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In the beginning...

Do you believe in a young Earth?

  • Yes

    Votes: 20 62.5%
  • No

    Votes: 7 21.9%
  • Not sure

    Votes: 5 15.6%

  • Total voters
    32

Jedi Knight

Well-Known Member
Site Supporter
Did God create it all in 6-24hr days? Seems simple enough.
 
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prophet

Active Member
Site Supporter
That's what it says. It even gives the parameters. Evening came first.
evening and morning make a day. Etc.
 

JamesL

Well-Known Member
Site Supporter
I'm not a science guy, by any stretch of the imagination.

So, when reading the account, God created light first, and separated light from dark. This, in my mind, is the setting of the sun, and the earth's rotation and such. Much more than that in the first two verses, for sure, but those seem to be the primary focus. Light and dark on the earth are only relative to the earth's spinning on its axis

And each day was specifically mentioned as evening and morning which are relative to the earth's rotation and the sun shining on half of it.

Why make any mention of evening and morning, light and dark unless the earth was spinning? And 24 hours is simply the duration of time it takes for the earth to spin one time.

So I would say that unless God sped up the rotation of the earth exponentially after creation, then it would be 6-24 hour days.

I got nothin' beyond that. I wasn't there, so I simply take God at His word
 

humblethinker

Active Member
I don't think that a modernist interpretation of Genesis 1 is required or compelling. You may want to check out John Walton's book _The Lost World of Genesis One: Ancient Cosmology and the Origins Debate_ for insight as to how the ancients viewed cosmology for a better understanding of the historical and cultural context.

http://www.amazon.com/gp/aw/d/0830837043
 

prophet

Active Member
Site Supporter
The Earth is 6,240 years old. The timeline is laid out, from Adam to the carrying away. Secular history meets us there, with ample evidence.
You either believe, or remain in unbelief.
 

Rippon

Well-Known Member
Site Supporter
The Earth is 6,240 years old. The timeline is laid out, from Adam to the carrying away. Secular history meets us there, with ample evidence.
You either believe, or remain in unbelief.
LOL! LOL! LOL! I am holding my stomach --it hurts so much to laugh this hard.
 

Rippon

Well-Known Member
Site Supporter
The Earth is 6,240 years old. The timeline is laid out, from Adam to the carrying away. Secular history meets us there, with ample evidence.
You either believe, or remain in unbelief.
Can't you be more precise? I mean come on. Break it down to the months,weeks,days and hours also.
 

humblethinker

Active Member
I think the information and data is compelling for an OE and OU. I also think it is incorrect for the evangelical community to exclude such from the debate of origins.

As a primer read on the issues, I suggest:

http://www.amazon.com/dp/B00BUWG650/?tag=baptis04-20


^^^ The Haarsma's (both husband and wife, both w PhDs in relevant fields) have some great lectures on YouTube as well. I highly recommend their book that QF shared above.
 

saturneptune

New Member
Can't you be more precise? I mean come on. Break it down to the months,weeks,days and hours also.

Why do you find this amusing? Is that a mockery of the Creation story? Either one believes the Bible not. Since you find his statement funny, how old do you think the earth is, and Who do you think created it?
 

Rippon

Well-Known Member
Site Supporter
Why do you find this amusing?
It is self-evident.
Is that a mockery of the Creation story?
Silly boy.
Either one believes the Bible not.
Believing the Bible has absolutely nothing to do with claiming the earth is exactly a certain number of years of age. In your more reflective moments you would hopefully agree.
Who do you think created it?
One of your classiest comments Mike.
 

saturneptune

New Member
It is self-evident.

Silly boy.

Believing the Bible has absolutely nothing to do with claiming the earth is exactly a certain number of years of age. In your more reflective moments you would hopefully agree.

One of your classiest comments Mike.

It is a reasonable question. When one makes a joke out of a Biblically sound post on Creation, it begs the question? Now, how old do you think the earth is and Who created it?
 
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Rippon

Well-Known Member
Site Supporter
It is a reasonable question. When one makes a joke out of a Biblically sound post on Creation, it begs the question?
The claim was that the earth is exactly 6,240 years old. He says with earnestness :"You either believe or remain in unbelief." Now if someone thinks it is younger or older than his figure --then they "remain in unbelief." Are you a believer or not according to his criteria?
 

quantumfaith

Active Member
The Earth is 6,240 years old. The timeline is laid out, from Adam to the carrying away. Secular history meets us there, with ample evidence.
You either believe, or remain in unbelief.

I will choose to remain in "unbelief" of YOUR position on the issue. But respectfully so regardless of any "sneers" or charges of H....... etc.
 

prophet

Active Member
Site Supporter
Gen 5:3
3 And Adam lived an hundred and thirty years, and begat a son in his own likeness, after his image; and called his name Seth:
 

humblethinker

Active Member
You either believe, or remain in unbelief.


Ah, good ol fideism! It'll resolve any and all cognitive dissonance.

Here's a good summary: http://biologos.org/questions/early-interpretations-of-genesis

Look folks, despite what good the fundamentalist movement might have brought us, we need to recognize that its demand for certainty has rendered the Bible a "scientific textbook" subject to modernity's scrutiny and it just wasn't written to such cultures or for such purposes. The Bible is not a scientific textbook nor is it a product of modernism and we should not require such of it for it to still authoritatively communicate truth.
 
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