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the lights of the church and the light of science-第4部分
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with the geographical horizon of the Jews。 In the north it was
bounded by the Black Sea and the mountains of Armenia;
extended towards the east very little beyond the Tigris;
hardly reached the apex of the Persian Gulf; passed; then;
through the middle of Arabia and the Red Sea; went southward
through Abyssinia; and then turned westward by the frontiers of
Egypt; and inclosed the easternmost islands of the
Mediterranean (p。 11)。
The justice of this observation must be admitted; no less than
the further remark that; in still earlier times; the pastoral
Hebrews very probably had yet more restricted notions of what
constituted the 〃whole earth。〃 Moreover; I; for one; fully agree
with Professor Diestel that the motive; or generative incident;
of the whole story is to be sought in the occasionally excessive
and desolating floods of the Euphrates and the Tigris。
Let us; provisionally; accept the theory of a partial deluge;
and try to form a clear mental picture of the occurrence。 Let us
suppose that; for forty days and forty nights; such a vast
quantity of water was poured upon the ground that the whole
surface of Mesopotamia was covered by water to a depth certainly
greater; probably much greater; than fifteen cubits; or twenty
feet (Gen。 vii。 20)。 The inundation prevails upon the earth for
one hundred and fifty days and then the flood gradually
decreases; until; on the seventeenth day of the seventh month;
the ark; which had previously floated on its surface; grounds
upon the 〃mountains of Ararat〃 (Gen。 viii。 34)。 Then; as
Diestel has acutely pointed out (〃Sintflut;〃 p。 13); we are to
imagine the further subsidence of the flood to take place so
gradually that it was not until nearly two months and a half
after this time (that is to say; on the first day of the tenth
month) that the 〃tops of the mountains〃 became visible。 Hence it
follows that; if the ark drew even as much as twenty feet of
water; the level of the inundation fell very slowlyat a rate
of only a few inches a dayuntil the top of the mountain on
which it rested became visible。 This is an amount of movement
which; if it took place in the sea; would be overlooked by
ordinary people on the shore。 But the Mesopotamian plain slopes
gently; from an elevation of 500 or 600 feet at its northern
end; to the sea; at its southern end; with hardly so much as a
notable ridge to break its uniform flatness; for 300 to 400
miles。 These being the conditions of the case; the following
inquiry naturally presents itself: not; be it observed; as a
recondite problem; generated by modern speculation; but as a
plain suggestion flowing out of that very ordinary and archaic
piece of knowledge that water cannot be piled up like in a heap;
like sand; or that it seeks the lowest level。 When; after 150
days; 〃the fountains also of the deep and the windows of heaven
were stopped; and the rain from heaven was restrained〃 (Gen。
viii。2); what prevented the mass of water; several; possibly
very many; fathoms deep; which covered; say; the present site of
Bagdad; from sweeping seaward in a furious torrent; and; in a
very few hours; leaving; not only the 〃tops of the mountains;〃
but the whole plain; save any minor depressions; bare? How could
its subsistence; by any possibility; be an affair of weeks
and months?
And if this difficulty is not enough; let any one try to imagine
how a mass of water several perhaps very many; fathoms deep;
could be accumulated on a flat surface of land rising well above
the sea; and separated from it by no sort of barrier。
Most people know Lord's Cricket…ground。 Would it not be an
absurd contradiction to our common knowledge of the properties
of water to imagine that; if all the mains of all the waterworks
of London were turned on to it; they could maintain a heap of
water twenty feet deep over its level surface? Is it not obvious
that the water; whatever momentary accumulation might take place
at first; would not stop there; but that it would dash; like a
mighty mill…race; southwards down the gentle slope which ends in
the Thames? And is it not further obvious; that whatever depth
of water might be maintained over the cricket…ground so long as
all the mains poured on to it; anything which floated there
would be speedily whirled away by the current; like a cork in a
gutter when the rain pours? But if this is so; then it is no
less certain that Noah's deeply laden; sailless; oarless; and
rudderless craft; if by good fortune it escaped capsizing in
whirlpools; or having its bottom knocked into holes by snags
(like those which prove fatal even to well…built steamers on the
Mississippi in our day); would have speedily found itself a good
way down the Persian Gulf; and not long after in the Indian
Ocean; somewhere between Arabia and Hindostan。 Even if;
eventually; the ark might have gone ashore; with other jetsam
and flotsam; on the coasts of Arabia; or of Hindostan; or of the
Maldives; or of Madagascar; its return to the 〃mountains of
Ararat〃 would have been a miracle more stupendous than all
the rest。
Thus; the last state of the would…be reconcilers of the story of
the Deluge with fact is worse than the first。 All that they have
done is to transfer the contradictions to established truth from
the region of science proper to that of common information and
common sense。 For; really; the assertion that the surface of a
body of deep water; to which no addition was made; and which
there was nothing to stop from running into the sea; sank at the
rate of only a few inches or even feet a day; simply outrages
the most ordinary and familiar teachings of every man's daily
experience。 A child may see the folly of it。
In addition; I may remark that the necessary assumption of the
〃partial Deluge〃 hypothesis (if it is confined to Mesopotamia)
that the Hebrew writer must have meant low hills when he said
〃high mountains;〃 is quite untenable。 On the eastern side of the
Mesopotamian plain; the snowy peaks of the frontier ranges of
Persia are visible from Bagdad; and even the most ignorant
herdsmen in the neighbourhood of 〃Ur of the Chaldees;〃 near its
western limit; could hardly have been unacquainted with the
comparatively elevated plateau of the Syrian desert which lay
close at hand。 But; surely; we must suppose the Biblical writer
to be acquainted with the highlands of Palestine and with the
masses of the Sinaitic peninsula; which soar more than 8000 feet
above the sea; if he knew of no higher elevations; and; if so;
he could not well have meant to refer to mere hillocks when he
said that 〃all the high mountains which were under the whole
heaven were covered〃 (Genesis vii。 19)。 Even the hill…country of
Galilee reaches an elevation of 4000 feet; and a flood which
covered it could by no possibility have been other than
universal in its superficial extent。 Water really cannot be got
to stand at; say; 4000 feet above the sea…level over Palestine;
without covering the rest of the globe to the same height。 Even
if; in the course of Noah's six hundredth year; some prodigious
convulsion had sunk the whole region inclosed within 〃the
horizon of the geographical knowledge〃 of the Israelites by that
much; and another had pushed it up again; just in time to catch
the ark upon the 〃mountains of Ararat;〃 matters are not much
mended。 I am afraid to think of what would have become of a
vessel so little seaworthy as the ark and of its very numerous
passengers; under the peculiar obstacles to quiet flotation
which such rapid movements of depression and upheaval would
have generated。
Thus; in view; not; I repeat of the recondite speculations of
infidel philosophers; but in the face of the plainest and most
commonplace of ascertained physical facts; the story of the
Noachian Deluge has no more claim to credit than has that of
Deucalion; and whether it was; or was not; suggested by the
familiar acquaintance of its originators with the effects of
unusually great overflows of the Tigris and Euphrates; it is
utterly devoid of historical truth。
That is; in my judgment; the necessary result of the application
of criticism; based upon assured physical knowledge to the story
of the Deluge。 And it is satisfactory that the criticism which
is based; not upon literary and historical speculations; but
upon well…ascertained facts in the departments of literature and
history; tends to exactly the same conclusion。
For I find this much agreed upon by all Biblical scholars of
repute; that the story of the Deluge in Genesis is separable
into at least two sets of statements; and that; when the
statements thus separated are recombined in their proper order;
each set furnishes an account of the event; coherent and
complete within itself; but in some respects discordant with
that afforded by the other set。 This fact; as I understand; is
not disputed。 Whether one of these is the work of an Elohist;
and the other of a Jehovist narrator; whether the two have been
pieced together in this strange fashion because; in the
estimation of the compilers and editors of the Pentateuch; they
had equal and independent authority; or not; or whether there is
some other way of accounting for itare questions the answers
to which do not affect the fact。 If possible I avoid a
priori arguments。 But still; I think it may be urged;
without imprudence; that a narrative having this structure is
hardly such as might be expected from a writer possessed of full
and infallibly accurate knowledge。 Once more; it would seem that
it is not necessarily the mere inclination of the sceptical
spirit to question everything; or the wilful blindness of
infidels; which prompts grave doubts as to the value of a
narrative thus curiously unlike the ordinary run of
veracious histories。
But the voice of archaeological and historical criticism still
ha
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