Antediluvian
Encyclopedia : A : AN : ANT : Antediluvian
The antediluvian period is the period that preceded the Great Flood of Noah as related in the Book of Genesis in the Hebrew Bible. Creationists view it as an important feature of natural history, a view which was more widely held in the past. The primary source of knowledge about the antediluvian period is Genesis, chapters 5 and 6.
The antediluvian period
Creationists such as William Whiston (A New Theory of the Earth 1696) and Henry Morris (The Genesis Flood 1961) typically describe the antediluvian period as follows:
- People lived much longer than people today, typically between 700-950 years, as reported in the Genealogies of Genesis;
- The Earth contained many more people than the Earth contained in 1696. Whiston calculated that as many as 500 million humans may have been born in the antediluvian period, based on assumptions about lifespans and fertility rates;
- There were no clouds or rain. Instead, the Earth was watered by mists which rose from the Earth. (Another interpretation is that the Earth was covered completely by a global cloud layer; the upper "waters" mentioned in the Creation. This is commonly called the Vapor canopy theory.)
Flood geology holds that fossils, seashells on mountaintops, fossil fuels, submarine canyon extensions, and many other geological formations are best explained by a global flood.
Other uses
"Antediluvian" is sometimes used figuratively to refer to anything of great age.In the Antediluvians are the most ancient of vampires, who have remained in hiding or suspended animation from the time of the flood of Noah. Their return is a sign of the end times.
From Wikipedia, the Free Encyclopedia. Original article here. Support Wikipedia by contributing or donating.
All text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License See Wikipedia Copyrights for details.
