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Author | Topic: Biblical Time Measurement Vs Modern Time Measurement | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Heathen Member (Idle past 1313 days) Posts: 1067 From: Brizzle Joined: |
Just read Brian's proposed new topic re: "Kings..."
A question popped into my head: When a year is mentioned in the Bible (e.g. moses is described as living to be 120 years old) is it a solar year as we know it? or was there some other measure? I suspect the latter and would be interested to find out how long a biblical year was. Or do literalists belive that moses was really 120 years old? I guess this could be related to the whole creation-in-7-days question. Does 1 day literaly = 1 day or is it an age/eon...? responses from literalists and skeptics welcomed.
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AdminPhat Inactive Member |
Thread moved here from the Education and Creation/Evolution forum.
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Brian Member (Idle past 4989 days) Posts: 4659 From: Scotland Joined: |
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This message has been edited by Brian, 10-13-2005 02:38 AM
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TheLiteralist Inactive Member |
Hi Creavolution,
We literalists take the years as normal years...there have been (IIRC) variations in what defines a year...but nothing very major. Moses was 120 years old (maybe a year or two more or less by our standards *shrugs*). But we take all the Patriarchs named in Genesis as having lived nearly a thousand years old, too -- no one ever quite made it to 1000, though. --Jason PS: The Bible hints that Moses longevity (for post-Flood folks in Moses's time, his life span was a bit over par) was due to God's particular blessing for the Bible also indicates that his natural strength had not abated and his eye-sight had not been affected either. People DO still come close to 120 every now and then (114 year old died not too long ago in some country or other)...but I seriously doubt it could be said of any centurian (besides Moses) that their natural strength had not abated and that their eyesight had not dimmed. This message has been edited by TheLiteralist, 10-01-2005 05:41 PM
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TheLiteralist Inactive Member |
However, the word for day (yom) can mean a period of time that is longer than 24 hours. This is true. Actually, this is true in several languages, including English. Back in George Washington's day, people were very concerned about honesty and cherry trees. However, not only does the Bible include the wording "evening and morning" to describe the days...but the days are also numbered first, second, and so on. Numbered days, in Hebrew, IIRC, cannot mean other than literal days. It's that way in english, too. The first day, we played games. God does not to satisfy science, scientists, or human reasoning...he can do those things in 7 days. Furthermore, for those who try to make the "days" line up with evolution theory or the big bang somehow...the order of events appears quite unrelated...the sun, moon, and stars do not get made till day 4 (so much for the Bible agreeing with the Big Bang)...birds are made on the same days as fish...all land-dwelling animals are made on day 6 (so much for the Bible agreeing with evolution theory). --Jason *note*I know you, Brian, already ARE a literalist...this is actually for the benefit of others wondering how we see things...but you had made the point that "yom" CAN mean an "indefinite period of time." So, I was just throwing in my 2 cent on that point. This message has been edited by TheLiteralist, 10-01-2005 06:02 PM
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Brian Member (Idle past 4989 days) Posts: 4659 From: Scotland Joined: |
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This message has been edited by Brian, 10-13-2005 02:38 AM
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Heathen Member (Idle past 1313 days) Posts: 1067 From: Brizzle Joined: |
The literalist writes: But we take all the Patriarchs named in Genesis as having lived nearly a thousand years old, too -- no one ever quite made it to 1000, though. Just to confirm.. you are being serious here? I'm not familiar with"the Patriarchs" you mention although the name Methuselah does ring a bell... So as a Literalist you believe there were 'thousand year old men walking the earth... and these ages were used to date creation correctly? really?... no really? you're joking aren't you
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Brian Member (Idle past 4989 days) Posts: 4659 From: Scotland Joined: |
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This message has been edited by Brian, 10-13-2005 02:39 AM
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TheLiteralist Inactive Member |
Hi Creavolution,
Creavolution writes: The literalist writes: But we take all the Patriarchs named in Genesis as having lived nearly a thousand years old, too -- no one ever quite made it to 1000, though. Just to confirm.. you are being serious here? I'm not familiar with"the Patriarchs" you mention although the name Methuselah does ring a bell... So as a Literalist you believe there were 'thousand year old men walking the earth... and these ages were used to date creation correctly? really?... no really? you're joking aren't you No. I'm not joking. I AM a literalist...I believe Genesis to be literally true. I believe that Adam lived to be 930 years old (regular years). I believe the environmental differences between the pre-Flood earth and the post-Flood earth (i.e., we lived in a wrecked earth) explain the differences between pre-Flood ages and post-Flood ages. The declining ages given in the just-after-the-Flood lineages probably, imo, reflect various environmental variables reaching new equilibriums. I used the term "the Patriarchs" to mean "our Forefathers" as the men listed from Adam to Noah are, if the Bible is true (and I believe it is), the forefathers of all humans on the earth today. As far as dating creation...I believe that the lineage given can date the creation of the earth fairly accurately (but apparently there is the possibility of missing persons in the lineage, which would make the earth somewhat older than 6000 years). So, I believe in a 6000 to 10000 year old earth. --Jason
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TheLiteralist Inactive Member |
Brian,
I see that you are NOT a literalist...as I supposed you were. Your first post on this thread made me think you were for some reason...but I've glanced around at some of your other threads and no longer think that. By any chance...was your avatar recently that of a black cat? --Jason {edited to remove an extraneous word} This message has been edited by TheLiteralist, 10-03-2005 02:50 PM
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Brian Member (Idle past 4989 days) Posts: 4659 From: Scotland Joined: |
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This message has been edited by Brian, 10-13-2005 02:39 AM
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TheLiteralist Inactive Member |
Well, I knew who Black-Cat Brian was, but I never before saw Blinking-Eye Brian and, based on that one post, mistook you for a YEC.
I just didn't recognize you in your new avatar. --Jason
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Heathen Member (Idle past 1313 days) Posts: 1067 From: Brizzle Joined: |
The Literalist writes: No. I'm not joking. I AM a literalist...I believe Genesis to be literally true. I believe that Adam lived to be 930 years old (regular years). I believe the environmental differences between the pre-Flood earth and the post-Flood earth (i.e., we lived in a wrecked earth) explain the differences between pre-Flood ages and post-Flood ages. The declining ages given in the just-after-the-Flood lineages probably, imo, reflect various environmental variables reaching new equilibriums. I am genuinely amazed and astounded... is there anything (extra-biblical)which can or attempts to back up this belief?(apologies if this has already been discussed, I will do a search)
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ringo Member (Idle past 442 days) Posts: 20940 From: frozen wasteland Joined: |
TheLiteralist writes: I believe the environmental differences between the pre-Flood earth and the post-Flood earth (i.e., we lived in a wrecked earth) explain the differences between pre-Flood ages and post-Flood ages. The declining ages given in the just-after-the-Flood lineages probably, imo, reflect various environmental variables reaching new equilibriums. I asked you about that in the meat-eating thread and never got an answer. Since this is a Science forum, I would think that a little more than your belief is required (in whichever thread is appropriate ). People who think they have all the answers usually don't understand the questions.
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TheLiteralist Inactive Member |
Hi Ringo,
I had to find Message 117 to refresh my memory.
Ringo316 writes: But we have all kinds of different environments on earth today: sea level to many thousands of feet in altitude, desert to arctic, every possible variation of "water mineral content, diet, topsoil content, etc." Do we detect vastly different lifespans based on those different environments? Do we really have "every possible variation of "water mineral content, diet, topsoil content, etc." represented in our environments today? If so, then how is the extreme giantism represented in extinct reptiles (and longevity required to reach such sizes?), plants, and insects explained? What if there was some atmospheric mechanism that effectively filtered out UV and Xrays? What if the overall oxygen percentage were slightly different? What if...? AFAIK, I have nothing but belief and speculations for my position. No scientific evidence.
Ringo316 writes: Since this is a Science forum, I would think that a little more than your belief is required... My 10th grade biology book uses the phrases "scientists believe" an awful lot. Perhaps it wasn't actually a science book. So...what was the environment on earth like when life first formed (according to modern abiogenic theories)? The evidence for the various answers to that question is what? Anyways, I was just answering Creavolution...who seemed genuinely interested in what literalists believe. I told him what at least one literalist believes. --Jason
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