Anonymous
(Investigator 98, 2004 September)
INTRODUCTION
A previous discussion focussed on whether
eagles hunt by sight or by smell. (Investigator 34 & 35) In this article
we’ll consider additional Bible statements about eagles.
CATCHES ITS YOUNG
The Bible likened God’s protective care of
Israel to an adult eagle catching its young on its back:
I bore you on eagles’ wings. (Exodus 19:4)
…a thing wholly incompatible with flight in any bird. (Orr et al 1930)
…naturalists agree that this is not confirmed
by observation. (Cansdale 1970)
only on a few occasions, to catch her falling young and carry it off on her back… (Grant & Rowley 1963)
…the female...has been known to catch her
young on her wings as described in Ex 19:4; Dt 32:11-12. (Fauna and Flora
of the Bible 1972)
In 1902 S R Driver quoted an earlier source:
The Mother started from the nest in the crags
and, roughly, handling the young, she allowed him to drop, I should say,
about ninety feet; then she would swoop down under him, wings spread, and
he would alight on her back. She would soar to the top of the range with
him and repeat the process.
(Bulletin of the Smithsonian Institution
1937, No. 167, p302)
YOUTH RENEWED
Some skeptics have wondered about Psalm 103:5
The book Bird Life points out that
small birds such as swallows and robins seldom reach an age of ten years.
It adds:
In Psalm 103 the renewed youth of followers
of God refers to psychological and physical benefits of knowing God and
obeying his commands. A news report in America titled "Studies show that
people with faith are healthier" started off:
While past research has found that connection in religious groups with special dietary and anti-smoking rules, it now has turned up in large, mainline denominations without the special disciplines.
Religious commitment itself was found to
make the bodily difference…
(The Holland Sentinel, Friday, December
18, 1992; Investigator No. 41, March 1995)
Another debate arose because Jesus stated:
Jesus’ analogy has been criticised on grounds that eagles do not gather around carcases but catch prey individually and carry it off.
For example:
One distinction always holds good. Eagles
never flock. (Orr 1930)
The Hebrew word "nesher", usually translated "eagle" can therefore sometimes refer to vultures. In Micah 1:16, for example, the phrase "bald as an eagle" could be better rendered "bald as a vulture" since the griffon-vulture has a bare neck and head and is, therefore, "bald". Eagles, in contrast, have neck and head covered with feathers.
The Greek "aetos" used in the New Testament may, likewise, apply to both vultures and eagles.
Therefore Jesus can be translated as having said, "Wherever the body is, there the vultures will be gathered together."
Modern naturalists of course distinguish vultures from eagles. They see eagles as solitary hunters whereas vultures often scavenge in packs.
A second response, therefore, is to assume that Jesus did mean "eagle" by our modern classification and show that eagles sometimes scavenge on carcases.
Referring to eagles, condors, vultures and
other birds of prey the book Bird Life says:
Sometimes, rarely, eagles prey in flocks.
Insight
On The Scriptures quotes a 1954 reference:
Many skeptics call the Bible "pre-scientific"
and claim it is full of errors. Further research, however, often proves
the Bible accurate and its critics wrong. Subsequent science corrects previous
science and proves the Bible true.
REFERENCES
Cansdale, G S 1970 Animals of Bible Lands,
Paternoster, Britain.
Craighead, J 1967 Sharing the Lives of Wild
Golden Eagles, National Geographic, September, p434.
Driver, S R 1902 The International Critical
Commentary—A Critical and Exegetical Commentary on Deuteronomy, Third
Edition, T & C Clark, Edinburgh, p358.
Felix, J 1983 Animals of Asia, Hamlyn,
Czechoslavakia, p117.
Flora and Fauna of the Bible 1972
United Bible Societies, USA.
Grant, F C & Rowley, H H 1963 Revised,
Dictionary
of the Bible, T & J Clark, Edinburgh, p 226.
Hastings, J et al 1898 10th impression,
A
Dictionary of the Bible, Edinburgh, Volume 1, T & C Clarke.
Insight On The Scriptures 1988 Volume
1 — Eagle, Watchtower Bible & Tract Society, USA, pp662-664.
Nicholson, W nd The Bible Explainer and
Concordance, W Nicholson and Sons, Britain.
Orr, J et al 1930 The International Standard
Bible Dictionary. Volume 4, Howard Severance, USA.
Perrins, C 1984 Bird Life, Peerage
Books, Britain, pp41, 61.
Zeffer, H 1866 Biblisches Worterbuch,
Kreuzer, Stuttgard, p34.