C
cubedbee
Guest
This is false. Read the link I just posted to see that these words and phrases used for non-Global scope throughout the OT.bibleberean said:"Of course, some of the words, such as 'all flesh died' (7:21) might be interpreted as meaning all living things within the local area, as some modern 'scholars' claim. But when a word can have more than one meaning, the context must define its true meaning. And in Genesis 6-10, the context is one of a global Flood! More than 30 times, words and phrases of global scope appear. In each case, the primary meaning is one of totality, but when they are all together, the meaning is crystal clear.
No, it doesn't logically imply this. Who says that humanity scattered throughout the globe before Noah's flood? Certainly not the Bible. The only recording of the scattering of people throughout the planet occurs at the Tower of Babel, after the flood. The judgement of Noah's flood was complete against humanity---but all of humanity lived in the Mesoptanian region and were killed by a non-global flood.Compare this clear teaching with the teachings of Christ and the New Testament writers, and the conclusion is inescapable. Trying to salvage the local flood idea makes nonsense out of New Testament doctrine.
For example: the local flood theory logically implies that the Indians in North America, the natives in Africa, the Scandinavians, the Chinese, etc., were not affected by the Flood. They escaped God's judgment on sin. If so, what could Christ possibly have meant when He likened the coming judgment of all men to the judgment of 'all' men (Matthew 24:37-79) in the days of Noah? A partial judgment in Noah's day means a partial judgment to come. Scripture does not stand if the Flood was not global."