LittleToe said:
: IMHO special pleading isn't required, on this one.
But if you carefully reread what I wrote, you'll see that I demonstrated why it's special pleading. If you want to do more than merely offer a contrary opinon, you'll have to show why my claimed demonstration is wrong.
: The Hebrew language allows the passage to be rendered "the country was flooded", rather than the whole planet and science appears to show that there was no planetary flood.
Allowing for such usage is not the same as demanding it. The point is that almost all readers of Genesis up until near the end of the 19th century would understand perfectly that the Flood was supposed to be global. There isn't a single word in the Flood account that isn't either fully consistent with a global Flood, or virtually demands it. The only thing about the Flood account that is consistent with local flooding is the ambiguity of the Hebrew word for {earth,land}. I've noted that you carefully steer away from pretty much all the specifics I've discussed. Why?
: If you take the bible as a collection of a bunch of peoples subjective recollections of events that may have actually happened, maybe even edited and embellished through time,
That's exactly the way I view the Bible -- but not as the infallible and/or inspired Word of God. Do you view it that way?
: I don't see the difficulty
One difficulty (which you have ignored) is as I said: the NT says that Jesus compared the coming of the Flood with his upcoming return (parousia), and so he obviously viewed every bit of the Flood account as real history, just as his return would be real history. Do you disagree? Do you not see the problem?
: (Though I haven't studied the geology of the area, my immediate thought is that the Mediteranean Sea seems another likely candidate).
When you study the geology, you'll find that the Mediterranean Sea is a poor candidate. Between roughly 4 and 5 million years ago, the Strait of Gibraltar repeatedly closed, as the African continent pushed northward against Europe. After it closed, the Mediterranean dried up completely, leaving massive salt deposits in the lowest places. The Nile cut a deep canyon to the bottom, and its canyon was hundreds of feet below today's sea level up to about a thousand miles upstream. This canyon is today buried under massive quantities of delta sediments. After some time the Atlantic broke though and flooded the Mediterranean basin. This cycle repeated many times, as shown by interbedding between marine bottom and salt deposits. Today the deep Mediterranean has about 200 meters of uninterrupted marine sediment on top of the interbedded deposits. Obviously, none of this is consistent with a biblical Flood.
: Genesis was merely a compilation of earlier works, so it surprises me little that there are parallels in the Babylonian and Sumerian epics.
Nor me.
: Of course, they could also just be stories with a "payload" of some description.
I think that the Sumerians came up with the story, and transmitted it to all the other ancient peoples in the region, who adapted it to their own mythology and religious needs.
AlanF