Quote:
Originally Posted by Ol' Man Mose
Lemme guess....the Mayans (...Tarheel for "man"?) and Injuns defiantly depicted the God from their Great Flood stories anthropomorphically - despite our global Jewish God’s "dire consequence" directive to them to portray him as a racially supremacist, pig and pussy-hating Mesopotamian psychopath, that His Hebrew pink-eyes kept imprisoned in a wooden crate?? (Still, I suppose that's a bit better than the book the poor bastard is locked up in today! )
That would also explain the strikingly Semitic profile of the Mayan and Injun Gods...
|
*Sigh*
Could you at least attempt to respond to my posts without resorting to extreme sarcasm? It's said that sarcasm is the lowest form of wit, after all.
A great flood in the Mediterranean region doesn't explain why both Mayan and many Native American beliefs mirror that of Christianity. It's plausible to believe that all beliefs regarding the flood stem from a single occurrence; It's implausible to believe that each belief regarding the flood came to mirror each other in lieu of a lack of communication between the religions (Even greater so when you see flood myths in areas which aren't predisposed to flooding).