Androsphinx wrote:
Assuming a ten-hour night, it works out at 5 deaths a second.
Indeed. Of course, a less charitable interpretation would be that it just poisoned their water supply with something slow acting but very lethal. As the king and his retinue would have been drinking and eating better, they would have survived, as the text indicates.
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A more impressive example is the Plague of the Death of the Firstborn, where an unspecified number of Egyptians across the Nile Delta drop dead simultaneously.
Not instantly, as the Angel has to know by marks over the door who's not to be targeted, and 'pass over' their house. Of course, all the bible says is that the (several million) Israelites are many times (they 'wax mightily' over and over in Exodus 1, even though they're already outnumbering the egyptians - this is ludicrous, of course, but that's the bible for you). Each family can only have one firstborn - Jehovah is clearly only targetting children below a certain age, vile little coward that it is, else the King of Egypt himself would surely be slain {Why wasn't he? Maybe Horus protected him? Practically everything the Pharaohs owned was covered in spells of protection, we should investigate that... Perhaps
all God can do to Pharoah is 'harden his heart...'} - and with infant mortality, many families' firstborn children would be dead, and many of the others, would already be grown. You're probably not talking about a number greater than a few hundred thousand there. Of course, he also takes time to kill the firstborn of the domesticated beasts.
Incidentally, a curious note WRT the 'rivers turned to blood' trick, the egyptian socerers knew how to do that too...
Invictus ChiKen wrote:
I.E. causing stars to fall from the sky turning the seas to wormwood and blood and causing great destruction?
The stars involved are not what we understand as stars. More like 'shooting stars' as life persists after that. And remember, his actual power is to give John a 'revalation' that all this will happen. We can do that too, it's called cinema.
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What about a second flood? Yes he promised he wouldn't flood us again but then he also promised everyone a chance and well I think the answer is obvious.
The flood cannot be as bad as God claimed it to be. The race of Nephilim, elsewhere in the world, who were not on the Ark, survived. It is possible it was only regional.