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Author Topic:   Where does it say in the bible that the Universe is only 6,000 years old?
Sylas
Member (Idle past 5290 days)
Posts: 766
From: Newcastle, Australia
Joined: 11-17-2002


Message 26 of 114 (108310)
05-14-2004 10:47 PM
Reply to: Message 25 by Rick Rose
05-14-2004 8:58 PM


Rick Rose writes:
Yes, Gen 1:17 says that God set the sun and moon in the firmament. That the firmament means our atmosphere and not outer space is born out in Gen 1:20
Gen 1:20
And God went on to say: Let the waters swarm forth a swarm of living souls and let flying creatures fly over the earth upon the firmament of the heavens.
Where do the flying creatures fly about? In the firmament. So the firmament is our atmosphere where flying creatures fly, and not outer space.
Where are the stars placed? In the firmament. So it is trivially erroneous to infer that the firmament excludes outer space.
The proper conclusion is that the writers of Genesis did not make a strong distinction between the atmosphere and outer space. You've given no reason whatsoever for excluding space from the firmament, merely because it also includes things within the atmosphere.
In any case, you appear to be using a poor translation of the bible there. The phrase "upon the firmament" is better as "across the face of the firmament". The word you give as "upon" would be much better as "beneath" or "within" or "across". The word "face" (Paniym) which your verse omits suggests birds flying across the face of heaven; which is not quite the same as being embedded within the firmament. Many modern translations render this as being across the "expanse of the sky" or "open expanse of the heavens", which is also a reasonable handling.
I have looked at the available translations of this verse at the biblegateway.com. The major translations are:
  • let birds fly above the earth across the expanse of the sky (NIV)
  • let birds fly above the earth in the open expanse of the heavens (NASB)
  • let birds fly over the earth in the open expanse of the heavens (AMP)
  • fowl that may fly above the earth in the open firmament of heaven (KJV)
  • let birds fly above the earth across the face of the firmament of the heavens (NKJV)
  • fowl that may fly above the earth in the open firmament of heaven (KJ21)
  • let birds fly above the earth in the open firmament of heaven (ASV)
  • fowl let fly on the earth on the face of the expanse of the heavens (YLT)
It invariably ends up distorting the bible to project modern cosmology onto the account. The "firmament" of the Hebrews encompasses both things which are in outer space and things which are in the atmosphere.
Obviously God did not literally place the sun, moon and stars in our atmosphere. But he did place 'thier light' in our atmosphere by clarifying it as suited his will and he placed the birds in our atmosphere or firmament.
This is a classic case in which attempting to treat the bible as if it is based on modern scientific understandings ends up turning the fundamental biblical teachings inside out.
In fact, the account in Genesis is very particular about distinguishing the creation of light from the creation of the Sun and Moon and stars. By this means, the bible portrays God as the ultimate source of light and life; in contrast to other cultures which regard the Sun as the source of light. Genesis has the Sun in a strictly subordinate role; given responsibility to rule the day; but still formed as a creature after the formation of light.
By this rewording the bible to make the fourth day into an account of light reaching the earth, this point is lost. It is essential to Genesis that the light comes before the heavenly bodies which now rule night and day.
Added to which this is scientifically absurd. Light was reaching the earth long before the formation of plants, and they were on the third day. If you try to make Genesis into a scientific account, you inevitably distort the messages intended in Genesis; and also end up with scientifically ridiculous positions that serve -- rather unfairly -- to bring the bible into disrepute.
Which is correct then? Is the firmament outer space or our atmosphere? You decide.
That's dead easy. According the bible, the biblical firmament obviously encompasses both of what we now distinguish as atmosphere and space.
The cosmological concepts used in the bible are those of the ancient world, not those of modern cosmology. The firmament was conceived as a barrier or separation between upper and lower waters. The Hebrew word used indicates something beaten or hammered out, and other passage also indicate that the firmament was conceived of as a solid structure. Generally, term could also refer to the regions of the heavens or sky within this dome of heaven.
Cheers -- Sylas

This message is a reply to:
 Message 25 by Rick Rose, posted 05-14-2004 8:58 PM Rick Rose has not replied

Replies to this message:
 Message 28 by Buzsaw, posted 05-14-2004 11:02 PM Sylas has not replied
 Message 41 by cromwell, posted 05-17-2004 6:56 AM Sylas has replied

  
Sylas
Member (Idle past 5290 days)
Posts: 766
From: Newcastle, Australia
Joined: 11-17-2002


Message 43 of 114 (108766)
05-17-2004 7:32 AM
Reply to: Message 41 by cromwell
05-17-2004 6:56 AM


The events of the fourth day in Genesis.
(You can quote people by writing something like [QS=name]Quoted text.[/QS]. Use the raw text button to see how people write their posts.)
Cromwell writes:
The correct translation is Expanse...Hebrew: "Ra.qi.a".
The expanse between the two waters is clearly defined in Genesis 1:6.The Heavens above the expanse and the heavens below the expanse. The stars, earth and sun and their light were made before in the heavens and then were made to gradually appear as if in the expanse and heavens of the sky above our head. Appearing through the gradually clearing thick cloudy cover over the periods of time (Days..Yohm.See above post). It comes down to the perspective of the observer.
Genesis is not a science text book; and by trying to fit it with what is known by science, you end up with a distortion of both.
Genesis is plain. The Sun, Moon and stars were made on the fourth day. It was not that they became visible on the fourth day, or that their light filtered through clouds on the fourth day. They were made on the fourth day.
Anything else is denial of the biblical text. The attempt to make the creation of the Sun into a clearing of clouds is both scientifically ridiculous and also theologically sterile. The only point is to try and force fit with a modern cosmology; but Genesis is not a science text book, and it was not written with modern cosmology as the context.
Cheers -- Sylas

This message is a reply to:
 Message 41 by cromwell, posted 05-17-2004 6:56 AM cromwell has replied

Replies to this message:
 Message 44 by johnfolton, posted 05-17-2004 9:46 AM Sylas has replied
 Message 47 by cromwell, posted 05-17-2004 2:18 PM Sylas has not replied

  
Sylas
Member (Idle past 5290 days)
Posts: 766
From: Newcastle, Australia
Joined: 11-17-2002


Message 45 of 114 (108785)
05-17-2004 9:59 AM
Reply to: Message 44 by johnfolton
05-17-2004 9:46 AM


Re: The events of the fourth day in Genesis.
whatever writes:
I think we all agree the sun/stars were shining before day 4, though they were not likely visible because of the mist that covered the earth kjv genesis 2:6 before man was yet upon the earth.
You think wrong.
I emphatically do not agree to any such thing. The account in Genesis is perfectly explicit that the sun and stars were created on the fourth day, and this is essential to the whole structure of the account.
The only basis for denying the plain biblical text on this matter is to force fit the Genesis account into a match with modern cosmology.
This match distorts the bible, and fails to be scientifically meaningful. The notion that plants were created before the Sun became visible is scientific nonsense. But it makes good sense in the structure of Genesis. Genesis is not a scientific text book. The primary error is in even bothering to make a comparison with modern cosmology at all. That is the wrong context, and will inevitably obscure the intented lessons of the biblical writer.
Cheers -- Sylas

This message is a reply to:
 Message 44 by johnfolton, posted 05-17-2004 9:46 AM johnfolton has not replied

Replies to this message:
 Message 46 by PaulK, posted 05-17-2004 10:23 AM Sylas has not replied
 Message 51 by Rick Rose, posted 05-17-2004 3:21 PM Sylas has replied

  
Sylas
Member (Idle past 5290 days)
Posts: 766
From: Newcastle, Australia
Joined: 11-17-2002


Message 53 of 114 (108866)
05-17-2004 5:21 PM
Reply to: Message 51 by Rick Rose
05-17-2004 3:21 PM


Re: The events of the fourth day in Genesis.
Rick Rose writes:
As most of you contend that the sun, moon, and stars were created during one of the six creative days, then what is the meaning of Gen. 1:1, In the begining God created the heavens and the earth? That statement appears before the first creative day begins.
It is an introduction to the entire following account of how God created the heavens and the earth.
Cheers -- Sylas

This message is a reply to:
 Message 51 by Rick Rose, posted 05-17-2004 3:21 PM Rick Rose has replied

Replies to this message:
 Message 59 by Rick Rose, posted 05-17-2004 11:15 PM Sylas has replied

  
Sylas
Member (Idle past 5290 days)
Posts: 766
From: Newcastle, Australia
Joined: 11-17-2002


Message 62 of 114 (108944)
05-17-2004 11:50 PM
Reply to: Message 59 by Rick Rose
05-17-2004 11:15 PM


Re: More to it than meets the eye.
Rick Rose writes:
That does not appear to be the case Sylas. Your interpretation seems to come appart. It allows for no spacific beginning of creation. If you place the beginning of creation at vrs 2, vrs 1 merely being an introduction of things to come, you are already picking up the account after the globe already came into existence:
My reading of verse 1 as the introduction to an account of the creation of heaven and earth is the only interpretation ever considered by early commentators. I'd be fascinated to learn of when it was first proposed that verse 1 refers to a complete creation of heaven and earth, with verse 2 then starting on subsequent creation events.
You are still not really engaging with my interpretation. In speaking of "the globe", you have already moved away from my interpretation. My interpretation is that the first chapter of Genesis was given in the context of an ancient cosmology, in which the notion of a globe for the earth does not appear.
Your interpretation obscures the theological impact of the account. It denies the plain description of the creation of heavenly bodies, and the firmament, and the cycles of night and day. It requires ad hoc notions that are in conflict with available evidence; such as an initial universal ocean, and an initial opaque cloud cover. It fails in its attempt to make a match with what we know of the world by science, by avoiding many problems, such as the creation of flowering plants and seed bearing herbs or grains before animals (flowering plants and herbs or grasses actually arose after the dinosaurs), or the creation of birds and sea dwellers before animals (in fact, terrestrial animals were formed before birds, and many kinds of aquatic animals developed from terrestrial ancestors).
The fundamental error is to treat Genesis as a scientific account, or to link its value to how well it matches with histories inferred by empirical sciences.
As long as you do this, you will continue to get something shorn of its theological significance, falsified by modern discoveries in geology and palaeontology and astronomy, and rendered redundant by the development of more clear and unambiguous descriptions of the events in the past.
Cheers -- Sylas

This message is a reply to:
 Message 59 by Rick Rose, posted 05-17-2004 11:15 PM Rick Rose has replied

Replies to this message:
 Message 64 by Rick Rose, posted 05-18-2004 12:09 AM Sylas has replied

  
Sylas
Member (Idle past 5290 days)
Posts: 766
From: Newcastle, Australia
Joined: 11-17-2002


Message 66 of 114 (108966)
05-18-2004 1:34 AM
Reply to: Message 64 by Rick Rose
05-18-2004 12:09 AM


Re: More to it than meets the eye.
Rick Rose writes:
You have answered in a shotgun style, not discussion replying to the content of my post. If you are able to reply to the content, please do so. If not . . . .
On the contrary; I have attempted to give a focused reply on the central point, rather than attempt to refute in detail every aspect of your post. This is the "rifle" style; where "shotgun" style is IMO the style where you write a long response with hundreds of quoted extracts and try to cover everything. Both styles have advantages and disadvantages. The shotgun approach in which you cover everything leads to exponential growth in post sizes and loss of focus. The rifle approach I had adopted previously runs the risk of missing points which the other poster would like answered.
My previous Message 62 is focused on what I consider to be the main point. It remains as my contribution to the discussion. This more detailed reply (IMO) is already implicit in that first post. I don't actually say anything particularly new in what follows here.
Since you explicitly request it, I will spell out my response to each paragraph of your post. Let me say out the outset that I consider this reply to be the shotgun approach, and mostly an inefficient waste of time. Still, if it helps then it is worthwhile.
Bear in mind that I'm not trying to persuade you to drop your own views. That is rarely a useful objective. I'm content to present my views side by side with yours for anyone who is reading; and thus I will tend to focus on what I think is the main issue.
Anyhow, here is a more comprehensive reply, if it helps.
That does not appear to be the case Sylas. Your interpretation seems to come appart.
You have given no argument for that assertion. I disagree with you. My interpretation is both internally consistent, and (as I said last time) the same interpretation which has been used through most of history.
It allows for no spacific beginning of creation. If you place the beginning of creation at vrs 2, vrs 1 merely being an introduction of things to come, you are already picking up the account after the globe already came into existence:
That is false. My interpretation is that verse 1 states that in the beginning God created heaven and earth; and the rest of the chapter shows how He did it. The initial state is one of chaos, which is represented by water. You are assuming that the globe is in existence; but that is the very point at issue. As I said last time, I claim that the Genesis account is given in the context of a cosmology which does not model the Earth as a globe at all. It is an essential feature of the account that it describes ordering of the entire cosmos from an initial state of unformed chaos.
vrs 2
"Now the earth proved to be formless and waste and there was darkness upon the surface of [the] watery deep; [but it already existed] and God's active force was moving to and fro over the surface of the waters."
This represents the initial state of unformed chaos. There is no mention of globes, and I believe it is a misleading projection to interpret this as a strictly localised vision of one little watery planet within a much larger cosmos. This is intended by the biblical writer to represent a state of unformed chaos for the whole cosmos; and (as I suggested last time) the imposition of modern science onto the account loses this essential aspect of the biblical story.
When God's active force began the six creative periods, the globe already existed. That is why the creation account picks up in the middle with a primeval soup (watery deep, vrs 2). If you are saying the watery deep was the beginning, you omit the substantial developments leading up to that point, and in essence have no beginning.
As I said in my previous post, the error is in thinking in terms of globes at all. That is not the correct cosmological context for this account. I do say that the watery deep was the beginning, and this does not omit developments leading up to that point, because there are no developments leading up to that point within the proper context of this story.
You can disagree; but you cannot call my view inconsistent or falling apart because I fail to account for your view. I am saying that your view is completely the wrong approach for understanding what the bible is saying here. The watery deep is the beginning state in the biblical cosmology. That this is not the same as the scientific account is not important, because the bible is not a science textbook, and the significance and intent of the story is not about getting empirical details. It is a theological treatise on monotheism.
My understanding places a beginning of universal matter in vrs 1. Only that can allow for a primordial soup in vrs 2 and still assume we have a beginning.
I know that you have some kind of preceding creation of matter and whatnot in verse 1. I disagree with you. I do not think that is the intent at all, and, as I suggested last time, it has never been taken in those terms until comparatively recently, when people tried to force fit the Genesis account with a modern cosmological context that was completely unfamiliar to the readers and writers of the bible.
All this is simply spelling out details that I think are adequately covered in my focussed response of Message 62.
Best wishes -- Sylas

This message is a reply to:
 Message 64 by Rick Rose, posted 05-18-2004 12:09 AM Rick Rose has replied

Replies to this message:
 Message 73 by Rick Rose, posted 05-18-2004 1:29 PM Sylas has replied

  
Sylas
Member (Idle past 5290 days)
Posts: 766
From: Newcastle, Australia
Joined: 11-17-2002


Message 77 of 114 (109052)
05-18-2004 2:54 PM
Reply to: Message 73 by Rick Rose
05-18-2004 1:29 PM


Re: More to it than meets the eye.
Rick Rose writes:
The fact is that earth is modeled as a globe, as was the visible moon in the account.
That is not a fact. There is nothing about globes in the account, and the account has strong parallels to cosmologies of other cultures in the region, in which the earth is represented as being supported by pillars above waters beneath, and with a domed sky (usually a god, in the other polytheistic cultures) over the earth, and the heavens like an ocean above this.
The contrast with these other cultures in the Genesis account is, in my view, deliberate; and the intended lessons of Genesis are shown by the contrast between one creator God; and a pantheon of gods in the other cosmologies. That is, the teaching of Genesis is about one God, and it is expressed in the cosmological context of its readers and writers, as a carefully structured retelling of conventional contemporary cosmology within the new religious context.
Isa 40:21b,22
Have you not applied understanding from the foundations of the earth? There is One who is dwelling above the circle of the earth, the dwellers in which are as grasshoppers, the One who is stretching out the heavens just as a fine gauze, who spreads them out like a tent in which to dwell.
This also is in the same ancient cosmological context. The translation of circle as "globe" is incorrect. This view is seen to be incorrect by the fact that it was other cultures (Greek) that first represented the Earth as a globe, while the depiction in Isaiah is a close match to the basic cosmology of the cultures surrounding the Hebrews (Egyptian, Babylonian, Sumerian) in which the sky was a dome (like a tent) over an essentially plate like circle of the earth. A tent does not surround a globe. It covers a circle.
In later times, long after Genesis and Isaiah was written, the globular earth was accepted by most in the early church; since Genesis is not a science text book and its lessons continue to work no matter what shape you think the earth might be. However, a strand of flat-earth thought with some of the early church fathers continues to show that the literal reading of the bible, unmodified by subsequent merely empirical discoveries about the Earth, is of a plate-like earth covered by a tent-like sky.
Rick Rose writes:
Sylas writes:
You are assuming that the globe is in existence; but that is the very point at issue.
Yes, it is a main point at issue. And it gives me great pleasure to present to you a view which you were not familiar with, as you so said you could not find anywhere in your theological studies where someone has equated Gen 1:1 with the creation of the cosmos as I have. Each one must determine this by his own belief system.
You are mistaken if you believe I have not previously heard of views such as you are expressing here. I have heard of such interpretations, and reject them as invalid impositions on the text. They are founded on an attempt to force fit the bible with a cosmology that was unknown to its writers, and this invariably results in notions in conflict with the plain wording of the bible, and distorting what the bible is attempting to convey.
However, be aware that I am not a believer. My aim in reading the bible is to understand it on its own terms; not to force a fit with my own views. I do not believe in the God described in Genesis.
To the contrary, the juxtaposition of the Genisis account and modern science credits both in this most astounding duet.
The science of mathematical probability offers striking proof that the Genesis creation account must have come from a source with knowledge of the events. The account lists 10 major stages in this order: (1) a beginning; (2) a primitive earth in darkness and enshrouded in heavy gases and water; (3) light; (4) an expanse or atmosphere; (5) large areas of dry land; (6) land plants; (7) sun,
moon and stars discernible in the expanse, and seasons beginning; (8) sea monsters and flying creatures; (9) wild and tame beasts, mammals; (10) man. Science agrees that these stages occurred in this general order. What are the chances that the writer of Genesis just guessed this order? The same as if you picked at random the numbers 1 to 10 from a box, and drew them in consecutive order. The chances of doing this on your first try are 1 in 3,628,800! So, to say the writer just happened to list the foregoing events in the right order without
getting the facts from somewhere is not realistic. -- Life - How Did It Get Here? By evolution or by creation?
I've seen this also, and it is breathtaking idiocy.
This "probability" is obtained by assuming that 10 factorial alternatives should be equally likely; but in fact it is much a conventional progression which would occur naturally to the ancients. The writer of the above nonsense effectively assumes (for example) that one should rank as equally likely that land animals were created before the dry land. The writer is insulting your intelligence; you may safely throw this book away as useless.
The other problem, of course, is that the given order is incorrect anyway. The writer puts an expanse of atmosphere in step four; but it belongs back with the early earth. The writer places land plants before the sun, which is incorrect. The Sun was plainly visible long before plants developed. In fact, Genesis explicitly mentions plants of two kinds; fruiting and seeding. This is actually important. Genesis is structured as three days of separations of chaos to reveal order. Light separated from dark; then sea separated from sky; then ocean separated from land. The next three days establish populations for the first three days. Heavenly bodies ruling light and dark; then creatures of sea and sky; then creatures of the land. But plants are part of the preparation of order prior to population with life; because the plants listed are the food for life which comes later. It makes good sense in the proper theological and cosmological context; and the essential feature is that all this is the work and command of one God.
However, as empirical science it is wrong, because the plants listed (fruits and grains) are comparatively recent; and actually developed since the extinction of the dinosaurs. Shouldn't matter; the bible is not intended as a science text book.
The order of flying creatures before land creatures is also a mismatch with empirical accounts. All flying animals developed from land dwellers; not sea dwellers. The notions that seasons began late in the order is incorrect also. Seasons came before life. And, as usual, the account deliberately distorts the clear formation of Sun and stars on the fourth day with a notion of "becoming visible" — a notion which is not in the bible, is inconsistent with the text, and which is only imposed because of this attempt to force fit with the wrong cosmological context. It fails in any case, because the Sun, moon and stars were certainly visible long before plants arrived on the land.
In the above statement you take oppisite positions. On the one hand you tenably acknowledge the watery deep. And, yes, modern science also acknowledges earth’s distant past likewise. How, then, is it that the Genesis writer could know so much so long ago, and not know about globes. You might as well try to convince your audience that a writer doesn’t know what a verb is. Perhaps your cosmological view of Genesis is not shared by it’s author.
There is no indication at all that the writer of Genesis had any special insights into empirical cosmology which were not based on the conventional cosmology of the time. It is not a science text book. The points where the insights of the writer stand out are not for science; but for a new theological perspective.
But I would like to continue verse by verse through the rest of the account as it bears on the thread. "Where does it say in Gen that the earth is six thousand years old." Of course only if you wish to oblige.
Shrug. Go for it. I may continue, or I may decide that I have already given an adequate criticism of the defects in the kind of forced amalgamation you propose with modern cosmology.
Cheers -- Sylas

This message is a reply to:
 Message 73 by Rick Rose, posted 05-18-2004 1:29 PM Rick Rose has replied

Replies to this message:
 Message 81 by Rick Rose, posted 05-18-2004 10:01 PM Sylas has not replied
 Message 82 by cromwell, posted 05-19-2004 4:55 AM Sylas has replied

  
Sylas
Member (Idle past 5290 days)
Posts: 766
From: Newcastle, Australia
Joined: 11-17-2002


Message 83 of 114 (109213)
05-19-2004 5:56 AM
Reply to: Message 82 by cromwell
05-19-2004 4:55 AM


Re: More to it than meets the eye.
I'm content to disagree profoundly with all the above, and to let Message 77 stand as my position; I see no need to add to what was already said. Just letting you know I saw your post.
If you will excuse a minor comment on formatting... your posts will look a lot better if you put spaces after punctuation, and use the quotation tags. Have a look at Message 1
Best wishes -- Sylas

This message is a reply to:
 Message 82 by cromwell, posted 05-19-2004 4:55 AM cromwell has replied

Replies to this message:
 Message 84 by cromwell, posted 05-19-2004 7:50 AM Sylas has not replied

  
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