Interesting article on Biblical accuracy

by Jon Preston 13 Replies latest watchtower bible

  • Jon Preston
    Jon Preston

    Appearance of camels in Genesis called sign of authors' distance from history

    .

    Biblical scholars have long been aware many of the stories and accounts in the sacred book were not written by eyewitnesses, and according to new research, further evidence of that historical distance has appeared in the form of a hump-backed camel.

    New research using radioactive-carbon dating techniques shows the animals weren't domesticated until hundreds of years after the events documented in the Book of Genesis.The research was published by Erez Ben-Yosef and Lidar Sapir-Hen, archaeologists from Tel Aviv University in Israel. They believe camels were not domesticated in the eastern Mediterranean until the 10th century B.C.

    And yet, the hump-backed creatures are mentioned repeatedly alongside Abraham, Jacob and Isaac, indicating the Bible's writers and editors were portraying what they saw in their present as how things looked in the past, says a New York Times article by John Noble Wilford:

    These anachronisms are telling evidence that the Bible was written or edited long after the events it narrates and is not always reliable as verifiable history. These camel stories "do not encapsulate memories from the second millennium," said Noam Mizrahi, an Israeli biblical scholar, "but should be viewed as back-projections from a much later period."

    Via National Geographic:

    While there are conflicting theories about when the Bible was composed, the recent research suggests it was written much later than the events it describes. This supports earlier studies that have challenged the Bible's veracity as a historic document.

    The biblical angle wasn't the focus of the recent research, though, just an after-the-fact observation.

    The question over "phantom camels" is not new one, according to TIME magazine. Biblical scholar William Foxwell Albright "argued in the mid-1900s that camels were an anachronism."

    In an opinion piece for CNN, Joel Baden writes that there was no deception intended on the part of the Bible's authors.

    "Biblical authors," Baden writes, "simply transplanted the nomadic standards of their time into the distant past. There is nothing deceptive about this. They weren’t trying to trick anyone. They imagined, quite reasonably, that the past was, fundamentally, like their present."

    A similar conclusion was reached by Smithsonian.comauthor Colin Schultz, who wrote, "these findings don't necessarily disprove all the stories of the Bible. Rather, knowing that there are camels where there definitely shouldn't be shows that the Bible's authors, working thousands of years after the events they were describing were supposed to take place, took a modern lens to these ancient tales."

    whatcha think?

  • Witness My Fury
    Witness My Fury

    Yes I've read about this somewhere, It might have been in The Bible Unearthed, but I've read so much stuff that it could have been anywhere LOL...

    Edit: Yes it was briefly mentioned in The Bible Unearthed.

  • Cadellin
    Cadellin

    I recall an article in the WT or Awake refuting this point and using some kind of "recent evidence" suggesting that camels were domesticated much earlier than scholars first thought. This was some time ago (probably a few years) and I did no research on it. My suspicion, now that I know the WT's "rigorous, scholarly standards of accuracy," is that it's fallacious.

  • Finkelstein
    Finkelstein

    The bible is full of fictional embellished stories, many which were told to reconfirm the power and

    relevance of the god (YHWH) of which the Hebrews created and identified themselves with.

    The Bible is honestly a man made expressive effort inspired by advocating certain god(s)

    something that was important to people who were trying to identify and distinguish themselves

    among many gods of that time in human history.

  • Frazzled UBM
    Frazzled UBM

    There are easier ways to discredit the accuracy of accounts in the Bible surely - Giants, people living for 100s of years, the parting of the Red Seas and walking and riding chariots across what would in fact have been a very deep ravine and Noah's Ark - there are no end of examples

  • Jon Preston
    Jon Preston

    All good points. Ill have to do some further research on it

  • Phizzy
    Phizzy

    So Rutherford's "Anti-typical fulfillment" involving Rachel's Camels is total rubbish ??????

    I never would have guessed !

    Except I did, when I first read it many decades ago.

    Before I knew about the reasons mentioned above, of course, but the whole thing, lke most of Rutherford's Loony-Tunes stuff, struck me as laughable.

    Of course, all the things Rutherford taught were enough to convince Jesus he should choose him and his cronies as the FDS in 1919.

    That makes sense.

    Not.

  • billythekid46
    billythekid46

    What about the wild Camels that roamed on those ancient dates, and were they 1 hump or 2. history is funny since none of

    us were there HA!!!!!!!!!

  • Tiktaalik
    Tiktaalik

    Camels evolved in the Americas. They crossed the land bridge that formed during the ice ages in the modern day Berring Strait between Alaska and Siberia.

    They were wiped out by human migrants into the Americas around 10000 years ago and survived only in their 'new' home in the Middle East, North Africa, and Western Asia.

    That's science, folks.

    Who cares what the bible says.

  • cofty
    cofty

    Interesting thanks.

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