bcuzbcuz wrote:The Bible just isn't very good at getting animals species right. It lists the hare as a cud chewer, it has asses that talk (no, not Jim Carrey) and whales listed as fish.
The buccal cavity of the fin whale (mysticete group), relatively common to the Mediterranean, is the most likely camping spot for Jonah. Its baleen feeding gives it a very large buccal space and a fairly narrow throat (can only swallow something smaller than grapefruit)...so no swallowing of human sized prey. It would have spit Jonah out.
Yup, Jonah is one of the most possible of Old Testament stories.
Some critics of the scriptures are skeptical...some are cynical...and some, as exhibited in most of the posts above, are just incapable. (simply put, the inability to understand the prescriptive nature of logic and the descriptive nature of natural laws is alarming among the critics here)
First let us consider Matthew 12:40 where we see that Christ was convinced of the "accuracy" in the story of Jonah and the "whale".
Now let us recognize that the actual text (Hebrew/Greek) actually translate as "a great aquatic animal".
The context of the times must also be recognized, for example - 3 days and 3 nights is a Hebrew idiomatic expression that could have simply meant 38 hours - or 3 day/night. It is not "impossible" within natural law that a man could survive 38 hours in such an environment.
Most likely this was just a "miracle"
one must realize that this is an occurrence of a "miracle" and by its very essence is something that a weak mind would definitely term as "impossible"..for if it were "possible" then it would not have been a miracle - this is the fundamental inadequacy of most of the quasi-intellectual who would bother to try and use information about a "buccal cavity" to disprove a miracle. Just as an exercise in basic logic it exposes the rather underdeveloped capacity of most "miracle" critics.
But hey, i suppose only me and Themis believe in the supernatural
If a man had no conception of a regular order in nature, then of course he could not notice departures from that order. When the disciples saw Christ walking on the water, they were frightened: they would not have been frightened unless they had known the laws of nature, and known that this was an exception. - C.S. Lewis