ECT What did the Tower of Babel look like?

shopkinslpskids

New member
Maybe like tge ziggurat from Ur?
c263ff8869e41c69db43b70c412589d7.jpg


Sent from my SM-N920V using Tapatalk
 

Danoh

New member
Probably the obelisk in Rome

Or the one in DC.

The myth within the standard Christianity of most, is that they were trying build a tower they could use to climb to heaven, like some sort of a Jack and the Beanstalk tale.

The reality is that it had merely been a tall steeple representing their worship of their own gods (supposedly) in heaven by.

Gods, per Romans 1, after their own image and likeness.

A tower not unlike the image on the back of our dollar bill, etc.

Rom. 5:8
Acts 17:11, 12.
 

SaulToPaul 2

Well-known member
Or the one in DC.

The myth within the standard Christianity of Most, is that they were trying to get to climb to heaven, like some sort of a Jack and the Beanstalk tale.

The reality is that it had merely been a tall steeple representing their worship of their own gods (supposedly) in heaven by.

Gods, per Romans 1, after their own image and likeness.

A tower not unlike the image on the back of our dollar bill, etc.

Rom. 5:8
Acts 17:11, 12.

Or the one in Mayberry, just off the southeast corner of the Courthouse.
 

dodge

New member
Maybe like tge ziggurat from Ur?
c263ff8869e41c69db43b70c412589d7.jpg


Sent from my SM-N920V using Tapatalk

I contracted for the DOD as a civilian contractor from 2004 through 2011 and in 2007 I got to go to the site outside of Talil air base in Iraq where the zigguart is which I got to visit. It was supposedly built 6000 years ago.
 

Interplanner

Well-known member
In a sense it doesn't matter what the appearance was like, but one thing I notice about the zigguratic genre is the breadth of the base was meant to reach as high as possible. But they didn't seem to know how to develop the rest for height and the height usually ends up being lower than the base, compared to the delicate Ulm cathedral in Bavaria, Germany, which I think is 8x as high as its base, completed in 1400.

I think you will find the heavy construction throughout the 'giantist' period (pre-cataclysm). Compare the Easter Island statues, the perfect fitted walls of Naszca, Atlantis, the sunken temple off the coast of Japan, etc. All huge structures with amazing stone-cutting, but never delicate.
 

SaulToPaul 2

Well-known member
In a sense it doesn't matter what the appearance was like, but one thing I notice about the zigguratic genre is the breadth of the base was meant to reach as high as possible. But they didn't seem to know how to develop the rest for height and the height usually ends up being lower than the base, compared to the delicate Ulm cathedral in Bavaria, Germany, which I think is 8x as high as its base, completed in 1400.

I think you will find the heavy construction throughout the 'giantist' period (pre-cataclysm). Compare the Easter Island statues, the perfect fitted walls of Naszca, Atlantis, the sunken temple off the coast of Japan, etc. All huge structures with amazing stone-cutting, but never delicate.

Does your church have a steeple?
 

shopkinslpskids

New member
I contracted for the DOD as a civilian contractor from 2004 through 2011 and in 2007 I got to go to the site outside of Talil air base in Iraq where the zigguart is which I got to visit. It was supposedly built 6000 years ago.
That's amazing. I wonder what kind of archeological finds we'd discover if academic Westerners, not Muslims, inhabited these places.

Sent from my SM-N920V using Tapatalk
 
Top