Neo wrote:
Rick, I am not looking for agreement, there are reasons why I find it a thin argument and not likely plausible.
That's fine. As long as I think you are understanding what I'm saying, I will listen to your reasons.
1. Moses audience wasn't looking for a pattern, they were people who were born into slavery in Egypt and they needed solid answers to life's biggest questions. All they had seen was the Egyptian religion and that was why they were so keen on getting the calf made and worshiped because that was what had influenced them most. They needed to know this story and thus have their own religion and origin story.
I believe the main point of Genesis 1 was to show that God was the creator of the heavens and earth, including humanity.
2. You don't get the pattern until you jump pretty late in the N.T not until you get to the author of Hebrews (whoever that may be) but not until then can a theological angle like a 6-1 day pattern of work and rest could be established. So its impossible for Moses to have written it that way since he didn't know the author of Hebrew, nor could say that Christ was the eternal rest.
The 6 to 1 pattern is first mentioned in Genesis 1, in the creation days. How you can say that "You don't get the pattern until you jump pretty late in the N.T not until you get to the author of Hebrews" is beyond me. And whether Moses fully realized the implications of what God told him to say, really isn't crucial to what he wrote. Saying an OT author had to be fully aware of all meaning of what he wrote, just isn't true. That would mean that any OT writer who wrote about a Messianic prophecy, would have to have known that prophecy would be fulfilled in Jesus of Nazareth.
Today you see the pattern, because you have had 2000 years of mature theology, you know the creation story, Moses and the Hebrews who got out of Egypt had none, nor were they looking for one, nor the story of Genesis makes it one.
The 6 to 1 pattern is there in Genesis, for anyone to see. Whether Moses' audience was aware of it, or even looking for it, really doesn't matter.
So you are basically concluding, even if you don't like it, for reasons above, that Moses himself did not know what he was writing about.
I believe Moses didn't know the full implications of all he wrote about. And I have no problem with that.
Your take on the matter is a classic example of reading into the text, which in this instance, is that you assume that the 6-1 days pattern must have been what Moses had in mind based on what you read in the Hebrews, a book written after 1400 years, but you only think this in hindsight and Moses would have never known about this at all.
No. That's just not accurate. Like I said above, what God was telling Moses to write, was that God was the creator of the heavens and earth, including humanity. I'm not saying Moses was fully aware of the 6 to 1 pattern he was writing about.
You may not agree which I can understand but I thought I should point out these reasons and why is this bad Hermeneutics.
I hope I made it a little clearer as to what I'm actually saying. It's certainly different than what you thought I was saying.