11-07-2025, 09:40 AM
This thread spun off from my Bible Translations post, which somehow turned into sixteen pages of flood debates (linking it HERE for anyone who wants to catch up).
That conversation got heated, sure — but it also showed how deep and layered the topic really is. So rather than keep hijacking that one, here’s a fresh thread dedicated entirely to The Great Flood.
Round two begins below:
It only made sense to give this debate its own home.
So here it is — no sidetracks, no apologies. Let’s talk about the Flood.
Was it a literal event that nearly wiped out humanity — a real, remembered catastrophe that echoed through every ancient civilization? Or was it a regional disaster retold by people whose entire “world” stretched only as far as they could walk before the waters rose?
We’ve got geological evidence of massive floods in Mesopotamia around 7,000–5,000 years ago. Nearly every culture — Sumerian, Hebrew, Indian, Chinese, even Aboriginal Australian — has a flood story that follows the same pattern: judgment, destruction, mercy, and renewal. Coincidence? Or a shared memory of something the ancient world never forgot?
Of course, others point to continuous civilizations like Egypt and China and say that disproves a global flood. Fair. But even modern science is rethinking how fast adaptation and evolution can occur — some studies say up to four times fasterthan we thought. That changes the timeline for a lot of assumptions about population recovery and diversity.
And then there’s the spiritual angle: maybe the flood wasn’t just water, but a story meant to explain why humanity keeps collapsing and rebuilding — a cycle of destruction and grace.
Either way, the flood story refuses to die. So let’s have at it — evidence, theology, myth, and everything in between.
That conversation got heated, sure — but it also showed how deep and layered the topic really is. So rather than keep hijacking that one, here’s a fresh thread dedicated entirely to The Great Flood.
Round two begins below:
It only made sense to give this debate its own home.
So here it is — no sidetracks, no apologies. Let’s talk about the Flood.
Was it a literal event that nearly wiped out humanity — a real, remembered catastrophe that echoed through every ancient civilization? Or was it a regional disaster retold by people whose entire “world” stretched only as far as they could walk before the waters rose?
We’ve got geological evidence of massive floods in Mesopotamia around 7,000–5,000 years ago. Nearly every culture — Sumerian, Hebrew, Indian, Chinese, even Aboriginal Australian — has a flood story that follows the same pattern: judgment, destruction, mercy, and renewal. Coincidence? Or a shared memory of something the ancient world never forgot?
Of course, others point to continuous civilizations like Egypt and China and say that disproves a global flood. Fair. But even modern science is rethinking how fast adaptation and evolution can occur — some studies say up to four times fasterthan we thought. That changes the timeline for a lot of assumptions about population recovery and diversity.
And then there’s the spiritual angle: maybe the flood wasn’t just water, but a story meant to explain why humanity keeps collapsing and rebuilding — a cycle of destruction and grace.
Either way, the flood story refuses to die. So let’s have at it — evidence, theology, myth, and everything in between.




![[Image: 708880338595ab08c831fe3fc615f4d0.jpg]](https://denyignorance.com/uploader/images/708880338595ab08c831fe3fc615f4d0.jpg)


