RickD wrote:Genesis 2:1-4 2 Thus the heavens and the earth were completed, and all their hosts. 2 By the seventh day God completed His work which He had done, and He rested on the seventh day from all His work which He had done. 3 Then God blessed the seventh day and sanctified it, because in it He rested from all His work which God had created [a]and made.
KBC, if the first six days weren't 24 hours, why do you assume the 7th day in verse 2, is 24 hours?
Who is assuming that a day equals anything other than a period of time? I certainly don't infer any specific set of hours and minutes for the creation days. What I do know is that our creator performed acts during 7 distinct time periods. Periods that he defined. Now he defined those periods during that 'time' as having distinct separation points or dividing points;
Gen 1:5 ...And the evening and the morning were the first day.
Gen 1:8 ...And the evening and the morning were the second day.
Gen 1:13 ...And the evening and the morning were the third day.
Gen 1:19 ...And the evening and the morning were the fourth day.
Gen 1:23 ...And the evening and the morning were the fifth day.
Gen 1:31 ...And the evening and the morning were the sixth day.
A significant part of the creation week description was this defining of the divisions of it. None of these time periods was defined by hours and minutes which is a human interpretation. How long was an evening for God? How long was a morning? how long was his day?
No one here can empirically define these things. In fact if we look at genesis carefully there was evenings and mornings before there was a sun to make our perception of evening and morning occur. So how could God possibly experience an evening and a morning before he Formed the stars and planets which currently define our time keeping?
We should not assume anything more than what God himself is pointing out. He created in between mornings and evenings and when these things occur he called it a day or a specific period of time. For me I have chosen not to go beyond what is being stated by our maker.
He has stated clearly that our perception of time is not the same as his and when he inspired the genesis account he used a symbolic way of communication that man could comprehend. We experience time periods that also have evenings and mornings and we also divide our seven day weeks based on the same rules he set forth about dividing periods we call days.
Being the 'same' amount of hours and minutes has nothing whatsoever to do with observing time periods in the same manner as our maker does. He knows we don't possess the same sight he does this is why he gives us physical queue's so that we may be able to mimic what he does just as our children mimic what we do. Our hope is to be as much like our maker as he wishes us to be and we can do this by observing the same points that he has provided for our use.
RickD wrote:How do you know the 7th day isn't still ongoing?
Because if it was then God could never have commanded a cyclical observation of it.
RickD wrote:And furthermore, how do you know the sabbath commandment isn't a symbol of God's ongoing rest from creation.
Note here Rick that I am not referring to the commandment. The seventh day was made holy and blessed from the creation and since that time the first day of the week keeps coming after the seventh. Time did not stop at the seventh day and it did not continue to be counted up. God made the week cyclical... a symbolic reliving of the same week over and over. Seven periods of time that will ultimately end in the final day... the seventh symbolic day when those who overcome will be able to rest in Christ and God. Note also that no where in scripture is Gods rest referenced to anything other than the seventh day or seventh period of time. God made the seventh day holy and blessed... forever. That day or symbolic period of cyclical time will never cease to be observed for its symbolic meaning.
RickD wrote:Not to mention, a symbol or foreshadowing of our ultimate sabbath rest in Christ?
indeed the seventh day is also symbolic of the rest we could at some point have in Christ. So why honor any other period of time as the sabbath? The seventh day sabbath is our symbolic day to honor everything represented by it.