False dichotomy.
Science is knowledge. If knowledge is opposite the Bible then the Bible is not true.
The fact of the matter is that no one should take the Bible over science nor science over the Bible.
ALL TRUTH IS GOD'S TRUTH.
Science and scripture are only enemies in a moron's world.
In the real world they are bosom buddies.
Scientists can misinterpret the science- but only a fool would say that you should take the Bible over real science.
There is nothing in the Bible that teaches that the universe is thousands, not billions of years old. Period.
There is not a verse of Scripture in the entire Bible that says, "Thus saith the Lord, the Earth is 6,750 years old and anyone who says otherwise is a liberal."
There's not.
It's not in there.
Young Earth Creationists who pretend it is are committing the sin of misrepresenting the Word of God.
Look, I'm not really trying to say one way or the other. I haven't read through this whole thread, so this may have already been addressed, in which case, please forgive me and refer me to the page/post that answers it: Young Earthers will use Genesis 5 to point out that scripture says "
all the days that Adam lived were nine hundred and thirty years." All versions of the bible seem to agree with this statement.
From there, simple mathematics is used by Young Earthers to support their claim that the earth is only about 6,000 years old.
Like I said, my apologies if this has already been addressed; but I don't see how we reconcile this with a gap theory, or Camping's "a day is as a thousand years," etc.; because God created Adam on the 6th day, and then rested on the 7th.
I can come up with one idea, that the time frames for each of the first five "days" were of varying lengths (i.e., millions or billions for the first one or two "days"; millions or billions for the next couple of "days"; etc.); but with all the creatures
and man being created on the sixth day, that leads to a problematic understanding of just how long that day might have been; or worse, how long was the seventh? Or are we still in the seventh? Even though scripture says "
all of Adam's days," did his days not start getting counted until after being ejected from Eden? Or does the sixth day not count, and the seventh day was actually only one full day?
This I do know: one day, I'll be standing before the Throne, and someone will tell me, and I'll say, "Ah, that makes sense. Thanks!"