abelcainsbrother wrote:neo-x wrote:Thanks for posting the references rick regarding yom, i am aware of these. Even if i grant that yom is an age in Genesis 1, that still makes no sense because the later writers didn't consider that when mentioning creation account , if it had been that apparent they would have. But as i said, its a no brainer for them. They took it as it was, only now that we have evidence for oec, is why we need to rethink yom in Genesis otherwise there would be no need.
You could look at it that way or you could look at it the way I do.God's word is revealed over time and before man started realizing the age of the earth it was not a big issue in the church,but it is now and so God's word has revealed itself to be timeless and right at the right time and it proves man wrong whether they are Christian teaching a young earth or an atheist teaching evolution.And yet the Christians still teaching a young earth despite the evidence refuse to change based on tradition biblical teaching instead of a new revelation revealed in God's word at the right time.You see God's word is timeless and revealed over time and now that we have evidence for an old earth the biblical Gap theory that was always in the bible has now been proven correct based on the evidence of an old earth and forensic scientific evidence of a former world that existed that perished before this world was even created.Check out Isaiah 48:3-the end.
It's seems the theory you are suggesting makes it completely impossible to know what the Bible says at all and that we must ultimately deny its status as revelation. Suppose, for the sake of argument, that neo is correct and that the biblical writers took
yom to refer to a normal day. And suppose that OEC advocates are correct that that
yom REALLY referred to an age. That would mean that either Moses intended
yom to mean a 24 hour day, in which case both he and his readers understood his meaning correctly but were wrong about what Scripture meant; or else Moses intended
yom to mean an age, in which case his readers misunderstood what Scripture meant. In EITHER case, the only way they would have had to know what Scripture REALLY meant was to wait 2000 years until modern science came along and showed them (whether Moses AND the readers or just the readers) what the text really meant. Therefore, the text, as it is written, cannot be regarded (on your theory) as revelation. It must be regarded as some magic code that needs to be decoded by later science, and only at THAT point does it become revelation.
But, of course, the problem with that view is that you have no way of knowing whether or not enough revelation has come today to justify your claim that the text is revelation to you. It may be that science will yet show that both views are wrong and some other we have not yet thought of is correct. And worse, how do you limit this hermeneutical principle to Genesis 1 alone? You've already brought Isaiah into it. So what about the gospels? On your view, the Mormons could be right. God just needs to give us later revelation to show us that we were really misreading previous revelation all along.
Look, the bottom line is that the only way to maintain an objective biblical interpretation is to stick with authorial intent. You don't get to appeal to the mysticism of God as the "real" author to get away from difficulties in the text. Either the human authors were right in what the intended to write or they were wrong. If the former, then the Bible is not revelation. It is, at BEST, source material for revelation, and if THAT is the case, then there is no such thing as revelation at all. You may as well accept the claims of the Catholic church and accept their magisterium as the full authority, because at least in that case you have SOME reason to believe what you do other than your own mere preferences. Choose any authority you like to bow to, but please, for the love of God, don't let that authority be yourself.