TimCallahan
Philosopher
- Joined
- Mar 11, 2009
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. . .On a separate note, the 700 Club newscaster (not Pat Robertson) gave the typical cherry picked full of poor logic reasons one should believe the Bible. He noted geologists would say there was no evidence of a worldwide flood, biologists would say all the species wouldn't fit on the ark, but anthropologists find flood stories all over the world. Wel;l d'uh, floods are common.
Then he went on to describe an Aztec flood story that included everything in the Noah story up to the sending out a dove which didn't return indicating the water had receded. Ooooh, we should be impressed at this magical coincidence. Just ignore all the science because a coincidence in two ancient myths translated thousands of years later sound similar. Never mind all the other aspects of Aztec belief, the multiple gods, the different creation story, .....
But it is even worse than that. As I looked for confirmation of this Aztec flood myth to see how close the real story was to the 700 Club's version, it turns out there are many Mesoamerica flood myths, many versions of the same myths, the flood myth in question isn't some major Aztec myth and certainly not in the version repeated on the 700 Club. And what do you know? There are myths which were altered to include Christian themes!
Just ignore all evidence that disproves your beliefs and grossly distort evidence to make it fit. What fools.
Yeah, he definitely fudged the so-called Aztec story. Here's what I found at www.newworldencyclopedia.org/entry/Deluge(mythology)#Aztec
Aztec
There are several variants of the Aztec Flood story. One of the more famous is that of Nota, the Aztec version of Noah. However, this story is controversial for several reasons, especially because it was recorded by Spanish scribes well after Christian culture had a chance to interact with Aztec civilization. When the Sun Age came, there had passed 400 years. Then came 200 years, then 76. Then all mankind was lost and drowned and turned to fishes. The water and the sky drew near each other. In a single day all was lost. But before the Flood began, Titlachahuan had warned the man Nota and his wife Nena, saying, 'Make no more pulque, but hollow a great cypress, into which you shall enter the month Tozoztli. The waters shall near the sky.' They entered, and when Titlachahuan had shut them in he said to the man, 'Thou shalt eat but a single ear of maize, and thy wife but one also'. And when they had each eaten one ear of maize, they prepared to go forth, for the water was tranquil.
— Ancient Aztec document Codex Chimalpopoca, translated by Abbé Charles Étienne Brasseur de Bourbourg.
Inca
In Inca mythology, the god Viracocha, the creator of civilization, destroyed the giants, as well as the other inhabitants around Lake Titicaca with a Great Flood, and two people repopulated the earth. They survived sealed in caves.
Maya
The Subsiding of the Waters of the Deluge, by Cole Thomas, 1829
In Maya mythology, from the Popol Vuh, Part 1, Chapter 3, Huracan ("one-legged") was a wind and storm god. It is from his name that the English word hurricane is derived. Huracan caused the Great Flood (of resin) after the first humans angered the gods because, being made of wood, they were unable to engage in worship. Huracan lived in the windy mists above the floodwaters and spoke "earth" until land came up again from the seas. Humans had become monkeys, but later, real people would emerge, and three men and four women repopulate the world after the flood.
Add to these many dissimilarities the fact there was no native flood myth among the Celtic, Teutonic, Slavic, Baltic, Finno-Ugric and Altaic peoples, who, taken together comprise the peoples of Europe north of the Mediterranean and most of the land mass of Asia north of the Indian subcontinent, and the evidence of a grand, universal flood myth erodes considerably. Add to this the fact that the only universal flood myth in China is found among an ethnic group speaking a language similar to Thai and who apparently emigrated from Southeast Asia, and the there's even more erosion.
Flood myths are also scarce in Africa. The only flood myth in Egypt involves a flood of soporific mandrake beer, poured out by the gods to cover Egypt, that the goddess Hat-hor - who was on a rampage and was about to destroy the human race - drank up. After drinking up all the mandrake beer, she tottered off to bed, slept and forgot about exterminating the human race.
So the 700 Club's one great "proof" disintegrates under even slight scrutiny.
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