| Noahs Flood & the Tower of
						Babel
 120 years of GraceNeither Jerome(1) nor Augustine(2) held that Genesis 6:3 meant that the human life span was
						reduced to 120 years, because men lived for 200 or 300 years after the flood.
						Instead they saw it as the length of time that God had allotted for them to
						repent before He sent his judgement upon them. Jerome mentions that there were
						some who disagreed with him on this point, one of them being Lactantius.(3) 
 The Extent of the Flood 
						 
						   
							 | Writer | Date | Extent of Flood | Reference |   
							 | Local | Global |   
							 | Philo | c.20 BC-c.AD 50 |  | X | Abraham, 41-44  |   
							 | Josephus | AD 37/38 - 100 |  | X | Antiquities, 1.3.4 (1.89) |   
							 | Justin Martyr | c.100 - c.165 |  | X | Dialogue, 138  |   
							 | Theophilus of Antioch  | Wrote c.180 |  | X | Autolycus, 3.18-19  |   
							 | Tertullian | c.160 - c.225 |  | X | Pallium, 2; Women, 3 |   
							 | Gregory of Nazianzus  | 330-390 |  | X | 2nd Theol. Orat. 18 |   
							 | John Chrysostom | 374-407 |  | X | Genesis, 25.10  |   
							 | Augustine of Hippo | 354-430 |  | X | City 15.27 |  The evidence from the early church summarised in
						Table 6.1 is fairly conclusive. It was the unanimous
						opinion of the Jewish and early Christian writers who wrote on the subject that
						Noahs Flood was a global event. In this the fathers cannot be said to be
						simply parroting the commonly held views of contemporary culture, because many
						used it to counter the local flood view which was held by all the Greek
						philosophers (except Xenophanes(4) c.560 - c. 478 BC). The
						Hellenistic Jew Philo of Alexandria understood Noahs Flood to be
						universal, covering all the mountains, islands and continents, destroying all
						animals and men outside of the ark.(5) However, some of the
						phrases he uses are regarding the extent of the Flood are ambiguous. He writes,
						for example, that the flood ...extended almost beyond the pillars of
						Hercules and the great Mediterranean Sea, since the whole earth and all the
						spaces of the mountains were covered with water...(6)
						Even Davis Young, who believes that the Flood was local, concedes that the
						phrase used meant that the flood was tantamount to being
						universal.(7) This tells us more about Philos
						limited understanding of the size of the earth than anything else.(8) Philo was emphatic that the Flood was anthropologically
						universal,(9) and destroyed all plants, animals and buildings
						(except for one house).(10) The roots and seeds of the plants
						were not destroyed because they were below the surface of the earth and the
						Lord promised only to destroy what was on the face of the earth.(11) Theophilus of Antioch (for example) rejected Platos
						argument that Noahs Flood was local and restricted to the plains, leaving
						the mountains uncovered. He maintained that it was universal and that only
						eight people were saved in an Ark, built at Gods command.(12) The Flood would never be repeated. Theophilus accounts for
						the name Deucalion (the equivalent of Noah in the Greek account of the Flood)
						by means of a word study:  ...Noah, when he announced to the
						men then alive that there was a flood coming, prophesied to them, saying, Come
						thither, God calls you to repentance. On this account he was fitly called
						Deucalion.(13) [Deucalion, from Deute,
						come andkaleo, I call](14) 
 The Shape of the ArkOrigen of Alexandria wrote fairly extensively on the Flood
						and so it is worth considering his views in some detail. In his second
						Homily on Genesis Origen told his congregation that he intended first to
						relate to them the literal sense of the account of Noahs Ark, and then
						...ascend from the historical account to the mystical and allegorical
						understanding of the spiritual meaning...(15) Even in
						his literal account there are elements not found in the original Hebrew (such
						as the reference to the construction of nests for the animals)(16) which are drawn from Philo of Alexandria.(17) He described the dimensions of the Ark (giving it 5 decks
						instead of 3) and (again apparently following Philo) thought that the Ark was
						shaped like a pyramid.(18) The reason for this being that
						they misunderstood the meaning of the phrase in Genesis 6:16 finished to
						a cubit above, which is better translated finish the ark within a
						cubit of the top. The result of this mistake is bizarre: In the first place, therefore, we
						ask what sort of shape and form we should understand the appearance of the ark.
						I think, to the extent that it is manifest from these things which are
						described, rising with four angles from the bottom, and the same having been
						drawn together gradually all the way to the top, it has been brought together
						into the space of one cubit. For thus it is related that at its bases three
						hundred cubits are laid down in length, fifty in breadth, and thirty are raised
						in height, but they are brought together in a narrow peak so that its breadth
						and length are a cubit.(19) It did not occur to either Philo or Origen that such an ark
						would only float upside down! On the contrary, he considered that the pointed
						top would allow the rain water to flow off more easily and the four corners act
						like a foundation!(20) Origen refuted the accusation of
						Apelles, a disciple of the Gnostic Marcion, that the ark was not large enough
						to hold all the animals. Rather than resorting to allegory he defended the
						literal meaning by arguing that Moses meant geometrical cubits - equal to 6
						ordinary cubits.(21) This argument was later taken up at a
						later date by Augustine to answer the same challenge.(22)
						Celsus likewise pours scorn upon the account of the Flood, especially on the
						dimensions of the Ark. Origens answer is that the dimensions stated and
						the time given to build the Ark were all reasonable and can be taken
						literally.(23)He makes no reference to 2 Peter 3:3-10 in his
						discussion of the Flood, possibly because that passage contradicted his
						eschatology. He believed that the fire of the second great conflagration was to
						be taken figuratively for the judgement of God consuming the works of men (cf.
						1 Cor. 3:13-15).(24) Such an interpretation, however, was not
						typical of the rest of the church of his day.(25) 
 The Church fathers on the FloodExtrabiblical evidence was often referred to by the fathers.
						Eusebius cites Josephus references to Berossus the Chaldee, Hieronymus
						the Egyptian and Nicolaus of Damascus in support of the biblical account of the
						Flood.(26) In line with his negative view of pagan culture
						and learning Lactantius rejected the view that the account of Noahs flood
						was borrowed from the Greeks. This could not be the case because the Greek
						account of the Flood was fatally flawed. If, therefore, the flood took place
						for the purpose of the destroying wickedness, which had increased through the
						excessive multitude of men, how was Prometheus the maker of man, when his son
						Deucalion is said by the same writers to have been the only one who was
						preserved on account of his righteousness? How could a single descent and a
						single generation have so quickly filled the world with men?(27) This led him to conclude that it was the Greeks who had
						borrowed and subsequently corrupted the older Genesis record. Augustine held
						that the account of the Flood was historical, but added that it should also be
						interpreted allegorically, as referring to Christ and to the Church.(28) He then went on to defend the historicity of the ark and
						the world-wide extent of the Flood. He concludes: ...no one, however stubborn, will
						venture to imagine that this narrative was written without an ulterior purpose;
						and it could not plausibly be said that the events, though historical, have no
						symbolic meaning, or that the account is not factual, but merely symbolical, or
						that the symbolism has nothing to do with the Church. No; we must believe that
						the writing of this historical record had a wise purpose, that the events are
						historical, that they have a symbolic meaning, and that this meaning gives a
						prophetic picture of the Church.(29) Likewise the account of Noahs family is referred to as
						a historical narrative which can be interpreted spiritually.(30) The account of the Flood caused Chrysostom some problems in
						his sermons. He explained that the references to the floodgates of
						heaven do not mean that there are actually physical sluices in the sky. Rather
						it was a way of expressing in human terms the promptness with which the waters
						responded to the divine command ...and inundated the whole world.(31) Likewise it is pointless trying to work out how God made
						the flood waters subside. He believed that all such things must simply be taken
						on faith.(32) 
 Life in the ArkA few of the church fathers felt that they had to explain
						the logistical difficulties raised by a year spent in the Ark. Ephrem the
						Syrian solved the problem of the storage of water by arguing that the water on
						the earth was not salty until the seas were gathered together.(33) For John Chrysostom the main question raised was how all
						those animals managed to survive for so long in such an enclosed space. Imagine
						the smell! That their survival was achieved by a miracle was the only
						explanation that he could come up with.(34) 
 Noahs DrunkennessBy the third century AD Christian piety demanded certain
						standards, even from the Old Testament saints. While for Jewish writers like
						Philo Noah was the archetypal drunk and a warning of the perils of imbibing to
						excess,(35) the church fathers went to great lengths to
						excuse or explain his actions. Rabbinic writers even go so far as to claim that
						Noah fell from grace by planting a vineyard and becoming drunk.(36)  A number of ingenious solutions were proposed. Epiphanius of
						Salamis excused Noah by suggesting that he was overcome by grief and infirmity
						caused by old age.(37) Ephrem the Syrian held that Noah did
						not drink to excess - it had been so long since he had had a drink that he was
						intoxicated very quickly.(38) John Chrysostom sought to
						exonerate Noah by claiming that as he had never made or drunk wine before he
						did not know of its effects!(39) By way of contrast
						Lactantius was not concerned about vindicating Noah, but rather on
						demonstrating that he was the inventor of wine, rather than Bacchus.(40)  
 The Location of The Ark 
						 
						   
							 | Writer  | Date  | Reference | Relevant Extract |   
							 | Unknown | 109-105 BC | Jubilees 5. 28 | And the ark went and rested on the top of Lubar, one
								  of the mountains of Ararat. |   
							 | Jubilees 7.1  | ...Noah planted vines on the mountain on which the
								  ark had rested, named Lubar, one of the Ararat Mountains... |   
							 | Josephus | 37 - 100  | Antiquities 3.6 (1.93-95) | ...Berosus the Chaldean... goes on thus:- It
								  is said that there is still some part of this shipin Armenia, at the mountain
								  of the Cordyaeans; and that some people carry off pieces of the bitumen, which
								  they take away... .... Nicolaus of Damascus... speaks thus:- This
								  is a great mountain in Armenia, over Minyas, called Baris, upon which it is
								  reported that many who fled at the time of the deluge were saved; and that one
								  who was carried in an ark came on shore upon the top of it; and that the
								  remains of the timber were a great while preserved... |   
							 | Antiquities 20.1.2 (20.24-25) | Monobazus... bestowed on him [his son] the country
								  called Carrae; ...there are also in it the remains of the ark, wherein it is
								  related that Noah escaped the deluge, and where they are still shown to such as
								  are desirous to see them. |   
							 | Julius Africanus | c. 160 - 240  | Fragments of the Five Books of the Chronography,
								  4 | And when the water abated, the ark settled on the
								  mountains of Ararat, which we know to be in Parthia; but some say that they are
								  at Celaenae of Phrygia, and I have seen both places. |   
							 | Theophilus of Antioch | c. 180 | Autolycus 2.19 | And of the ark, the remains are to this day to be
								  seen in the Arabian mountains. |   
							 | Hippolytus of Rome | 170-236 | Refutation 10.26 | [Noah] owed his preservation to an ark; and both the
								  dimensions and relics of this ark are, as we have explained, shown to this day
								  in the mountains called Ararat, which are situated in the direction of the
								  country of the Adiabeni. |   
							 | 1 Genesis, 8:1 (ANF, Vol. 5, 198). | And there is a town of the name Kardu, and that hill
								  is called after it, which is indeed very lofty and inaccessible, whose summit
								  no one has ever been able to reach, on account of the violence of the winds and
								  the storms which always prevail there. And if any one attempts to ascend it,
								  there are demons that rush upon him, and cast him down headlong from the ridge
								  of the mountain into the plain, so that he dies. No one, moreover knows what
								  there is on top of the mountain, except that certain relics of the wood of the
								  ark still lie there on the surface of the top of the mountain. |   
							 | Ephraem the Syrian | c. 306-373  | Commentary on Genesis 6.12.1 | But after one hundred fifty days the waters began
								  top subside and the ark came to rest on Mt. Qardu. |   
							 | Epiphanius of Salamis | c. 313-403 | Panarion 1.2.1 | After the Flood Noahs Ark came to rest in the
								  highlands of Ararat between Armenia and Cardyaei, on the mountain called
								  Lubar |   
							 | Panarion, 18.3.3 | ...even today the remains of Noahs ark are
								  still pointed out in Cardyaei. And if one were to make a search and discover
								  them - this stands to reason - he would surely also find the ruins of the altar
								  at the foot of the mountain.  |   
							 | John Chrysostom | 374-407 | Homilies on Thessalonians, 8 | Do you then believe that the deluge took place? Or
								  does it seem to you a fable? And yet even the mountains where the ark rested,
								  bear witness; I speak of those in Armenia. |  
 Other Physical Evidence of the Flood a) FossilsModern young-earth creationist thought centres around the
						Flood of Noah as the source of the majority of geological formations and
						especially fossils. It is therefore of some interest to investigate what the
						ancients made of these structures. In antiquity the term fossil meant
						anything dug from the ground, and the distinction between organic fossils and
						minerals was not clearly made until the modern period.(41) Among the Greeks it appears to have become common knowledge
						that fossils were the result of the periodic flooding by the sea.(42) Xenophanes (c. 560- c. 478) is the first writer we know of
						to suggest this explanation. He believed that several of these floods occurred
						in the past, each wiping out all of mankind and so implying that they were
						universal in extent.(43) Later writers referred only to
						localised instances of flooding. The presence of salt lakes and springs were
						also noted as evidence cited as evidence of marine transgressions. Herodotus
						(484 - 430-420 BC) wrote:  Thus I give credit to those from
						whom I received this account of Egypt, and am myself, moreover, strongly of the
						same opinion, since I remarked that the country projects into the sea further
						than the neighbouring shores, and I observed that there were shells upon the
						hills, and that salt exuded from the soil to such an extent as even to injure
						the pyramids...(44) Strabo (b. 64/63 BC - d. after AD 23?), records in his
						famous Geography (written between 27 BC and AD 14) many of the
						statements of earlier historians regarding fossils. Erastosthenes (c. 276 - c.
						194 BC), Xanthus of Lydia (mid 5th century BC) and Strato (3rd century BC) are
						all said to have explained fossils as evidence that large areas of land were
						formerly covered by the sea.(45) Xenophanes, however, appears
						to have been unique amongst the Greek historians and philosophers in as much as
						he believed in a universal flood. Writing over 300 years after Strabo Tertullian was in no
						doubt that this presence of fossils on the peaks of mountains was evidence that
						the flood was a world-wide event. There was a time when her [the
						earths] whole orb, withal underwent mutation, overrun by all waters. To
						this day marine conchs and tritons horns sojourn as foreigners on the
						mountains, eager to prove to Plato that even the heights have inundated. But
						withal, by ebbing out, her orb again underwent a formal mutation; another, but
						the same. Even now her shape undergoes mutations...(46) The writings of the early church on fossils give no hint of
						the part they would later play in calling Mosaic history into question during
						the eighteenth century.(47) 
  b) Changed GeographyIn his Lectures on Genesis Martin Luther recognised
						that the flood forever changed the geography of the world. Concerning the four
						rivers described in Genesis he says: Therefore one must not imagine that
						the source of these rivers is the same today as it was at that time; but the
						situation is the same today as in the case of the earth, which now exists and
						brings forth trees, herbs, etc. If you compare these with the uncorrupted
						creation, they are like wretched remnants of that wealth which the earth had
						when it was created. Thus these rivers remain like ruins, but, to be sure, not
						in the same place; much less do they have the same sources.(48)  When we read the writings of the early church we find little
						evidence that the church fathers had any idea that the flood would bring about
						such dramatic changes. The Jewish historian Josephus wrongly attributed the
						pillar in the land of Siriad built at the command of Seth (Sesostris) King of
						Egypt to Seth, the son of Adam.(49) Clearly Josephus assumed
						that a pillar of stone would have survived the flood. Later Jerome, whilst
						discussing Origens allegorical interpretation of Genesis 1, asserts that
						the four rivers of Genesis are also meant literally because he himself has
						drunk from both the Gihon and the Euphrates.(50) Clearly he
						assumed that the rivers he visited were the same ones that existed before the
						Flood. One of the few writers who appears to have considered the possibility of
						a changed geography was Augustine. He rhetorically asks what has now become of
						the spring of water that waters the whole earth (Gen. 2:6)(51) and in his answer he says that the world has changed since
						the time of creation. 
  c) The Credibility of the EvidenceDespite the prominence that ancient accounts of the survival
						of Noahs ark on a mountain top somewhere in the Near East there are good
						reasons for doubting the value of the evidence. It should be noted that none of
						the church fathers cited actually claimed to have seen the ark for himself.
						Julius Africanus claims to have seen the two mountains claimed as resting
						places of the ark, but not the ark itself. Hippolytus seems to actively
						discourage any search for proof of its survival or, at the very least,
						attempting to explain why such proof is not forthcoming. Table 6.2illustrates clearly the diversity of opinion in
						the early church concerning the location of the ark. The locations cited are
						not only not consistent, but are separated by many hundreds of miles which
						again undermines the credibility of the sightings. The stock phrase to this day used in several of
						the accounts is often used etiologically in the Bible to explain to the origin
						of a present day object or custom. For example, the reason why the town of
						Beersheba got its name (Genesis 26:33), the origin of Joshuas pillar
						(Joshua 4:9) and Absoloms Monument (2 Samuel 18:18). Josephus and the
						early church fathers often used the phrase in the same way. Josephus claims,
						for example, that the pillar of salt that had been Lots wife was still
						visible to this day and that he himself had seen it.(52) Clement of Rome(53) and later Irenaeus of
						Lyons(54) both believed that the pillar still exists (but not
						that they have seen it themselves), no doubt using him as their source. Other
						writers have also had reason to question Josephus claims supporting his
						statements. Alberto R. Green, for example, points to Josephus statements
						regarding the building of Solomons temple. In this instance Josephus
						cites a record that he insists exists in the achives of Tyre, but does not say
						that he has examined it personally.(55) In the fourth century Cyril of Jerusalem wrote that the
						stone that sealed Christs tomb still stands by the empty tomb in
						Jerusalem.(56) Dubious as these claims appear they pale in to
						insignificance next to Augustines assertion concerning the survival of
						Jobs ash-heap (Job 2:8): The discourse concerning the three
						young men, and the Babylonian furnace, did, as it would seem, yesterday give no
						small comfort to your Charity; and still more the example in the case of Job,
						and that dunghill more to be venerated than any kingly throne. For from seeing
						a royal throne no advantage results to the spectators, but only a temporary
						pleasure, which has no profit; but from the sight of Jobs dunghill, one
						may derive every kind of benefit, yea, much divine wisdom and consolation, in
						order to patience. Therefore to this day many undertake a long pilgrimage, even
						across the sea, hastening from the extremities of the earth, as far as Arabia,
						that they may see that dunghill; and having beheld it, may kiss the land, which
						contained the wrestling-ground of such a victor, and received the blood that
						was more precious than all gold!(57) Such claims would seem to further undermine the credibility
						of the early church fathers as unbiased witnesses to physical evidence used in
						support of their faith. Finally, it should be noted that nowhere in Scripture
						does it say that any of the above objects, the Ark of Noah included, have
						survived. The fact that the cannot be found today therefore does not disprove
						anything. 
 The Repopulation of the EarthAmong the modern challenges to the idea of a global flood is
						that of how certain species of plants and animals spread out from one location
						into the habitats in which we find them today. As far as I am aware only one
						Christian writer in antiquity attempted to answer a similar problem. When it
						came to filling that Ark with animals Augustine saw no problem because he
						believed that Noah did not need to catch them, because they came to him at
						Gods command.(58) The redistribution of the animals in
						the ark to the remote islands did cause him some difficulty. He made several
						suggestions: some arrived by swimming, some were taken by men in ships, others
						could have been transported by angels. His final solution involves the animals
						being spontaneously generated from the earth in their new locations - as they
						were in the beginning (he says). Therefore, Augustine wrote ...all species were in the ark not
						so much for the purpose of restoring the animal population as with a view of
						typifying the various nations, thus presenting a symbol of the Church. This
						must be the explanation, if the earth produced many animals on islands to which
						they could not cross.(59) 
 The Tower of BabelAs far as we can tell from their surviving comments the
						early church fathers accepted the account of Babel as a historical event,
						although for the most part they simply quoted the text without commenting on it
						in any detail. One of the churchs opponents, Celsus, claimed in the
						second century that the account of the Tower of Babel was a corrupted version
						of the Greek story of the sons of Aloeus, Otus and Ephialtes, recorded by Homer
						(c. 8th century BC).  And after her I saw Iphimedeia,
						wife of Aloeus, who declared that she had lain with Poseidon. She bore two
						sons, but short of life were they, godlike Otus, and far-famed Ephialtes - men
						whom the earth, the giver of grain, reared as the tallest, and far the
						comliest, after the famous Orion. For at nine years they were nine cubit in
						breadth and in height nine fathoms. Yea, and they threatened to raise the din
						of furious war against the mortals in Olympus. They were fain to pile Ossa on
						Olympus, and Pelion, with its waving forests, on Ossa, that so heaven might be
						scaled. And this they would have accomplished, if they had reached the measure
						of manhood; but the son of Zeus, whom fair-haired Leto bore, slew them both
						before the down blossomed beneath their temples and covered their chins with a
						growth of beard.(60) Origen countered Celsus argument with the (now
						familiar) claim that as Moses antedated Homer then Moses account of the
						confusion of tongues must be the original one.(61) Eusebius
						called upon extrabiblical evidence in support of the account of the confusion
						of languages, citing Josephus, Abydenus and the Sibylline Oracles.(62) It appears to have been generally accepted that Babel
						resulted in the division of mankind into 72 language groups, being the number
						of post-flood chieftains.(63) Augustine referred to Genesis
						11 on numerous occasions and clearly held the majority view that all the
						languages of the world are explained by the events at Babel: We now see that from these three
						men, Noahs sons, seventy-three nations - or rather seventy-two, as a
						calculation will show - and as many languages came into being on the earth, and
						by their increase they filled even the islands. However, the number of nations
						increased at a greater rate than the languages. For even in Africa we know of
						many barbarous nations using only one language.(64) If there was only one language before Babel, what was it.
						Augustine view seems to change one this subject. In his Literal Commentary
						on Genesis he wrote:  We know, of course, that there was
						originally just one language before man in his pride built the tower after the
						flood and caused human society to be divided according to different languages.
						And whatever the original language was, what point is there in trying to
						discover it? (65) By the time he wrote the City of God he had changed
						his mind and become convinced that Hebrew was the original language of man,(66) the position held by the majority.(67)
						There were those who stood against this position. Gregory of Nyssa, for
						example, argued that Hebrew was a recent language and rejected any notion that
						it might be the language of God Himself.(68) Finally, it is
						worth noting that Augustine understood the dividing of the earth (Genesis
						10:25) as being caused by the diversity of languages arising after Babel.(69) ©
						1998, 1999 Robert I. Bradshaw
 References(1) Jerome, Hebrew,
						6.3 (Hayward, 37). Italics in original. (2) Augustine, City,
						15.24 (Bettenson, 642). (3) Lactantius,
						Institutes, 2.14 (ANF, Vol. 7, 63). (4) Adrian J. Desmond,
						The Discovery of Marine Transgressions and the Explanation of Fossils in
						Antiquity, American Journal of Science, Vol. 275 (June 1975):
						699. (5) Philo, Abraham,
						41-44 (Yonge, 414).  (6) Philo, Q & A
						Gen., 2.28 (Yonge, 823-824). (7) Davis A. Young, The
						Biblical Flood: A Case Study of the Churchs Response to Extrabiblical
						Evidence. (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans / Carlisle: The Paternoster Press, 1995),
						12. (8) Jack P. Lewis, A
						Study of the Interpretation of Noah and the Flood in Jewish and Christian
						Literature. (Leiden: E.J. Brill, 1968), 48. (9) Philo, Moses 2.60
						(Yonge, 496). (10) Philo, Abraham,
						45-46 (Yonge, 414-415). (11) Philo, Q & A
						Gen. 2.15 (Yonge, 820). (12) Theophilus,
						Autolycus, 3.18-19 (ANF, Vol. 2, 116-117). (13) Theophilus,
						Autolycus, 3.19 (ANF, Vol. 2, 116-117).  (14)ANF, Vol. 2,
						116, n. 8.  (15) Origen,
						Genesis, 2.1 (Heine, 72). (16) Origen,
						Genesis, 2.1 (Heine, 72-73); cf. Philo, Q & A Gen. 2.3 (C.D.
						Yonge, The Works of Philo [Peabody, Mass.: Hendrickson, 1993],
						814). (17) Like Origin, Philo
						relied on a Greek translation and did not refer to the Hebrew Text. (18) Cf. Philo, Q &
						A Gen. 2.5 (Yonge, 815). (19) Origen,
						Genesis, 2.1 (Heine, 72-73). (20) Origen,
						Genesis, 2.1 (Heine, 75). (21) Origen,
						Genesis, 2.2 (Heine, 76-77). (22) Augustine,
						City, 15.27; St. Augustine, Concerning the City of God Against the
						Pagans, trans. Henry Bettenson, 1972. (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1984),
						646. (23) Origen, Celsus,
						4.41 (ANF, Vol. 4, 516). (24) Origen, Celsus,
						4.13 (ANF, Vol. 4, 502). (25) Lewis, 171-172.
						 (26) Eusebius,
						Preparation, 9.10-11 (Gifford, Part 1, 445-446). (27) Lactantius,
						Institutes, 2.11 (ANF, Vol. 7, 59). (28) Augustine,
						City, 15.27 (Bettenson, 645). (29) Augustine,
						City, 15.27 (Bettenson, 648). (30) Augustine,
						City, 16.2 (Bettenson, 652). (31) John Chrysostom,
						Genesis, 25.10 (Hill, 131-132). (32) John Chrysostom,
						Genesis, 26.11 (Hill, 152). (33) Ephrem the Syrian,
						Genesis, 1.10.2; 11.2 St. Ephrem The Syrian, Selected Prose Works:
						Commentary on Genesis, Commentary on Exodus, Homily on Our Lord, Letter to
						Publius, trans. Edward G. Mathews, Jr. & Joseph P. Amar. Kathleen
						McVey, ed. (Washington, D.C.: The Catholic University of America Press, 1994),
						82-83. (34) John Chrysostom,
						Genesis, 25.14 (Hill, 134-135). (35) Philo, On
						Drunkeness, 4. C.D. Yonge, The Works of Philo (Peabody, Mass.:
						Hendrickson, 1993), 207. (36) Louis Ginzberg, The
						Legends of the Jews, Vol. 1. (Philadelphia: The Jewish Publication Society
						of America, 1925), 167-168. (37) Epiphanius, Panarion,
						43.3.8; Frank Williams, Translator, The Panarion of Epiphanius of
						Salamis, Nag Hammadi and Manichaean Studies, Vol. 36. (Leiden:
						E.J. Brill, 1994), 130.  (38) Ephrem the Syrian,
						Genesis, 7.1-2. (Mathew, Amar & McVey, 144). (39) John Chrysostom,
						Genesis, 29.9 (Hill, 204-205); Chase, 53. (40) Lactantius,
						Institutes, 2.14 (ANF, Vol. 7, 63). (41) Francis C. Haber,
						The Age of the World: Moses to Darwin. (Westport, Connecticut: Greenwood
						Press, 1959), 41. (42) W.K.C. Guthrie, A
						History of Greek Philosophy, Vol. 1. (Cambridge: CUP, 1962), 387, n.
						2. (43) Adrian J. Desmond,
						The Discovery of Marine Transgressions and the Explanation of Fossils in
						Antiquity, American Journal of Science, Vol. 275 (June 1975):
						698-699. (44) Herodotus,
						History 2.12  (45) Strabo,
						Geography, 1.3.4 (translated by Horace Leonard Jones, The
						Geography of Strabo, LCL, Vol. 1. (London: William Heinemann,
						1917), 181-187. (46) Tertullian,
						Pallium, 2 (ANF, Vol. 4, 6) (47) Haber,
						105-115. (48) Martin Luther,
						Lectures on Genesis, Chapters 1-5, Jaroslav Pelikan, ed.
						Luthers Works, Vol. 1. (St. Louis, Missouri: Concordia Publishing
						House, 1958), 99. (49) Josephus,
						Antiquities, 1.2.3 (1.71). (50) Jerome, Letter,
						51.5 (NPNF, 2nd series, Vol. 6, 86). (51) Augustine, Literal
						5.7.20 (Taylor, No. 41, 158). (52) Josephus,
						Antiquities, 1.11.4 (1.203). Josephus likewise claims that a tower built
						by Daniel in Ecbebana, Media still exists "to thios day". See 10.11.7
						(10.264). (53) Clement of Rome,
						First Epistle 11 (ANF, Vol. 1, 8). (54) Irenaeus,
						Heresies 4.31 (ANF, Vol. 1, 504). (55) Josephus, Against
						Apion 1.107-108; Alberto R. Green, Davids Relations with Hiram:
						Biblical and Josephan Evidence for Tyrian Chronology. Carol.L. Myers & M.
						OConnor (eds.), The Word of the Lord Shall Go Forth: Essays in Honor
						of DavidNoel Freedman on his Sixtieth Birthday. (Winona Lake, Indiana:
						Eisenbrauns, 1983), 381. (56) Cyril of Jerusalem,
						Catechetical, 13.39; 14.32 (NPNF, 2nd series, Vol. 7, 93,
						100). (57) Augustine,
						Homily 5.1 (NFNF, 1st Series, Vol. 9, 371). (58) Augustine,
						City, 15.27 (Bettenson, 647). (59) Augustine,
						City, 16.7 (Bettenson, 661).  (60) Homer,
						Odyssey, 11.305-320; Trans. A.T. Murray, LCL, Vol. 1. (London:
						William Heinemann, 1969), 409. (61) Origen, Celsus,
						4.21 (ANF, Vol. 4, 505); cf. Origen, Celsus, 5.29 (ANF,
						Vol. 4., 555-556). (62) Eusebius,
						Preparation, 9.11 (Gifford, Part 1, 447-448). (63) Epiphanius,
						Panarion, 2.2.8-11; Frank Williams, Translator, The Panarion of
						Epiphanius of Salamis, Nag Hammadi and Manichaean Studies, Vol.
						35. (Leiden: E.J. Brill, 1994), 16; Hippolytus, On the Psalms, 9 (ANF,
						Vol. 5, 202). One source argued that there were only 70 languages - the number
						of Israelites who entered Egpyt. Pseudo-Clementine Homilies 18.4
						(ANF, Vol. 8, 325).  (64) Augustine,
						City, 16.6 (Bettenson, 660). (65) Augustine, Literal
						9.12.20 (Taylor, No. 42, 84). (66) Augustine,
						City, 16.11 (Bettenson, 667-670). (67) Origen, Celsus,
						5.30 (ANF, Vol. 4, 556); Jerome, Letter 18 (NPNF, 2nd series,
						Vol. 6, 22); Pseudo-Clementine Recognitions 1.30; 4.28 (ANF, Vol. 8, 85,
						141). (68) Gregory of Nyssa,
						Answer of Eunomius Second Book (NFNF, 2nd series, Vol. 5,
						276). (69) Augustine, City
						16.9 (Bettenson, 664). 
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