individual convictions – regardless of what the church may or may not say or do.

Yet, you say, “Who cares if it is written into law”? You should care. Everyone should care. It’s a very important law in this country. The idea that the organized church could have changed vaccine mandates simply isn’t true – particularly given the nature of certain types of jobs dealing with the most vulnerable in society (such as health care workers for example).

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