| A Review of Davis A. Young, The Biblical
						Flood: A Case Study of the Church's Response to Extrabiblical Evidence.
						Carlisle: The Paternoster Press, 1995Davis Young opens by explaining why he wrote this book; to
						answer those who objected to his understanding of the Genesis accounts of the
						creation and flood. As Young holds that the flood was both geographically and
						anthropologically local in that it covered only the Mesopotamian basin [Young,
						225] and did not wipe out all of mankind outside the ark it is understandable
						why people should object to his teaching [Young, 242]. A survey of the church's interpretation of the flood
						narrative through history leads Young to conclude that until the
						mid-seventeenth century the majority of Christians believed that the flood was
						universal [Young, 307]. He notes that the church has reacted in different ways
						to extrabiblical evidence about the world. Some writers ignored it completely,
						while others recognised it as an aid to biblical interpretation and
						understanding. As scientific knowledge developed and apparently contradicted
						the biblical account Young laments that conservative Christians became
						increasingly suspicious of science. He accuses recent conservative commentators
						on the flood of relying on out-dated evidences and pseudo-science in order to
						support their (mistaken) contention that the biblical flood was universal
						[Young, 306-307]. The key issue is the role which extrabiblical evidence plays
						in the interpretation of Scripture. Whether we recognise it or not, we all
						approach the text with our own pre-understanding of what it means, brought from
						our culture, life-experience, education, background, etc. As we read the Bible
						our pre-understanding is changed and when we read it again we see it in a new
						light. This process continues as we continue to study Scripture and is known as
						the hermeneutical spiral. What Young is arguing is that Christians should recognise
						that extrabiblical evidence has always influenced the interpretation of
						Scripture; current geological, biogeographical and anthropological evidence
						modern dating techniques are extrabiblical evidence and therefore Christians
						should adjust their interpretation of Scripture in line with the conclusions of
						those sciences. The flaw in this syllogism is the secondary premise. While
						Young is correct in arguing that infallible Scripture is subject to our
						fallible interpretations (and demonstrates this at length), he appears to
						regard the interpretation of physical data as infallible and not open to any
						challenge. It is therefore not surprising that he comes to such strange
						conclusions. In reality physical data can be explained in terms of
						the Creationist paradigm, as has been shown recently in work carried out at
						Mount St. Helens and the Grand Canyon. Among the evidences cited by Young for
						the earth's antiquity is the supposed evolution of the horse [Young, 173-174],
						but he fails to note that this interpretation of the evidence is simply untrue.
						In his survey of recent literature on the flood Young discusses at length an
						article by Donald C. Boardman who argues for a local flood [Did Noah's
						Flood Cover the Entire World? - No, Ronald F. Youngblood, ed. The
						Genesis Debate (Grand Rapids: Baker Book House, 1990), 210-229] Although
						Young notes that Steven A. Austin of the Institute for Creation Research wrote
						an article in the same volume in favour of a universal flood, he doesn't
						mention any of Austin's arguments [Young, 274-276]. Dismissing Creationist
						explanations of physical sciences Young concludes that a literal interpretation
						of the flood demands ...that representatives of tens of
						thousands of different species left their natural habitats and restricted
						supplies of food, made their way from all the distant and isolated parts of the
						globe, crossing oceans, Arctic wastes, and any number of hostile environments
						to arrive at the ark, that these vast numbers of creatures somehow all boarded
						the craft, which (presumably) already held enough food to sustain them for a
						year, and then after the retreat of the floodwaters all made the journey back
						to their respective habitats to replenish the earth. Commentators who maintain
						that fossils were laid down in the flood must apparently also assume that
						representatives of all the species in the fossil record, including dozens of
						species of dinosaurs, were also aboard the ark. Is a literal reading of the
						flood narrative really so sacrosanct as to induce us to maintain such bizarre
						scenarios? [Young, 312] Most Creationists will be disappointed that once again their
						views are reduced to an caricature on the basis of objections that have been
						answered adequately already. Creationists are not the only ones to recognise
						the growing difficulties in the evolutionary paradigm (See Richard Milton,
						The Facts of Life: Shattering the Myth of Darwinism & Michael
						Denton.Evolution: A Theory in Crisis.), yet if one were to believe Young
						they too must be accounted arrogant and pseudo-scientific for daring to
						challenge the dogma of infallible science. ©
						1995 Robert I. Bradshaw 
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