MG 2.0 wrote: ↑Sun Jun 29, 2025 8:09 pm
Philo Sofee wrote: ↑Sun Jun 29, 2025 3:28 pm
MG said: "The game clock was reset. I mean, what was a God to do?"
Astonishing! So the Almighty really couldn't think of anything better or a way out that he simply had to murder everyone except a very small number of them because, forsooth, he either didn't have the power, or didn't have the will, or didn't have the resources to make something work perhaps through the Holy Ghost?! So he murders them all instead?! OMG MG this is simply the most laughable defense I have ever seen for an Almighty deity. Of course, to a literalist there is not many options other than yours to produce... I get that.
I think it was reset for a relatively small group of people. A people who were called to be a 'covenant people' to live a higher law but chose to go another direction counter to that higher law. All the stuff about all the animals going along with them, the giraffe, the penguin, etc.,...umm...I don't think so.
The Chinese dynasties were rolling right along. Yada, yada, yada.
Clocks can be reset for different games being played on different courts that are widely separated.
Regards,
MG
That view certainly runs contrary to what the Church teaches about the flood (see Everybody Wang Chung’s post). It also runs contrary to the general narrative of building a boat to save a few people whilst the masses were drowned. If the flooding was localised, as you are suggesting, it fails to deliver its stated divine purpose.
Let me add
this current reference
Noah lived at a time when people thought and did evil continually,4 and God called him to be a preacher of righteousness to that wicked generation. When the people rejected his message, God commanded Noah to build an ark, gather animals, and prepare for a flood. Noah and his sons—Shem, Ham, and Japheth—and their wives were the only people on the whole earth saved from the flood.
It’s unequivocal.
That view also opens the door to believing that all the other stories in The Bible, including those about Jesus, are similar tall tales, like the flood. And where does that then leave the notion of a Great Apostasy and therefore a Restoration?
The idea of a local flood is a straw that breaks the camel’s break. The whole house of cards falls down. Accepting one story as figurative/myth/lengend, is accepting that they all could be.
If you support the notion of a localised flood, then that’s you supporting something contrary to accepted Church doctrine. Which should bar you from holding a temple recommend (at least honestly). Here’s the relevant question “Do you support or promote any teachings, practices, or doctrine contrary to those of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints?” If you answer No to that, then you’re not telling the truth.
It’s seems true that members can believe anything they want, so long as they continue to pray, pay, and obey.