Chapter 6: Noah's Ark I

Grandpa David not only brought the dying Dura into the magical Bible, but also the fat mouse George.

Incredibly, as soon as Dura entered the Bible, she was miraculously healed—just like countless souls and lives that had been saved by the world's greatest book.

What puzzled Dura even more was that she couldn't remember everything she had been through before - not even Zeus could remember.

For more than three hundred years, her family has been the mount of the Holy Rat for generations, just as Shag's family has been the bodyguard of the Holy Rat for generations. Why is it that she and Shag's family are the only ones who are the closest companions of the holy rat?

Because the ancestors of Dura and Shag were chosen by the righteous Noah as the only pair of white doves and golden retrievers to board the ark.

But at that time the female white dove was not called Dura, but "Gospel," and the male golden retriever was not called Shag, but "Moses"—their names were given to them by the righteous Noah.

At that time, Jesus, the Son of God, had not yet come to this sinful world, and mankind had turned the world created by God into an abyss of sin, and God was completely disappointed in his creation, so he decided to cleanse the world with a flood.

Only Noah's family was pleasing to God, and God could see in him and his family the devout faith, the hope of humanity, and the love of a believer.

So he asked Noah to build a huge ark, and then asked him to take a male and a female of each species in the world, and send it to the ark with his family before the Great Flood came.

Among those animals, of course, there was also the ancestor of Mary the lamb, but Mary must have had this fate—she had to die once before she could gain eternal life, so Grandpa David didn't bring her into the Bible.

In the gladiatorial arena, there was a very skilled Egyptian who knew that Mary was the favorite pet of the holy rat, and if her body could be preserved, the holy rat would surely let him go to heaven after his death.

The religion of ancient Egypt was fetishism, but since the conquest of Egypt by Alexander the Great, the ancient Egyptian civilization was replaced by the Greek civilization. Later, Emperor Augustus turned Egypt into a Roman province.

By the time of Honorius, the civilization capital of the world had become the city of Alexandria in Egypt, named after Alexander the Great. Since it was a Roman province, the subjects of Egypt had already changed their old beliefs to Christianity in the time of Theodosius the Great, so the Egyptian was also a very devout Christian.

The reason why he became a gladiator was because his ancestors were very respected priests in Egypt, and the Egyptian priests had to teach not only the gods, but also the Egyptian people hieroglyphs.

Once the old religion was abolished, the priests were executed as infidels, and their descendants certainly did not end well, and it was a blessing in misfortune that an Egyptian named Herry could be sent to the gladiatorial arena.

The Pope admired his unparalleled skill and promised to save him from death if he was willing to convert to Christianity.

Fascinated by Greek philosophy and born and raised in Alexandria, Heri grew up seeing how incredible Christianity can transform and sublimate human nature—especially the ten plagues that God brought on Egypt, and the story of Moses leading the Jews across the Red Sea and fleeing Egypt.

He knew that without the wonderful Greek culture, Hebrew and Hellenism, there would have been no miraculous Christianity in the world, and that mankind would not have been able to have a more perfect humanity.

So he chose to convert to Christianity without much hesitation.

The Pope allowed him not to participate in gladiatorial fights, but if any of the saints died, he had to make mummies for them that would last forever.

But as it turned out, the mummies, relics of the old Egyptian religion, were finally destroyed by order of the new pope, leaving only those timeless masterpieces - marble statues by Greek and Roman artists.

No faith, no matter how great or great, is immune to its own limitations—even if it is holy, noble, and fraternal like Christianity!

To this day, there is still a voice that says that the last straw that destroyed the civilization of ancient Egypt was Christianity!

But is that really the case?