Brown
Penultimate Amazing
- Joined
- Aug 3, 2001
- Messages
- 12,984
From ABC News (USA):
The novel "The Robe," by Lloyd C. Douglas, includes some natural and plausible explanations for some of Christ's greatest miracles, such as the feeding of multitudes with a small amount of food. What I find interesting is that Lloyd's non-supernatural version of the feeding incident actually encompasses a powerful moral message, whereas the supernatural version does not encompass that message.
Of greater interest is a potential explanation for the fabled burning bush:In the latest attempt to lend scientific credence to a supernatural event, Naum Volzinger, a senior researcher at St. Petersburg's Institute of Oceanography, and Alexei Androsov, a colleague based in Hamburg, Germany, analyzed conditions that could have made the parting of the Red Sea possible.
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Volzinger and Androsov calculated that a wind blowing at the speed of 67 miles per hour sustained overnight could have exposed a reef that existed close below the ocean surface. The Israelites could have then fled over the passage before the wind died down and waters rose again, blocking the way for pursuing Egyptian soldiers in their wheeled chariots.
It is possible that some folks saw a real burning bush, and that it led to the generation of part of the Moses story. There are other examples of strange events reported in the Bible that really do occur, to a degree. Around the Dead Sea, for example, pillars of salt naturally form. Some of them, quite by chance, resemble a human. It is easy to see how a myth could develop that the Almighty turned a person into a pillar of salt.One of the most common bushes in the region is the acacia bush, says Humphreys, a bramble that is known for making good charcoal. If a [volcanic] vent happened to spew hot gasses under an acacia bush, he argues, it could have alighted and appeared to have burned without end.
The novel "The Robe," by Lloyd C. Douglas, includes some natural and plausible explanations for some of Christ's greatest miracles, such as the feeding of multitudes with a small amount of food. What I find interesting is that Lloyd's non-supernatural version of the feeding incident actually encompasses a powerful moral message, whereas the supernatural version does not encompass that message.