Originally posted by Setekh
Poor? How about totally plausible? Think of the extinction rates we have these days.
There's some problems here though, Steak. It just isn't totally plausible. Extinction might explain it, if you're willing to believe that one species of grasshopper existed in one part of the world that differed from every other grasshopper species everywhere else. However that's not how the world works. Same goes for the rabbit.
Grasshoppers have six legs. They've alway had six legs. Every bit of evidence that we have for the existence of grasshoppers shows them to have six legs. If a Grasshopper had FOUR legs,it wouldn't be a grasshopper. It would be something else entirely. It would seem to me that this is a translation error, since any person can walk up to a grasshopper and see that it has six legs very easily.
Consider the rabbit. Some animals chew cud (that is to say, they regurgitate their food for further mastication). Cows and (i believe) camels do this. Rabbits, of no variety, do not chew cud. Not only do they lack the physical apparatus to do this (a multi chambered stomach, or some sort of pre-digestive organ in line before the stomach) is part and parcel of ruminant anatomy. This would seem to be a translation error as well, for the same reason as the grasshopper.
Btw, Mik, out of curiosity, what else do you think about the change in direction between Testament I and Testament II? I still think that there is in fact no change of direction (at least, not like the one you mention, eg. God = solely angry -> solely loving) - what's your evidence for the assertion?
I thought I'd already admitted that it was an exaggeration for the purposes of illustration, Steak? I can find examples of Divine anger in both testaments and I can find examples of Divine benevolence in both testaments. The overall tone, however, of the Old Testament is that of an angry God, and the overall tone of the New Testament is that of a loving God. These two things are NOT irreconcialable and thus the distinction is not accurate. I used this as an example of obvious changes between the testaments that any lay person (and thus pretty much everyone reading this thread) could see.