The Tower—Under Construction
The most extensive catalog of
the world’s languages, generally perceived to be as authoritative as any, is
that of “Ethnologue”, a comprehensive
reference publication that catalogs all the known living languages. Its detailed list as of 2013 sited 7,106
languages and dialects in the world today.
Of which only 230 are spoken in Europe, while 2,197 of the total are
spoken in Asia.
During pre-contact times, in
North America, over 300 languages were spoken. Of these, about half have died
out completely. Today (2014) about 165
indigenous languages remain; eight are spoken by as few as 10,000 people. Nearly 75 are spoken only by a handful of
older folks, and can be assumed to be on their way to extinction. While you
might think this is an unusual fact about North America, in large part, due to
the overwhelming pressure of European immigration over the past 500 years, it’s
actually close to the norm.
The origin of the language you speak can be sub-divide into several
theoretical approaches but with some underlying assumptions:
“Continuity
Theories” are build on the idea that language exhibits so much complexity
that one cannot imagine it simply appearing from nothing in its final form; so
it must therefore have evolved from earlier pre-linguistic systems among our very
ancient and primate ancestors.
“Discontinuity
Theories” basically take the opposite approach — that language as a
unique trait cannot compare with anything found among non-humans and must
therefore have appeared fairly suddenly during the course of human evolution.
A few views see language mostly
as an “Inborn Faculty” - largely
genetically encoded; while other notions suggest that language is a “Cultural System” — learned through
social interaction.
The “Inborn Faculty” theory may
be the source for the old joke: “I would
adopt that Vietnamese (etc.) child, but I can’t speak its language”; if so, the “Cultural System” certainly
proves the flaw in that way of thinking.
A majority of “Linguistic Scholars”
of late (2014) hold “uninterrupted flow” theories, but they vary in how they
envision the actual development of language.
Among those who see language as mostly “inborn”, avoid speculating about
specific forerunners in nonhuman primates (such as monkeys & apes);
stressing simply that the language faculty must have evolved in the usual gradualist
way over thousands of years. Others in
this intellectual camp hold that language evolved not from primate
communication but from primate cognition / reasoning, which is much more
complex.
Primates encompass 300 or more species;
it’s the third most diverse order of mammals, after rodents and bats so why do humans
have around 7,000 distinct languages while others apparently have none? A good question, but a question none the less,
that’s without a good answer. In their
efforts to explain the multitude of languages, nonspiritual theories have pretty
much come up empty. You could say they have been upstaged by the biblical
narrative, which credits God with the gift of language as well as the vast
diversity of different language families.
Biblical history indicates that
the diversity of language emerged from the area of “a plain in the land of
Shinar.” You may not know that the Land
of Shinar was once a general geographic term for what is today Iraq, known in
ancient times as Mesopotamia. In this
region, two of the greatest of ancient empires, Assyria and Babylon, were located.
Shinar you see is mentioned very early in
Bible History, it being the location of the famous “Tower of Babel” that was
constructed their many years after the Great Flood.
You probably already know how
the story goes: Long, long ago many, many generations after Noah and his Ark
survived the Great Flood; all the folks of earth spoke the same language. As
fate would have it, an unusually large number of these folks saw fit to travel
to a plain in the Middle East. Turns out that many a traveler decided to settle
down right there, in large part because most everyone got along with each other
so well; this in turn helped stimulate their skills for building tall buildings
and just generally helped with expanding the city.
Then one afternoon during a scheduled
break from work they said to one another, “Let’s build a city and a tower, and
let’s make a name for ourselves, so we won’t be scattered around the whole
earth.” So, wouldn’t you know it for the
next 47 years they toiled mightily six days a week trying to construct a tower
designed for worshiping the sun, moon and the stars!
What these ancient builders probably
didn’t realize was that this action was a direct refusal to obey God’s command
to go out and fill the earth. To add insult to injury, the tower’s design was
for worshiping God’s own creations instead of the Lord Himself.
In those days it was pretty
common for the Lord from time to time to have a little “look see” at the city, and especially check-out the tower these people were building; after all, a lot
of folks had started insisting that the tower when finished would be nothing
short of a Stairway to Heaven; which some say led to the song with the same
name by Led Zeppelin in late 1971 (Click
Here to have a listen).
Yep, the Lord he was “pissed”; he
said, “Behold, the people are organizing as one group and since they all speak
the same language, nothing they imagine to do will be held back from them. Let
us go down and confuse their language, so that they cannot understand each
other’s speech.” So the Lord mixed up their language, which caused them to stop
building the tower and quit expanding the city.
That’s how the name of that city ended up being called “Babel”; you see Babel, or ancient Babylon, some 65 miles south of modern day Baghdad, Iraq actually means confusion; so right there in down town Babel the Lord multiplied language on the earth, which resulted in causing the surviving people to scatter everywhere, which is exactly what the Lord wanted for some reason.
That’s how the name of that city ended up being called “Babel”; you see Babel, or ancient Babylon, some 65 miles south of modern day Baghdad, Iraq actually means confusion; so right there in down town Babel the Lord multiplied language on the earth, which resulted in causing the surviving people to scatter everywhere, which is exactly what the Lord wanted for some reason.
It depends upon who tells the
story but some versions say that the Lord was so angry that day that he destroyed
the Tower, for example in The Book of Jubilees,
which is occasionally called “Lesser Genesis”, (an ancient Jewish religious
work composed of 50 chapters) . . . in
its version the tower had parallel walls, was built with bricks of clay, and is
described as being 5,433 cubits and 2 palms, or 2,484 m (8,150 ft.) tall just
before it was destroyed — that’s about 1.6 miles high.
Before you get all “google eyed”
about the reported height of the tower, you might like to know that simple elementary
arithmetic shows that a tower with parallel walls could only have been built to
a height of 1.3 miles before the bricks at the bottom were crushed. It certainly seems that this little factoid
may have been embellished a good bit over the years and naturally, the Biblical
record does not indicate whether ruins of the Tower still exist, but if they
did, they would be located in what is now Iraq near modern day Baghdad.
In any event the story of the
tower only offers an explanation as to why the various cultures of the world
speak so many diverse languages. The
same folks who relate the Tower of Babel story will tell you that the all
inclusive language spoken by everyone on Earth prior to the “confusion event” was
simply a result of creation.
Regardless, a conclusive scientific
account of how and when mankind developed the ability to verbally communicate
with and to each other and why so much diversity exists between the many
languages used may never be forthcoming.
Sources
. . .
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Origin_of_language#The_.27mother_tongues.27_hypothesis http://www.linguisticsociety.org/content/how-many-languages-are-there-world
http://www.britannica.com/EBchecked/topic/476264/primate
https://answersingenesis.org/tower-of-babel/
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ethnologue
http://www.keyway.ca/htm2004/20040223.htm
http://christiananswers.net/godstory/babel1.html
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tower_of_Babel#Height_of_the_tower
http://www.creationconcepts.org/resources/TOWER.pdf
If Noah and his family were the only ones that survived the great flood, I'm still trying to figure out where all the other people came from after the flood.
ReplyDeleteCan you trace your genealogy back to Noah? According to the “Great Flood” story, you should! Why stop with Noah; Adam and Eve are sure to fall into your linage somewhere. In other words if you believe one, why not believe the other?
DeleteI don't believe either one. Adam and Eve were supposed to be the first two people on Earth. They had sons and later sent them off to the land of Nod to find wives. Story sounds fishy to me.
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