Re Don's note, some Native American flood myths have come to us in a form
that suggests some influence of the Noah story; probably conveyed by
Christian missionaries. I recall one myth from one of the Nortwest tribes (I
can't lay my hand on the book right now to identify it) that had obvious
affinities with the biblical story, but the latter's features were
incorporated into a more ancient framework. Perhaps the late ice age lake
that Crater Lake is a remnant would have been the original inspiration.
Bob Schneider
----- Original Message -----
From: "Don Perrett" <donperrett@theology-perspectives.net>
To: <burgytwo@juno.com>
Cc: "ASA Discussions" <asa@calvin.edu>
Sent: Tuesday, January 09, 2007 5:59 PM
Subject: RE: [asa] dinos
> Normally I don't get into the YEC/ID discussions. HOWEVER
>
> IMHO I feel that more likely than a direct descendancy from Noah, which
> cannot account for Native Americans being here before the flood, I believe
> it is more likely that the flood stories from around the world are in
> reference to past human experiences (tales) of the floods which likely
> occurred at the end of the last ice age which would have been seen
> globally
> but would not have been global. Being that it would more likely be at a
> more recent time, it may have been as a result of mountain glaciers
> melting
> rapidly and not the larger glaciers that may have cut the Grand Canyon for
> example. Any area in a low land near mountains with remaining ice age
> glacier caps would have experience localized (regional) flooding.
>
> As for the flying dinos, is it not likely that the tales may have
> originated
> from hypotheses drawn from those that found Ptero remains?
>
> Don
>
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: asa-owner@lists.calvin.edu [mailto:asa-owner@lists.calvin.edu] On
> Behalf Of burgytwo@juno.com
> Sent: Tuesday, January 09, 2007 3:35 PM
> To: asa@calvin.edu
> Subject: [asa] dinos
>
> AIG recently tossed out the following:
>
> Q: Were dragons just mythological?
>
> A: You may have heard about the flood legends that have come down from
> many
> different people groups around the world, many of which are very similar
> to
> the Bible's account of Noah's Flood.
>
> For instance, the Australian Aborigines, before they even met
> missionaries,
> had stories about a global flood. The stories included many similarities
> to
> the Bible's account. The same can be said of the legends of the American
> Indians, Fijians, Eskimos, and other cultures all around the world.
>
> The reason for this is that these people are all descendants of Noah.
> They handed down the story of the Flood to succeeding generations. The
> stories changed over the years, but the similarities to the Bible are
> still
> there.
>
> The same sort of thing likely happened with dragon legends. These stories
> are based on real encounters with real beasts. The stories exist all over
> the world, handed down from generation to generation.
>
> What were the dragons? When you read about the descriptions of many of
> these
> dragons in the old history books, you will see that they fit with many of
> the descriptions we have today of dinosaurs.
>
> Yes, dragons were probably dinosaurs!
>
> -----------------------------------------------------------
>
> Now I'm going to confess that the first time I saw this argument, it
> argued
> (for me) somewhat persuasively that -- perhaps -- dinos and humanity
> existed
> at the same 6time. The stories in the book of Job reinforced this. Then
> when
> I saw dino tracks in a river in San Rose
> (?) Texas, the credibility increased. Those tracks "looked" fresh -- not
> 100
> MY old. (They still do).
>
> So to a limited extent I stll hold a small chance (.01% perhaps) that
> dinos
> did survive into recent times.
>
> Of course, that possibility has nothing to do with the YEC view, I think.
> Should a living T Rex be found in -- say -- S America, it WOULD be
> interesting. I keep hoping ... .
>
> Burgy
>
>
>
>
>
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Received on Wed Jan 10 00:02:45 2007
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