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One enemy of the Biblical account of the Noahic flood tells us that, "Another problem for the global flood interpretation" is that, supposedly, according to it, "Planet Earth became a desert after the flood!" Instead of accepting the Biblical account of the Noahic flood, the author prefers to try to promote a contra-Biblical account, wherein he claims that God brought the flood waters upon only some undefined geographic region he refers to as "the Mesopotamian plain", "the Mesopotamian flood plain", and "the Mesopotamian area".
He writes:
Nobody who accepts the Biblical flood account claims that the drying up of the flood waters, as per Genesis, caused the earth to become a desert. But, here is an image the author presents in illustrating his attack against a straw man he has created (rather than against what believers of the Genesis flood account actually believe):
Since he claims that the words, "the earth was completely dry", necessitate that the Biblical, "global" flood account imply a postdiluvian desert planet (no seas, oceans, lakes, rivers, etc.), then, unless he's a rank hypocrite, he'll not complain when it is pointed out that those same words--"the earth was completely dry"--must, then, mean that whatever "local" region he favors as being "the earth", in that passage, should have been left a desert upon the drying up of the flood waters.
Consider:
Perhaps our Bible-opposing author would like to tell us, then, that, round about the time Noah and Co. were disemb-arking, this unspecified area he calls "the Mesopotamian area" had become a desert, because "the Mesopotamian area was completely dry"! Were he to (alongside the above image) also supply an image depicting the boundaries of whatever geographic region he calls "the Mesopotamian area", it seems we should expect to find him to have completely colored in that postdiluvian, "local land area of the flood", with the same, brown color with which he has colored in the seafloors surrounding the continents in the above image. We should expect to see, in such a depiction, absolutely no blue, since there should (according to his own, poor, anti-Biblical thinking) be no lake(s), river(s), pond(s), nor any other water feature(s) needing to be indicated.
I remember once when a lake not far from where I live flooded. What did it flood? It did not flood itself. Rather, its water level rose, and so it flooded some of the land surrounding it. That's what gets flooded in a flood: land. In a flood, rivers, lakes, and other bodies of water do not get flooded--they do not flood themselves; rather, they flood the land. Needless to say, the lake near me, after it was done flooding, and after it subsided, was still there, pretty much just as it had been before. It's still there, to this day, and there's never been any desert there, at least so long as I've been alive.
He writes:
Read the following verses and see if you can see why the word "earth" does not refer to the entire planet:
If one were to interpret these verses from a global perspective, one would have to conclude that the entire earth became a desert after the flood. Obviously this interpretation is false, so the translations must be bad. In these verses, the dryness of the earth is obviously referring to the local land area of the flood and not the entire planet earth. |
Nobody who accepts the Biblical flood account claims that the drying up of the flood waters, as per Genesis, caused the earth to become a desert. But, here is an image the author presents in illustrating his attack against a straw man he has created (rather than against what believers of the Genesis flood account actually believe):
Since he claims that the words, "the earth was completely dry", necessitate that the Biblical, "global" flood account imply a postdiluvian desert planet (no seas, oceans, lakes, rivers, etc.), then, unless he's a rank hypocrite, he'll not complain when it is pointed out that those same words--"the earth was completely dry"--must, then, mean that whatever "local" region he favors as being "the earth", in that passage, should have been left a desert upon the drying up of the flood waters.
Consider:
- "the earth was completely dry"
- "[the Mesopotamian area] was completely dry"
Perhaps our Bible-opposing author would like to tell us, then, that, round about the time Noah and Co. were disemb-arking, this unspecified area he calls "the Mesopotamian area" had become a desert, because "the Mesopotamian area was completely dry"! Were he to (alongside the above image) also supply an image depicting the boundaries of whatever geographic region he calls "the Mesopotamian area", it seems we should expect to find him to have completely colored in that postdiluvian, "local land area of the flood", with the same, brown color with which he has colored in the seafloors surrounding the continents in the above image. We should expect to see, in such a depiction, absolutely no blue, since there should (according to his own, poor, anti-Biblical thinking) be no lake(s), river(s), pond(s), nor any other water feature(s) needing to be indicated.
I remember once when a lake not far from where I live flooded. What did it flood? It did not flood itself. Rather, its water level rose, and so it flooded some of the land surrounding it. That's what gets flooded in a flood: land. In a flood, rivers, lakes, and other bodies of water do not get flooded--they do not flood themselves; rather, they flood the land. Needless to say, the lake near me, after it was done flooding, and after it subsided, was still there, pretty much just as it had been before. It's still there, to this day, and there's never been any desert there, at least so long as I've been alive.