Suppose you go to a place where there is no or very little wind and you tell a story about Usain Bolt runs like the wind. People there might say: Oh, we walk faster than Usain then because the wind here is very slow. On the other hand if you go to Chicago, the windy city, and tell the same story about Usain Bolt, right away they would understand you.
IOW, you can’t interpret idiomatic expression from a different time frame with your own interpretation today because you don’t agree with it. Instead of learning from it you are pushing yourself away from it because you have your own interpretation.
I have a friend and at the age of 42 he finished his first Iron Man and the end of the race he cried like a baby. What an expression, right?
Now, can you somehow understand or replace that expression with you own expression? No, you can’t, for the simple reason that only this guy at that moment could understand this and expressed it the way he wanted it. You cannot interpret it your way until you do your first Iron Man and finish it.
You are missing the whole point of simile as literary's figure of speech, JM2C.
Wind can be of any speed, that's true, but using the "wind" in connection with Bolt in a race, as a simile, often referred to Bolt running faster than other Olympians in a 100m sprint.
The use of similes are most common in verse literature, like poetry, for instance, epic poems of The Iliad, The Odyssey, or in Old Norse sagas.
Similes can often be commonly found in allegories, in religious scriptures.
My point with the example of Bolt "run like wind", means that he run faster than everyone else in foot races, but HE IS NOT THE
"WIND".
I could write that "Samson is strong
as a bear", and I mean to talk of Samson's
"strength" being greater than any normal man. So using this saying or simile, it doesn't mean that I am saying Samson is a bear.
Do you understand what I am saying now?
In Job 40:17
Job 40:17 NRSV said:
17 It makes its tail stiff like a cedar;
Job 40:17 KJV said:
17 He moveth his tail like a cedar
Both referred to the tail cedar, as either how much its tail bend or how stiff tail is. It doesn't say anything about the cedar height, so Job 40:17 is not talking about the tail's length. You are making wrong comparison between the behemoth and the cedar. What I am saying that your personal interpretation to 40:17 has deliberately changed the context of that verse, so that you can say that this behemoth is a dinosaur.
And judging by your past posts, you think this behemoth is T-Rex.
Behemoth is plural.
JOB 40:15 “Behold now, Behemoth, which I made as well as you;
He eats grass like an ox.
Except that every time it referred to the behemoth, it always referred to it as "he" or "him" or "his" (from verse 17 to 24) - which are all singular, not plural like "they" or "them" or "their".
Again, you like to twist contexts to suit your baseless argument. Your dishonesty precede you.
The Behemoth and Man were created by God in the same day.
GE 1:25 God made the beasts of the earth after their kind, and the cattle after their kind, and everything that creeps on the ground after its kind; and God saw that it was good.
GE 1:26 Then God said, “Let Us make man in Our image, according to Our likeness; and let them rule over the fish of the sea and over the birds of the sky and over the cattle and over all the earth, and over every creeping thing that creeps on the earth.”
GE 1:27 God created man in His own image, in the image of God He created him; male and female He created them.
The Behemoth is so big that only God can control it, but God gave man dominion over them.
GE 1:26 Then God said, “Let Us make man in Our image, according to Our likeness; and let them rule over the fish of the sea and over the birds of the sky and over the cattle and over all the earth, and over every creeping thing that creeps on the earth.”
No where in Genesis 1:25-27 does it mention "behemoth". Again more, more dishonesty from you.
That’s maybe the reason why they don’t eat people back then. Only in movies dinosaurs eat people.
More straw man from you.
I have said anything about dinosaurs eating people.
I only say stated that tyrannosaurs were meat-eaters, meaning they were predators to other dinosaurs. I didn't say that they eat people.
You are right that dinosaurs don't eat people, and not because they are herbivores, but because dinosaurs were never around at any time in human history, BECAUSE they have been extinct since about 65 million years ago, at the end of Cretaceous period.
But they (dinosaurs) weren't around at any time of biblical stories, you being a YEC believe in all sort of ignorant things. You just believe in the Young Earth Creationism, and the YECs are known for their famous dishonesty. The behemoth is nothing more than mythological creature that you have delusionally associated with dinosaurs.
Just because you believe that behemoth and dinosaurs are one and the same, doesn't mean what you believe in or how you interpret Job 40 to be true or accurate.
Interpreting it differently and inconsistently is the true meaning of “deceptive and very desperate act”.
You keep telling yourself that. I just wonder how you can look yourself in the mirror in the morning.
I have nothing but you not only corrupting science for your creationism, but you have corrupted the bible with your own warped interpretations.