gnostic
The Lost One
Jesus himself made reference to the life of Noah, and to the flood, so the implication of doubting his word is to doubt all of scripture as prophecy. If Noah lived, and the flood occurred, then the record of Genesis 10 is a legitimate record of descendants after the flood.
That 1st century jew know of the story don’t make Noah a real person in history, and there have been no such flood as described by Genesis 7 & 8.
There are no physical evidence to support that destroy every civilizations and water covering the highest mountains.
It is a myth that 1st century BCE Jews adapted from older Babylonian myths (eg Epic of Gilgamesh, the 16th century BCE Epic of Atrahasis), which was adapted from even much older Sumerian myths (eg the Eridu Genesis or the myth of Ziusudra, as well as being alluded to in the Death of Bilgames and in one of the versions of the Sumerian King Lists - WB-62 recension).
The part about God instructing Noah to build a vessel to save his family and some animals, as well as the smell of sacrifices drew God, originally appeared in the Ziusudra myth, and all other later versions, eg Atrahasis in the Epic of Atrahasis and Utanapishtim in the Epic of Gilgamesh.
The Epic of Atrahasis also included the scenes of Atrahasis releasing birds to find lands, first appeared in this epic, a thousand years before Genesis was first composed in the 6th century BCE. It may have also originated in the Ziusudra story, but parts of the Eridu Genesis tablet is missing due to fragmentation of the clay tablet.
The Genesis story isn’t older than the Sumerian and Akkadian-Babylonian versions, nor was it original.
Many of the Babylonian myths were very popular during the mid-2nd millennium BCE that some copies were found as far away as Hattusa in the Hittite empire, Ugarit, the Canaanite Megiddo and in Egypt, and remained popular in the Neo-Assyrian empire (eg Library of Ashurbanipal in Nineveh, 7th century BCE) and Neo-Babylonian empire (6th century BCE).
You have described Nimrod as a fictional character, but this is based on a number of assumptions, including human longevity.
So you believe Nimrod was older than the patriarch Methuselah by over 3000 years?
If you are, then you’re being absurd.
There are no evidence to support anyone in ancient time with longevity of 130 years. The whole over 900 year old people like Adam, Seth, Methuselah and Noah are pure myths.
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