I most certainly did not. I'm making the exact same point as in the previous post to which you simply replied with the non-explanatory one-liner saying "yeah...funny".
I'm just trying to get you to expand a bit and actually address the point raised.
Is this your way of saying that god then "tried" to send his message to all independent cultures over the course of history and only a single tribe in judea managed to properly understand it?
If yes, then what does it say about god and his omnipotence, as well as his sincerity, that people managed to understand it in
vastly incompatible ways instead?
How does his monotheistic christian message result in the understanding of the norse religion of whalhalla, for example? The principles of that religion are EXTREMELY different from christianity. For starters, it's polytheistic. And plenty of customs and vaues therein, are VASTLY different from what you'll find in the bible.
Do you really wish to claim that this is simply due to "some misunderstanding on their part"?
That doesn't sound very plausible, now does it....
Now, if every culture in the world would rather represent a
denomination of christianity with difference more similar to protestantism and catholicism -
then you'ld have a point.
But when the difference between religion sare SO vast and major... The argument of "
it's the same god and the same massage, just a misunderstanding on the part of those who are the target of the message" doesn't hold up as the differences are far to huge to be explained away with some mere "misunderstanding".
Nore does this address the point made that it's also entirely implausible that not a single other culture managed to understand this "message" in even only remotely the same way.
The entire issue I raised, thus remains completely unaddressed
Which would be a plausible point if all religions of the world were a version or variation of christianity. But that isn't the case at all. Worse even, the christian religions, even abrahamic religion in general, are NOT the oldest religions either. So that argument doesn't hold up either. It would predict that the oldest religion would be the most "correct" then. But the oldest religions aren't even monotheistic and existed long before abrahamic religion....
So this argument doesn't hold up either.
Different floods at different times - and by far not as many have such a tale as you would like to believe.
Curiously (not really), the cultures that have such myths and legends in their religion or history, are all cultures that lived near large bodies of water....
The stories themselves (as to the cause of those floods and the circumstances) also don't match up at all. Except for the Epic of Gilgamesh, which is clearly where the old testament borrowed the tale from. Ironically, that makes the OT story a "deviation" as you called it from the "one correct religion".
Not really, since he, if he is the christian god and your bare declarations here are accurate, is going to punish all those people with eternal torment because he failed at communicating properly.