Hello,
A recent thread that touched on the chronology of the patriachs in the book of Genesis triggered off a memory that I just had to uncover. How did we ever believe such stuff!
Questions from Readers The conclusion that the Flood occurred 1,656 years after Adam’s creation rests on the ages in the genealogical list in Genesis chapter 5. The Bible there says how old each man was when he became father to the next. But is it not possible that each was some months older or younger, which could change the total considerably?This is plain hilarious. It seems far more reasonable to the WTS to suppose that each of the above named offspring were all born on the exact birth date of their fathers.
Genesis chapter 5 provides detailed information about a chain of men from Adam to Noah. It tells how old each was when he became father to the next link. For example, ‘Adam lived on for a hundred and thirty years and became father to Seth.’ (Gen. 5:3) Thus we have:
From Adam’s creation
to the birth of Seth 130 years
To the birth of Enosh 105 "
To the birth of Kenan 90 "
To the birth of Mahalalel 70 "
To the birth of Jared 65 "
To the birth of Enoch 162 "
To the birth of Methuselah 65 "
To the birth of Lamech 187 "
To the birth of Noah 182 "
From Noah’s birth to the flood 600 "
——————
Total 1,656 years
Some have wondered, though, ‘What if there was a few months’ difference in each case: If Adam was 130 years and 4 months old when Seth was born, and Seth 105 years and 4 months, and so on? Just a quarter year added to each link would amount to some three years more between Adam and the Flood. Might that be the case?’
Frankly, there is no reasonable basis for thinking so.
It would be speculation for someone to hold that Adam was four months older than 130 years when Seth was born. Another could speculate that Seth was four months younger than 105 years when Enosh arrived. So the differences could cancel each other out or average out to the same total reached from the Genesis record.This definitely sounds like the bats in Frederick Franz belfry had taken full flight that week. You are actually driven to new levels of respect for Tabby Hall when you read such stuff.
But let us not ignore this……..is it reasonable that God would provide specific figures that, when used, would mislead his people? No. Unlike the Devil, Jehovah God is not a liar or a deceiver. If he put facts in his Word, we can trust that they are accurate and reliable for use.I suppose on such definitions, that is, that those whose ‘facts’ and 'figures' one cannot trust are liars and deceivers, we should rest our case.
Best regards - HS