Saturday, November 14, 2009

How did Noah gather polar bears, kangaroos, Galapagos tortoises, tigers, lions, landcrabs etc?

he did a world tour beforehand





then after the flood he went around and put them all back where he found them





make sense?

How did Noah gather polar bears, kangaroos, Galapagos tortoises, tigers, lions, landcrabs etc?
Satellite tracking duuu





O and "With the help of God, anything is possible." wheres my $50 bucks
Reply:Noah was the great, great, great, great....great, great grandfather of the Lord of the jungle himself, TARZAN. He possessed the amazing ability to speak to animals. It's a perfectly logical explanation of how he got all those animals into the boat. ;)
Reply:those animals are good to get, what about the ants?
Reply:He didn't. They evolved from the small selection of animals he did take.
Reply:2 by 2's.
Reply:$50 say that the Christians will say:


"With the help of God, anything is possible."
Reply:The land was only one land at the time the story was meant, when the story was written, no one had traveled "around the world" and they probably thought it was flat!


All stories have a meaning, a lesson to be told, a moral, you should take more note of that than of the facts of the story!


Or do you need to know if Hansel and Gretel were really going to be eaten by a witch? :)
Reply:bait.
Reply:He tossed animal crackers out the starboard port holes.
Reply:Biblical scholars of the time such as Justus Lipsius (1547–1606) and Athanasius Kircher (c.1601–80) were also beginning to subject the Ark story to rigorous scrutiny as they attempted to harmonise the Biblical account with natural historical knowledge. The resulting hypotheses were an important impetus to the study of the geographical distribution of plants and animals, and indirectly spurred the emergence of biogeography in the 18th century. Natural historians began to draw connections between climates and the animals and plants adapted to them. One influential theory held that the biblical Ararat was striped with varying climactic zones, and as climate changed, the associated animals moved as well, eventually spreading to repopulate the globe. There was also the problem of an ever-expanding number of known species: for Kircher and earlier natural historians, there was little problem finding room for all known animals in the Ark, but by the time John Ray (1627–1705) was working, just several decades after Kircher, the number of known animals had expanded beyond biblical proportions. Incorporating the full range of animal diversity into the Ark story was becoming increasingly difficult, and by 1700 few natural historians could justify a literal interpretation of the Noah's Ark narrative.


http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Noah's_Ark
Reply:Noah didn't collect or go out and get any animals. The animals came to him.


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