I don't have a problem with the idea that the phrase "the whole sky" can refer in some cases to a localized region. My objection, which no one seems to be addressing, is that there is no warrant for taking it that way in Genesis 7 and significant warrant for taking it literally. But I could argue that you are arguing from English rather than from Hebrew and that there ARE linguistic reasons to say that "the whole heaven" in Hebrew cannot be used as it can in English. The phrase is found fourteen times that I am aware of in the whole OT. They are:melanie wrote:I'm going to throw my 2 cents in. I have always understood the flood to be a global flood, I took scripture on absolute face value. I think there is real validity to the claim that when you start interpreting scripture as not literal then where do you draw the line? But there are some very thought provoking things to consider on looking closer. Language and literature is kinda up my alley and I think terms like 'the whole sky' can and could be used in a more figurative sense. I actually said to my husband just last night " did you see that lightning, it lit up the whole sky" that was from my perspective from out of my window it certainly in no way meant it lit up the 'whole' sky on a global scale, that is just silly. Dictionaries tell us that figurative language is language used in a non-literal way in order to add emphasis. This is not only seen in English or in modern language. <br abp="1149">Mount Ararat is 5137 metres above sea level. The highest mountain in Turkey, not a low lying foothill but certainly not near the highest mountain on a global scale. Mt Everest is 8,848 metres and there are over 100 mountains with heights over 7200 metres around the world. So from a local perspective apart from Mt Ararat all the mountains would have been covered over.<br abp="1150">Noah lived somewhere east of Eden, the Tigris and Euphrates run through Eden which are found in Turkey. The ark floated around on the water in a very localised area, with the ark resting on Mt Ararat. <br abp="1151">I think from that perspective it is a possibility that the 'whole sky' and "all the mountains being covered over" could be from a localised viewpoint.
Gen 7:19
Deut 2:25
Deut 4:19
Job 28:24
Job 37:3
Job 41:11
Dan 7:27
Dan 9:12
There is no way you can argue that ANY of those instances refer to a localized region. So why should we take Gen 7:19 to be an exception? Especially when, as I said above, the entire thrust of the passage (following Hebrew composition) is the universal nature of the judgment. Why say "the whole heaven" when you can just say "heaven" or "sky"? The word "whole" or "entire" has a pragmatic effect. It is a matter of emphasis. And it is an emphasis set next to not only mountains, but high mountains; set next to not only covering waters, but prevailing waters; set next not only to flesh being destroyed, but ALL flesh being destroyed; set next not only to the waters prevailing greatly, but EXCEEDINGLY greatly. Now, you may not know Hebrew, but I do. And what I can tell you about Hebrew composition is that one of the ways you get across ideas is by repetition and thematic emphasis. To take one practical example, go to 2 Sam 11 (the story of David and Bathsheba). Notice that her name is used only once. Every other time she is referred to simply as "the woman" or as "Uriah's wife," the most damning statement being near the end of the story: "When Uriah’s wife heard that her husband was dead." Some feminist scholars have objected to the author's objectification here of Bathsheba, as he does not refer to her by name. But that misses the point. The very point (which is brought out later in Nathan's parable) is that David as stolen something dear from someone else, and then we continue the discussion from there.
So what I am trying to get you all to see is that this is just how Hebrew composition works. The OEC reading just plainly ignores the thematic intent that Moses is emphasizing. And in response, it simply explains away all of those elements individualistically. In other words, you aren't looking at what the narrative is saying. And that's a very similar problem to what OECs are doing with Genesis 1. You seek to explain away individual elements rather than looking at the whole narrative is driving at, and you are doing THAT because you are trying to fit the text with your preconceived worldview rather than trying to see what MOSES' worldview was.
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Creator and the Cosmos, either the 2nd or 3rd edition. It's been many years since I read it.Kurieuo wrote:Jac, I think you're being a bit misleading here.
I did not come to defend Ross, but rather what I feel is a misrepresentation.
You mention taking Ross at his "word", but what "word" was that and where did Ross say it?
And beyond that, I just point you to what I've pointed to elsewhere--namely, an article on Ross' own site that says:
- earliest statements claim that Irenaeus, Origen, Basil, Augustine, and Thomas Aquinas taught that the creation days were long periods of time, which Mook rejects as incorrect.4 In later books, Ross has backed away from many of those claims but still argues that Justin Martyr, Irenaeus, and several others taught that the days of creation were 1,000 years each. Mook concludes that while Ross become more nuanced in his claims, he remains substantially wrong.5
Unfortunately, few old earth creationists have written about the church fathers and what little they have written is often poor quality (with Stanley Jaki as a notable exception).6 This scarcity of solid resources is part of what motivated me to research this issue for myself.
Based on my own research, no early church father taught any form of a day-age view or an earth older than 10,000 years. In fact, the first people that I can clearly identify as teaching the old-earth view are Isaac Newton and Thomas Burnet in the late seventeenth century. This seems like a fatal blow to old-earth creationism and a strong vindication of Mook’s position but closer examination shows otherwise.
I hope that the citation about is enough to satisfy your curiosity. When Ross' own website admits its mistakes, then I think my claim is more than justified. In any case, all I said was that I took him at his word. Now, if you want to suggest that I misunderstood him, then fine (even as he admits his mistake!). But that wouldn't change anything, because it still would not change the fact that I got my incorrect ideas from Ross (even if wrongly interpreted), and that explains the problem Rick is raising.If you truly finally investigated the supporting quotes Ross uses, and found them very mistakenly used, then how about providing some of them here so others can judge for themselves?
Poisoning the well is hardly becoming. And if you want to play tit for tat, then here:You know I've read Ross too, and he presents references so people to decide for themselves.
He doesn't tell people what to believe. Just what he believes and why.
And people can decide for themselves from there. Just like I decided for myself.
And its a choice I don't see many prominent YEC's so graciously give to Christians (e.g., quote in RickD's signature a case in point).
- Appearance of age claims that God created a world with a false history. Such a claim is directly refuted by the Bible, which claims that God's creation declares His glory and righteousness. Nowhere does any biblical author make the claim that God's word contradicts any historical facts. Ultimately, the claim that the God of creation would lie to us with a false history of the universe, is a direct attack on the righteous character of God and cannot be tolerated within the Church! The God who would deceive His creatures with lies is not the God of the Bible. A Christian friend first presented this deceiver God to me as a senior in high school. Assuming he was correct, I rejected the "God of the Bible" as being unworthy of my worship. It wasn't until many years later that I read the Bible for myself and came to faith in Jesus Christ - the God who is the truth - my Creator. Why are those who advocate a deceiver God surprised when unbelievers reject their unrighteous God? (emphasis original!)
So let's not pretend like YECs are the only divisive ones here.
And the implication is that Irenaeus and Augustine held to OEC? Again, let me point back to Reasons.org:So others here can make up there own minds what to think, I'll present some of Ross' references.
We have some of the following writings on the Genesis creation days from various early "Christian Fathers" (aka theologians):
Irenaeus said: Thus, then, in the day they eat, in the same did they die... For it is said, "There was made in the evening, and there was made in the morning one day." Now in this same day that they did eat, in that also did they die. ... On one and the same day on which they ate they also died (for it is one day of creation)... He (Adam) did no overstep the thousand years, but died within their limit... for since "a day of the Lord is as a thousand years," he did not overstep the thousand years, but died within them."
Augustine wrote in the 'The City of God': "As for these 'days,' [Genesis creation days] it is difficult, perhaps impossible to think let alone explain in words what they mean."
In 'The Literal Meaning of Genesis' Augustine writes: "But at least we know that it [the Genesis creation day] is different from the ordinary day with which we are familiar."
Elsewhere in the same book he writes: Seven days by our reckoning after the model of the day of creation, make up a week. By the passage of such weeks time rolls on, and in these weeks one day is constituted by the course of the sun from its rising to its settings; but we must bear in mind that these days indeed recall the days of creation, but without in any way being really similar to them.
Origen also wrote of the first six days as representing the time of work for men, and the seventh (Sabbath) day, lasting the full duration of the world: He [Celsus] knows nothing of the day of the Sabbath and rest of God, which follows the completion of the world's creation, and which lasts during the duration of the world, and in which all those will keep festival with God who have done all their works in their six days, and who, because they have omitted none of their duties will ascend to the contemplation (of Celestial things) and to the assembly of righteous and blessed beings.
Belief that the days of Genesis 1 may not have been ordinary days existed long before modern science emerged.
And these ideas from CFs who took many of the now canonical books just as seriously as we do, even if they didn't have a statement like the Chicago Statement which endorses a Historical-Grammatical method when reading Scripture.
- Justin Martyr (Dialog with Trypho, A Jew 81) and Irenaeus (Against Heresies 5.23.2) are sometimes mistakenly cited as teaching long creation days on the basis of equating “day” with a thousand years. This is a common error and we see it, for example, in Hugh Ross, A Matter of Days (Colorado Springs, CO: NavPress, 2004), 43. A day as a thousand years was never applied to the creation days themselves, only to post-creation history.
Incorrect. There were many who insisted on a literal interpretation. To give you only one example, here is what Basil said:What does this mean?
Well it means there was really no "literal" interpretation whether OEC or YEC by today's same standards.
It is therefore unreasonable to expect to find ANY "literal" Historical-Grammatical interpretation from someone who believed Scripture was inerrant and divinely inspired by modern Evangelical standards.
Therefore, to use this in an argument against an opposition is to setup an unreasonable burden of proof.
- And there was evening and there was morning: one day.” And the evening and the morning were one day. Why does Scripture say “one day the first day”? Before speaking to us of the second, the third, and the fourth days, would it not have been more natural to call that one the first which began the series? If it therefore says “one day”, it is from a wish to determine the measure of day and night, and to combine the time that they contain. Now twenty-four hours fill up the space of one day—we mean of a day and of a night; and if, at the time of the solstices, they have not both an equal length, the time marked by Scripture does not the less circumscribe their duration. It is as though it said: twenty-four hours measure the space of a day, or that, in reality a day is the time that the heavens starting from one point take to return there. Thus, every time that, in the revolution of the sun, evening and morning occupy the world, their periodical succession never exceeds the space of one day.
None of the CFs you quote above supported OEC ideas, nor do the quotes you share support OEC ideas. You can say I'm not "allowing others to make up their own minds if you like." More poisoning of the well, if you ask me. But there's nothing at all virtuous in ripping the CFs out of context to have them teach something they never did. In fact, on the contrary, everyone you mentioned held YECs beliefs. They all held that the days of Genesis 1 were ordinary days and that creation was relatively recent. What they actually expected was a seven thousand year human history, that each day represents a post-creation age. For they allegorized the passage. Strictly, what they believed REALLY happened was that God created everything instantaneously a few thousand years ago.I think you would find even Hugh Ross agreeing that a literal OEC interpretation like Day-Age/Progressive Creation ONLY came about in the 20th century.
BUT, this does mean earlier ideas do not lend support to such interpretations. For example, those words from CFs that I quoted above.
I'll allow others here to make up their own minds about instead of dictating what they do/do not support.
On the contrary, it is disingenuous to argue that the CFs were anything like OEC or that they held anything like OEC ideas. And, AGAIN, I note that this is something that OECs are now admitting themselves (see articles I linked to above). With all due respect, Scott, you are about a decade behind on this argument.SO, to argue that no CFs thought anything that lends support of a non-ordinary day interpretation of Scripture is easy to disprove and disingenuous.
And to make out that there is absolutely nothing from CFs to support yom (day) in Genesis as a non-ordinary day is very misleading, especially if you have looked into the references behind it all.
Of course geocentricism was wrongly read into Scripture. Do you see that, K? It was WRONGLY read into Scripture. It seems very odd that you would appeal to one heresy motivated by the science of the day to justify your appeal to the science of OUR day and say that we can read it into Scripture.So I find your statement: "Someone would have done well to ask me to quote a church father or early Jewish interpreter who held to OEC" quite misleading.
And it is because of this, I've written this post as well as presented some references above that Hugh Ross himself uses.
People reading here can decide for themselves whether such supports an OEC, Day-Age or Progressive Creation position.
Finally, I'd argue that early non-modern scientific understandings may have lead interpreters of old even astray.
You say any OEC interpretation may be coloured by a modern scientific understanding, but equally any interpretation of old may have been coloured by a non-modern scientific understanding. Where does that leave us?
To provide an example, that the Earth was the centre of the universe was a scientific thought.
This influenced interpretation of Scripture.
And the RCC burnt themselves on Copernicus, who mind you was also just a Christian and scientist like Ross.
Where does it leave us? With a Bible that we ought to interpret on its own terms, apart from what the science of the day has to say.
Again, you are proving my point. Luther realized that tradition was being read INTO Scripture, just like OEC reads science INTO Scripture. So what ought we do? What Luther did . . . let the Bible speak to itself. And when you do that, there is absolutely no way we can hold to OEC. It is not in the Bible. It's in modern science and read INTO the Bible, implying that the Bible cannot be understood on its own terms. Therefore, the Bible is not true revelation. Science is. But that is a terribly dangerous game.Furthermore, we learn from examples like Copernicus that just because certain beliefs may find a home in a Traditional understanding such does not mean that the Traditional understanding is correct and true.
Just picture what Luther went through to resurface the true Gospel containing God's grace.
I want to affirm this. There is no angst between K and I. We are discussing a very important issue that has serious implications. We strongly disagree, but there's no loss of love between us and neither of us questions the other's salvation. We have simply known each other long enough that we can speak plainly in our understanding of these matters.AND SO, to stress again here like I did elsewhere....
None of these arguments external to Scripture prove what is the truth of the matter and as such correct interpretation.
Interpretations must be judged on their own merits, particularly if we want to know what Scripture itself says (rather than others' interpretations of it).
As an aside to anyone reading, Jac and I have been around long enough on these issues.
There is no angst between Jac or myself here. And I strongly disagree that there is strength in Christians agreeing on every point.
I think to do so introduces a weakness into the true Church (aka all in Christ) and that the Holy Spirit has instrumentally used the many denominations.
As long as we still tolerate each other's positions, then we can stand in Christ united in our disagreement.