Thinkingstuff
Active Member
Genesis 2:5-7May I ask where do you get this idea from?
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Genesis 2:5-7May I ask where do you get this idea from?
Genesis 2:5-7
Genesis 2:5
2:5 before it grew. This statement clearly teaches the fact of a mature creation, or creation of apparent age. The first plants did not grow from seeds, but were created full grown.
Genesis 2:5
2:5 rain upon the earth. The primeval hydrological cycle was subterranean rather than atmospheric (see note on Genesis 1:7), the absence of rain being a consequence of the water vapor above the firmament and the uniform temperature which it maintained over the earth. Rain today is dependent on the global circulation of the atmosphere, transporting water evaporated from the ocean inland to condense and precipitate on the lands. This circulation is driven by worldwide temperature differences in the atmosphere and would be impossible with the global warmth sustained by the canopy.
- Creation Institute website and the Defenders Bible.
Many scholars recognize this as referring to the process of REPRODUCTION rather than the initial herbs created by God.
Genesis 2:5Now no shrub had yet appeared on the earth
Now what do these terms indicate to you?and no plant had yet sprung up,
I understand context. But Doesn't the bible speak for itself? Seems pretty clear to me.Context, Thinkingstuff; Context!
OkGenesis chapter one speaks of God's creation. It is an historical account of how God created the heaven and the earth just like he said he did in verse one. Verse one is a summary verse, and then he proceeds to tell us how he did it verse by verse, day by day. Not hard to understand.
I know the focus is on Adam however no shrub no plants are contrary to Genesis 1 account of Day 3 is the setting which the story places the creation of Adam which occured according to genesis 1 on day 6.Genesis chapter two the focus changes. The focus is now on Adam and Eve, not on all of creation.
He doesn't seem to be consistent with in his own story. I know in college fictional writing class I would have been marked down for thatThe Lord is a good author after all. But you fault the Holy Spirit for not being up to your standards as a writer??
Actually according to Tradition Moses wrote the book as God inspired him.guess you should have asked to trade places with Him. He wrote the Book.
Let me break it down for you
Genesis 2:5
Genesis 2:5 Now what do these terms indicate to you?
If the focus is on Adam, why do you insist that the setting must place Adam in a place where there are no shrubs and supposedly contrary to Genesis chapter one.I know the focus is on Adam however no shrub no plants are contrary to Genesis 1 account of Day 3 is the setting which the story places the creation of Adam which occured according to genesis 1 on day 6. He doesn't seem to be consistent with in his own story.
Neither can you attempt to honestly approach scripture to make it fit your theology. Scripture just isYou can't pit one scripture against another scripture and expect you will come to a correct understanding of either scripture:.
Exactly, and it stands in stark contrast to Genesis 2. Note from a paper from Westminster Theologcial JournalAnd God said, Let the earth bring forth grass, the herb yielding seed, and the fruit tree yielding fruit after his kind, whose seed is in itself, upon the earth: and it was so.
12 And the earth brought forth grass, and herb yielding seed after his kind, and the tree yielding fruit, whose seed was in itself, after his kind: and God saw that it was good.
13 And the evening and the morning were the third day.
This is what the passage is getting at. So what does that indicate about the passage in Genesis 2? Its rather clear.A coherent picture is emerging: there was no wild vegetation because there
was no rain, and there was no cultivated grain because there was no cultivator.
Or a third aspect. The creation account is not to be taken as you've taken it. Genesis 1 stands in stark contrast to Genesis 2If the focus is on Adam, why do you insist that the setting must place Adam in a place where there are no shrubs and supposedly contrary to Genesis chapter one.
Again, the focus is on the creation of Adam and Eve.
Here is a breakdown:
2:1-3 Many commentators believe that these three verses should have been a part of chapter one, the conclusion of it. The chapter breaks are not inspired. They were added in much later on in history.
2:4-7, "These are the generations of the heaven and the earth." This is an introductory statement. What follows in this paragraph is a very brief summary of the entire first chapter. It can't possibly include everything, just some of the main points before it gets to the main subject matter in verse 8. There is nothing here that contradicts chapter one, or from 2:8 onward.
Then the Bible would contradict itself, which it doesn't.Or a third aspect. The creation account is not to be taken as you've taken it. Genesis 1 stands in stark contrast to Genesis 2
Exactly, and it stands in stark contrast to Genesis 2.
The earth did not exist prior to the first day of creation. It was created on the first day of creation.
Exodus 20:11 For in six days the LORD made heaven and earth, the sea, and all that in them is, and rested the seventh day: wherefore the LORD blessed the sabbath day, and hallowed it.
'All that in them is' leaves nothing out whatsoever. Even the dirt was created within the six day period (the first day). One cannot say 'such and such existed prior to the six day creation period,' because Scripture declares everything that is in the earth, everything that is in the sea, and everything that is in heaven was created within those six days of creation. There is nothing older than dirt except God, His only begotten Son, and the Holy Ghost.
That is not evidence of a gap. It is lack of evidence.
Your welcome. I also believe it "just a theory" a wrong one. However, you seem like a nice fella.
It is impossible to harmonize evolution with the Biblical account of creation regardless what kind of gap you invent to stick it into. It is equally impossible to harmonize a pre-adamic race, a pre-created and destroyed world, a pre-angelic fall with the Bible regardless of what "gap" you try to stick in. Scofield simply didn't do his homework.
But, was it "First Creation" or "Recreation"?
The earth existed prior to the Genesis record because for reason not shared with us it was void and without form.
Some people hypothesize that there was a pre-Genesis "creation" that was a part of satan's rebellion and that God wiped it our and recreated earth for Man...
Originally Posted by Fred's Wife![]()
I agree!
Here's a short article I found on Kent Hovind's website blog:
The Gap Theory Denies the Purpose of the Cross
Dr. Kent Hovind
October 26th, 2010
Without a doubt, the foundation upon which our salvation and hope rests is the substitutionary death of Christ on the cross. God created a perfect, sinless earth and placed upon it a perfect, sinless man. This man, Adam, enjoyed close fellowship with his Creator until he sinned and broke the perfect relationship between God and man. Ever since that time, death and degradation have plagued God’s once-perfect creation, and man has been separated from God. However, the shedding of Christ’s innocent blood on the cross can restore man’s fellowship with God and provide him eternal life. Through Adam’s sin, death entered into the world; but through Christ’s sacrifice, salvation is made possible (Romans 5:19). Therein lies the gap theory’s greatest error, the placement of sin and death prior to the existence of Adam. If death existed prior to Adam’s sin, then how could it be the result of sin?
http://http://www.drdino.com/the-gap...ross/#comments
But, that would mean that satan's rebellion came after (Adamic) creation...
Because if satan's rebellion predates (Adamic) creation then sin most assuredly existed prior to Adam.
Granted we aren't given a lot to work with...
But, Salvation does not hinge on there being a "perfect" Earth before Adam...
It hinges on the creation of Man, and God's interaction with His creation.
The evolutionist still does not have any accurate dating method. There is no way he can take into account all factors. Like Peter says:You seem to assume that anyone who subscribes to the Gap Hypothesis (not theory as there is not enough evidence to elevate it to Scientific Theory) is also, at least, a Theistic Evolutionist.
This does not need to be the case.
In fact in many cases the opposite is true because a Gap would explain the fossil evidence as being pre-Adamic and probably part of satan's rebellion.
Originally Posted by Dr. Walter in post #3
If the Bible is its own best interpreter (context) then these are six 24 hour days as this languauge "the evening and the morning" are never used in Scripture for anything other than a 24 hour day period.
It’s true the way it is constructed in Genesis is slightly different but of little consequence.
The point is that when “evening and morning” are used together it can indicate something other than 24 hours. So it’s time to drop this argument.
Tom Bryant noted [in post 16] that the verse alone doesn’t say the time was more than a day.
But if you read the context of the verse [all of Daniel 8] it is quite clear that the time mentioned is longer than a day.
A holy one (in Daniel 8:13) asks the question: “How long shall be the vision concerning the daily sacrifice, and the transgression of desolation, to give both the sanctuary and the host to be trodden under foot?”
(Daniel 8:13 AV 1873).
The answer is in verse 14.
Here the Authorized Version uncharacteristically breaks down a bit.
“And he said unto me, Unto two thousand and three hundred days; then shall the sanctuary be cleansed.”
(Daniel 8:14, AV 1873)
The New American Standard Bible translates it:
“He said to me, “For 2,300 evenings and mornings; then the holy place will be properly restored.”
(Daniel 8:14, NAS)
[A simple Hebrew transliteration of the bolded phrase is: “erev boqer” = “evening morning”
So an even more literal translation could be… ‘For 2,300 evening morning; then the holy place will be properly restored.’
Anyway it is this time period that Daniel 8:26 calls “the evening and the morning”.