I'm referring to stone tablets being the conveyance of the 613 items of the Law, which were given to Moses just before they entered the Promised Land, and he went to the mountaintop to be taken home to his Maker, and those tablets fitting into the Ark of the Covenant
.
I have no problem with the 613 items of the law being written on Papyrii....
It's the book of
Genesis which is the lynch-pin of the "Gap-Theory" argument.....Moses didn't "
WRITE" Genesis either on Papyrii or tablets....he
colllated and edited it....It actually implies that in the text every time it says.."
These are the generations of"
etc.... That's a
clue for us to figure it out...The book of Genesis reads that no less than 9 times...it's not there in order to meaninglessly repeat itself...it's telling us something.....
Namely, that that is the end of a particular account and that the particular tablet which comes AFTER it....starts with the same phraseology (that's to keep it in order) Like this in your KJV:
Gen 6:9
These are the generations of Noah
So, Noah will yack for a chapter or two...and then he passes it off to his sons and signs off 4 chapters later:
Gen 10:1
Now these are the generations of the sons of Noah,
..........an account ensues...and it ends with this.....
Gen 11:10
These are the generations of Shem:
Shem will yack for less than a chapter, and then he will sign off at the end of a tablet and introduce the next one thusly:
Gen 11:27
Now these are the generations of Terah
Terah/ Abraham will yack for about ten chapters and then Ishmael will take up the job here:
Gen 25:12
Now these are the generations of Ishmael, Abraham's son,
That would not be possible
It's actually quite possible. I don't think you understand those languages at all. They don't use useless spaces as we do.....they don't "punctuate" for the end of a "sentence" or complete thought as we do....they do none of this. Any given tablet usually maximized at about 17" by 17" square.........
If you know those languages......
You can put a
LOT of information on one of those tablets.....
A LOT.
Clay may seem rudimentary and stupid to you.....but.........clay lasts
WAY longer than papyrus.........a
LOT LONGER. How many extant Papyrii written by Moses do you think there are? The Original writers of Genesis were neither stupid nor crude nor idiots........they knew that clay would last a long time and they developed their writing systems to maximize space vs. accuracy.
That's why words like "of" don't exist, and they don't even have an idefinite particle like "an" (as we English speakers do)......
it wastes space. The average clay tablet at no more than 17" by 17" can contain LOADS of information....LOADS...(way more than you can convey in English). They weren't stupid.
I'm sorry, but there is no basis for that statement. The preposition is used to show direction, location, time, or to introduce an object. For example, "I put my wallet ON the table." Another example, "I went TO the store." When the ancient Hebrews wrote the word "in," it referenced not only location, but the nature of that location. They would never have written "in" but rather "on" if the original writings had been "on" a clay tablet. Instead, they wrote "in The Book of Law" to indicate it was found in the scrolls that made up the Book of Law.
I think you are making this up to be honest. Hebrew Preposistions take on a DEARTH of responsibility that our English ones don't even the preposition "MIN" which means "from" (loosely) can be taken three different ways..
I think you are speaking from no knowledge of the language itself or how it works but rather from assumption.
You are putting WAY TOO much stock in the nature of Hebrew Prepositions. They aren't very particular at all.
There is no reason, or evidence, to believe that he returned to the crude Sumerian method of writing on wet clay
He didn't "return" to it......it was ALREADY THERE.
And it isn't "CRUDE"....it has it's benefits...It lasts longer......and the Hebrew people didn't speak
COPTIC.......they spoke Hebrew.
He was writing to them........not Egyptians.
You show me how many copies of your brilliant "
non-crude" papyri you have......and I will (literally) show you
60,000 Ugaritic Ninevite and Sumerian tablets which exist to this day.......They are all in the British Museum of Natural History....
Clay lasts, Papyrus doesn't. That's why said museum has WAY more info about Ninevah from original writings than they do about Egypt.
But, the Egyptians weren't stupid either....they
also wrote their history in clay . But it's largely in pottery shards etc and not scrolls. They didn't ditch the practice, they just kept the long term info encased in clay and not paper.
or, more ludicrous, to believe he chiseled anything onto hard clay
He did nothing in "HARD CLAY"......he did it in "soft" clay....
soft clay is easy to mark in..........it hardens though.....and lasts forever.
You are simply being
insulting and rude. This does not become you at all.
given he had been educated in the preparation and use of papyrus, the making and application of ink,
Yes, Moses knew how to do it. So what?
the proper method of making a stylus, etc.
The "proper method" of making a "stylus" was to write a clay tablet......not to pen something in ink upon a papyri scroll.
On the contrary, the preparation and use of papyrus in that part of the world was quite common. The papyrus plant is a reed that grows in marshy areas around the Nile river. In ancient Egypt, the wild plant was used for a variety of uses, and specially cultivated papyrus, grown on plantations, was used to make the writing material.
"ON THE CONTRARY" WHAT?????
I KNOW everything you said in this diatribe. Did I deny this????
I know about that reed, and where it grows...I'm telling you two things:
1.) It didn't grow in the wilderness of Zin where Moses spent 40 years with the Israelites.......duh :sleep:
2.) Moses didn't "WRITE" the book of Genesis to begin with
AT ALL!........
If he had you would have a point in impressing us with what you learned from spending 45 mins. paying attention to the History Channel. Such as this pablum:
The inside of the triangular stalk was cut or peeled into long strips. These strips were then laid out in two layers, one horizontal and one vertical, and pressed and dried to form a papyrus sheet. The inside of the triangular stalk was cut or peeled into long strips. These strips were then laid out in two layers, one horizontal and one vertical, and pressed and dried to form a papyrus sheet. many of these sheets were then joined end-to-end to form a roll. No glue was required; instead, the natural gum of the plant held the sheets together. A roll was usually about one foot in height and could be up to 100 feet in length. It didn't take that long.
Yeah....I know......
I also dedicated my life to spending 60 mins. watching one "Modern Marvels" on the History Channel......
But Moses didn't "
WRITE" Genesis..............
He "Wrote" the 613 codices of the "Law" you insist on.
If you are hard-core about maintaining the truth of a Genesis account passed down in grass....you have nothing to stand on.
Genesis, God codified in
CLAY.............Moses could write the rest of the Pentateuch 2,000 years later on Papyri originally without a problem. I don't have a problem with that.