Just when I thought I'd seen every ridiculous Bible passage there is, I came across this gem:
"And thou shalt eat it as barley cakes, and thou shalt bake it with dung that cometh out of man, in their sight."
by sixsixsixtynine 4 Replies latest watchtower bible
Just when I thought I'd seen every ridiculous Bible passage there is, I came across this gem:
"And thou shalt eat it as barley cakes, and thou shalt bake it with dung that cometh out of man, in their sight."
Sorry, but the reference is certainly to the use of dung as a fuel. Some studies of the ancient use of dried dung as a fuel:
Anderson, Seona and Füsun Ertug-Yaras. 1998. Fuel Fodder and Faeces: An Ethnographic and Botanical Study of Dung Fuel Use in Central Anatolia. Environmental Archaeology 1: 99-109.Miller, Naomi F. 1984. The Use of Dung as Fuel: An Ethnographic Example and an Archaeological Application. Paléorient 10(2): 71-79.
Miller, Naomi F. 1984. The Interpretation of Some Carbonized Cereal Remains as Remnants of Dung Cake Fuel. Bulletin on Sumerian Agriculture 1: 45-47
Miller, Naomi F. and Tristine Lee Smart. 1984. Intentional Burning of Dung as Fuel: A Mechanism for the Incorporation of Charred Seeds into the Archeological Record. Journal of Ethnobiology 4: 15-28.
Reddy, Seetha N. 1998. Fueling the Hearths in India: The Role of Dung in Paleoethnobotanical Interpretation. Paléorient 24 (2): 61-70.
Sareiya, K.P. and P. Venkataramany. 1962. Use of Cattle-Dung as Manure and Domestic Fuel. Indian Forester 88: 718-724.
Sillar, B. 2000. Dung by Preference: The choice of fuel as an example of how Andean pottery production is embedded within wider technical,social and economic practices. Archaeometry 42(1): 43-60.
Winterhalder, B., R. Larsen, and R. B. Thomas. 1974. Dung as an Essential Resource in a Highland Peruvian Community. Human Ecology 2: 89-104.
... And it actually ended up being 'Ezekiel 4:15 bread' anyways, if the author could have bothered to read a bit further...
Sorry, but the reference is certainly to the use of dung as a fuel
Ah, so it was to be cooked with dung, rather than made with dung? I guess that's slightly less disgusting.
And it actually ended up being 'Ezekiel 4:15 bread' anyways
You're right. Three verses later he gives them cows dung to replace mans'. This stuff is sounding better all the time!
I still prefer the original intrepretation, though: