cubsfan wrote:Zoegirl, I will be convinced when you have demonstrated your position is correct. I will not quit because you show my position is incorrect.
cubsfan wrote:
I have stated from the start that I do not take the plain read approach dogmatically. I have stated I am not simply anti OEC and I am not simply pro YEC. I am pro God of the Bible. Like you, I just want the truth, whatever it may be. You might doubt this. That's okay.
Okay....my apologies. I was getting the impression that you were more dogmatic than perhaps was warranted.
cubsfan wrote:
The high ideals of this forum indicate its members should act Christian enough to try to build each other up in the faith. I have said I am trying to be iron sharpening iron, a phrase made popular among Promise Keepers based on a verse I could look up, which refers to Christians being strong for each other to encourage growth.
okay, fair enough, although I still don't know why you think we haven't lived up to that. Whether you think right now that we have sharpen *your* iron doesn't mean that we won't eventually.
Sharpening iron is a process after all....
cubsfan wrote:
I have criticized the OEC position primarily on the basis of argumentative methodology. I have not said its overall position (as opposed to cetain statements or points OEC'rs have made) is absurd or wrong. I have said it is in the minority. It must be in the minority, if there is no OEC exegetical scholar who has ever gotten a new translation of Ge 1 which incorporates the great exegetical insights they have into a major bible, or any bible for that matter.
Whoa there, some superb generalizations there!!! Have you ever considered that there are tremendous stigma's still to this? Simply because it is not the publishing company's choice doesn't mean that there aren't respected OT scholars. Didn't you read my links? Respected OT scholars from many many seminaries leave open the interpretation. HAve you ever thought that this falls under the realm of fallible man?!?! A pressure to keep the poplarity of the translation and not rock the boat? Simply because the model hasn't hit the fancy of the publisher's is no proof of the validity of the exegesis.
cubsfan wrote:
I also conclude OEC is in the minority based on the fact that most Christians understand this dilemma as all or nothing. They believe that if you don't read the 6 days as literal, 24 hour days, you have said scripture lies or is undependable. Consequently, most Christians over simplify the problem, and conclude, as I have argued, that they should embrace an old earth and stop believing the Bible, or they should remain skeptical about the claims of science and hold fast to the Bible.
Amen to that!! And most follow the lead of Ken HAmm and Kent Hovind and the like of ICR and AiG instead of thinking it through themselves. Far too many view this as an all or none.
cubsfan wrote:
You and your friends argue this is a false dilemma, as there are other options. My point throughout was that (a) I have yet to read or hear a sound argument for the OEC position and (b) the effect of the OEC position is, so far, not to strengthen the body overall.
Well, point number 1 might be something that we will have to agree to disagree on. I have shown you respected links (here is another one that provides quotes and bios and backgrounds of notable Christian leaders that are open to a OEC position)
http://www.reasons.org/resources/apolog ... #schaeffer
See, this is why I started to get annoyed because point number 2 is a typical YEC rant (are you *sure* that you aren't more invested in this that you say?!?!?
) *WE* are the source of the problems in the church today!! they claim. We weaken the church.....really.... which is rather humorous considering the blows that we still take from the atheists out there. According to them, we are still just as much the enemy as the YEC fundies our there.
Bottom line...
We seek to find the truth. All truth is God's truth. If God's creation is revealing something out there and God's WORD is harmonious to this, then who are we to be dogmatic about it. As one of my colleagues likes to say "we cannot be dogmatic about an issue when the scripture is not"
cubsfan wrote:
The effect has been to help the twin philosophies of Naturalism and Scientism to confuse the body of believers. If YEC's think your position is dangerous, whose fault is that?
Their fault for having so little faith in God and His word that it can't stand the scrutiny!!
NOt that there is any hard evidence for this c laim
It is nicely vague enough and sufficiently scary enough to make most CHristians wary of examining the topic!! The YEC camp has made this little soap box speech an art form. Their speeches about the warnings of traveling the road of OEC are sufficient to scare most young CHrstians from thinking. I charge that they are responsible for most ignorance out there and more lost faith. Do you realize that most High school Christian students leave high school with such YEC fluff that they get from whatever sources (believe me I hear them) and they're ignorance leaves them prone to the atheists out there. It is the YEC camps that tell them not to think and to simply lean upon their nice little bullet points, not the OEC's!!
Again, more rant similar to the YEC dogma out there. Do you think that we haven't heard this? Ah yes, the trouble out there is all our fault
NOt the atheists out there and not the dogmatic fundies that make a mockery of God's creation. I would suggest you examine previous posts and threads from the people who post here and the The many many longtime OEC posters are genuine Christians who love the scripture and it is annoying to hear that particular argument. That people are confused is more a result of poor thinking and emotional laden doctrine out there. There is more milk than meat out there and all people seem to hear is "Don't bother thinking about things or you're down the road to apostasy!!"
Naturalism and atheism existed LONG long times before any specific theory. The PCA link I gave you listed many many Biblical scholars from centuries aga that supported an old earth position that shows that this issue is not recent.
Again, the laughable but sad part of this is that the naturalists out there are still scornful of us. If you think that our OEC means that they welcome us with open arms you are greatly mistaken. All it means is that we are not a stumbling block to those who are open to God but see the fundies out there and reject HIm because they think they represent the word.
cubsfan wrote:
I'll put this another way: The OEC message has a PR problem which prejudices the body against it. The body is not primarily made up of scholars or science afficianados. They primarily listen to their leaders, who themselves are usually not scholars. OEC introduces a new paradigm for reading Ge 1, and it is motivated 100% by empirical evidence.
Except for the fact that OEC existed long before the knowledge of fossils and Darwin. Check out the link to the PCA document and you will see that poeple thought of this long before. And the PR?!? Thanks to the ICR and AIG and the others, yes there is a PR problem.
cubsfan wrote:
That kind of thing alarms serious Bible students. This is not because they do not like or respect legitimate science. It is because they believe most cosmologically significant science is driven by a philosophy of Ontologically Naturalistic Scientism (though they wouldn't use those words), and many of the conclusions drawn are tentative. But worse, categorically, science or conclusions about empirical observation are in many ways inappropriate bases upon which to intepret scripture.
You say, why not use science to help intepret scripture? and, paraphrasing, The creation and the Bible are two testaments to God. When one is ambiguous, the other should explain the other. Without arguing this point with you, OEC's need to understand that this is a paradigm of hermeneutics that most Bible believing Christians would not agree with.
Again with the "most". And again, even saying that the most is justified, do you suppose that this is because most get their information from YEC fundies?!?!? Hmm?
AND THis is laughable since YEC DOES place so much of their effort into trying to justify their science!! If they truly *truly* believe that God's creation can offer no answers, then they should just pack their bags and get out of the scientific circles. After all, you shouldn't attempt to justify the belief in scripture with science!!
So much for examining creation.
When it suits them, they are fine with methodological science born from naturalistic ideas!! Hypocrites!!
Do you not believe that God's creation is trustworthy? And if it is not trustworthy for the answers to the age question, then the YEC have absolutely no stance on their science as well. Let's all just throw our hands in the air and not bother to look at God's creation. ICR and AIG shouldn't even begin to refute with "science" of their own. Forget about trying to look at science to justify their belief in scripture!!
cubsfan wrote:
It is not surprising, then, that you get angry Christians on your site trying to convince you to change your ways.
Yes, when they are being fed nonsense about us being the cause of the problems in the church, that we are chipping away at the foiundation of the Bible, that we are to be feared, that to even think about this means that they are teetering on the edge of apostasy?!?!? Yeah, you end up breeding and raising an entire generation of angry and scared Christians.
cubsfan wrote:
Whether they understand your position or not, they represent a large contingent of Bible believing Christians who do not trust what OEC's are trying to do. OEC's can disparage them as stupid, small minded and paranoid all they want. But that will not fulfill a mission of educating them and building them up in Christ.
I may think them ignorant (different from stupid), but I reserve my wholehearted scorn for the leaders, they are willfully misleading people and encouraging ignorance. Again, I don't seek out YEc'ers and point my finger at them. I don't go to their webpages and call them ignorant, nor do I seek them out at church. I am incredsibly sensitive when I teach this and take great pains to not cause offense. I reserve my scorn for the *arguments* used and the poor thinking. If someone wants to engage in the debate I am mroe than happy to.
I am more than willing to concede that there are great mysteries to God's creation. And certainly this is not 100% knowledge.
cubsfan wrote:
If OEC's really believe they are correct, they owe it to the body to help it move along with them. For my part, I'd like to see a convincing argument. That shouldn't be so hard to muster, with all those wonderful scientific minds and OEC intellectuals out there.
Umm, respectfully, I think you are more biased than perhaps you think. I don't think there would be any arguments I could bring up. What do you disgaree with here?
One of the most frequently argued objections to the trustworthiness of Scripture is found in the apparent discrepancy between the account of creation given in Genesis 1 and the supposed evidence from the fossils and fissionable minerals in the geological strata that indicated Earth is billions of years old. Yet Genesis 1 allegedly teaches that creation took place in six twenty-four-hour days, at the end of which man was already on the earth. But this conflict between Genesis 1 and the factual data of science (in contradistinction to the theories of some scientists who draw inferences from their data that are capable of quite another interpretation by those equally proficient in geology) is only apparent, not real.
To be sure, if we were to understand Genesis 1 in a completely literal fashion—which some suppose to be the only proper principle of interpretation if the Bible is truly inerrant and completely trustworthy—then there would be no possibility of reconciliation between modern scientific theory and the Genesis account. But a true and proper belief in the inerrancy of Scripture involves neither a literal nor a figurative rule of interpretation. What it does require is a belief in whatever the biblical author (human and divine) actually meant by the words he used.
An absolute literalism would, for example, commit us to the proposition that in Matthew 19:24 (and parallel passages) Christ actually meant to teach that a camel could go through the eye of a needle. But it is abundantly clear that Christ was simply using the familiar rhetorical figure of hyperbole in order to emphasize how difficult it is spiritually for a rich man (because of his pride in his material wealth) to come to repentance and saving faith in God. To construe that passage literally would amount to blatant heresy, or at least a perversity that has nothing to do with orthodoxy. Or again, when Jesus said to the multitude that challenged Him to work some miracle, “Destroy this temple, and in three days I will raise it up” (John 2:19), they grievously erred when they interpreted His remarks literally. John 2:21 goes on to explain that Jesus did not mean this prediction literally but spiritually: “But He was speaking about the temple of His body. Therefore when He was raised from the dead, His disciples remembered that He said this, and they believed the Scripture.” In this case, then, literal interpretation was dead wrong because that was not what Jesus meant by the language He used; He was actually referring to the far greater miracle of His bodily resurrection.
It thus becomes clear in this present case, as we study the text of Genesis 1, that we must not short-circuit our responsibility of careful exegesis in order to ascertain as clearly as possible what the divine author meant by the language His inspired prophet (in this case probably Moses) was guided to employ. Is the true purpose of Genesis 1 to teach that all creation began just six twenty-four-hour days before Adam was “born”? Or is this just a mistaken inference that overlooks other biblical data having a direct bearing on this passage? To answer this question we must take careful note of what is said in Genesis 1:27 concerning the creation of man as the closing act of the sixth creative day. There it is stated that on the sixth day (apparently toward the end of the day, after all the animals had been fashioned and placed on the earth—therefore not long before sundown at the end of that same day), “God created man in His own image; He created them male and female.” This can only mean that Eve was created in the closing hour of Day Six, along with Adam.
As we turn to Genesis 2, however, we find that a considerable interval of time must have intervened between the creation of Adam and the creation of Eve. In 2:15 we are told that Yahweh Elohim (i.e., the Lord God) put Adam in the Garden of Eden as the ideal environment for his development, and there he was to cultivate and keep the enormous park, with all its goodly trees, abundant fruit crop, and four mighty rivers that flowed from Eden to other regions of the Near East. In 2:18 we read, “Then the Lord God said, 'It is not good for the man to be alone; I will make him a helper suitable for him.'” This statement clearly implies that Adam had been diligently occupied in his responsible task of pruning, harvesting fruit, and keeping the ground free of brush and undergrowth for a long enough period to lose his initial excitement and sense of thrill at this wonderful occupation in the beautiful paradise of Eden. He had begun to feel a certain lonesomeness and inward dissatisfaction.
In order to compensate for this lonesomeness, God then gave Adam a major assignment in natural history. He was to classify every species of animal and bird found in the preserve. With its five [sic] mighty rivers and broad expanse, the garden must have had hundreds of species of mammal, reptile, insect, and bird, to say nothing of the flying insects that also are indicated by the basic Hebrew term 'ôp (“bird”) (2:19). It took the Swedish scientist Linnaeus several decades to classify all the species known to European scientists in the eighteenth century. Doubtless there were considerably more by that time than in Adam's day; and, of course, the range of fauna in Eden may have been more limited than those available to Linnaeus. But at the same time it must have taken a good deal of study for Adam to examine each specimen and decide on an appropriate name for it, especially in view of the fact that he had absolutely no human tradition behind him, so far as nomenclature was concerned. It must have required some years, or, at the very least, a considerable number of months for him to complete this comprehensive inventory of all the birds, beasts, and insects that populated the Garden of Eden.
Finally, after this assignment with all its absorbing interest had been completed, Adam felt a renewed sense of emptiness. Genesis 2:20 ends with the words “but for Adam no suitable helper was found.” After this long and unsatisfying experience as a lonely bachelor, God saw that Adam was emotionally prepared for a wife—a “suitable helper.” God, therefore, subjected him to a deep sleep, removed from his body the bone that was closest to his heart, and from that physical core of man fashioned the first woman. Finally God presented woman to Adam in all her fresh, unspoiled beauty, and Adam was ecstatic with joy.
As we have compared Scripture with Scripture (Gen 1:27 with 2:15-22), it has become very apparent that Genesis 1 was never intended to teach that the sixth creative day, when Adam and Eve were both created, lasted a mere twenty-four hours. In view of the long interval of time between these two, it would seem to border on sheer irrationality to insist that all of Adam's experiences in Genesis 2:15-22 could have been crowded into the last hour or two of a literal twenty-four-hour day. The only reasonable conclusion to draw is that the purpose of Genesis 1 is not to tell how fast God performed His work of creation (though, of course, some of His acts, such as the creation of light on the first day, must have been instantaneous). Rather, its true purpose was to reveal that the Lord God who had revealed Himself to the Hebrew race and entered into personal covenant relationship with them was indeed the only true God, the Creator of all things that are. This stood in direct opposition to the religious notions of the heathen around them, who assumed the emergence of a pantheon of gods in successive stages out of preexistent matter of unknown origin, actuated by forces for which there was no accounting.
Genesis 1 is a sublime manifesto, totally rejecting all the cosmogonies of the pagan cultures of the ancient world as nothing but baseless superstition. The Lord God Almighty existed before all matter, and by His own word of command He brought the entire physical universe into existence, governing all the great forces of wind, rain, sun, and sea according to His sovereign will. This stood in stark contrast to the clashing, quarreling, capricious little deities and godlets spawned by the corrupt imagination of the heathen. The message and purpose of Genesis 1 is the revelation of the one true God who created all things out of nothing and ever keeps the universe under His sovereign control.
The second major aspect of Genesis 1 is the revelation that God brought forth His creation in an orderly and systematic manner. There were six major stages in this work of formation, and these stages are represented by successive days of a week. In this connection it is important to observe that none of the six creative days bears a definite article in the Hebrew text; the translations “the first day,” “the second day,” etc., are in error. The Hebrew says, “And the evening took place, and the morning took place, day one” (1:5). Hebrew expresses “the first day” by hayyôm hāri'šôn, but this text says simply yôm 'ehād (“day one”). Again, in v.8 we read not hayyôm haššēnî (“the second day”) but y óm šēní (“a second day”). In Hebrew prose of this genre, the definite article was generally used where the noun was intended to be definite; only in poetic style could it be omitted. The same is true with the rest of the six days; they all lack the definite article. Thus they are well adapted to a sequential pattern, rather than to strictly delimited units of time.
Genesis 1:2-5 thus sets forth the first stage of creation: the formation of light. This must have meant primarily the light of the sun and the other heavenly bodies. Sunlight is a necessary precondition to the development of plant life and animal life, generally speaking (though there are some subterranean forms of life that manage to do without it).
Genesis 1:6-8 presents the second stage: the formation of an “expanse” (rāqía') that separated between moisture in suspension in the sky and moisture condensed enough to remain on the earth's surface. The term raqía' does not mean a beaten-out metal canopy, as some writers have alleged—no ancient culture ever taught such a notion in its concept of the sky—but simply means “a stretched-out expanse.” This is quite evident from Isaiah 42:5, where the cognate verb rāqa' is used: “Thus says the God Yahweh, the Creator of the heavens, and the one who stretched them out [from the verb nātāh,'to extend' curtains or tent cords], the one who extended [rōqa'] the earth and that which it produces [the noun se'e sā'ímrefers always to plants and animals].” Obviously rāqa' could not here mean “beat out,” “stamp out” (though it is often used that way in connection with metal working); the parallelism with nātāh (noted above) proves that here it has the force of extend or expand. Therefore, the noun rāqîa' can mean only “expanse,” without any connotation of a hard metal plate.
Genesis 1:9-13 relates the third stage in God's creative work, the receding of the waters of the oceans, seas, and lakes to a lower altitude than the masses of land that emerged above them and thus were allowed to become dry. Doubtless the gradual cooling of the planet Earth led to the condensation of water necessary to bring about this result; seismic pressures producing mountains and hills doubtless contributed further to this separation between land and sea. Once this dry land (hayyabbāšāh) appeared, it became possible for plant life and trees to spring up on the earth's surface, aided by photosynthesis from the still beclouded sky.
Genesis 1:14-19 reveals that in the fourth creative stage God parted the cloud cover enough for direct sunlight to fall on the earth and for accurate observation of the movements of the sun, moon, and stars to take place. Verse 16 should not be understood as indicating the creation of the heavenly bodies for the first time on the fourth creative day; rather it informs us that the sun, moon, and stars created on Day One as the source of light had been placed in their appointed places by God with a view to their eventually functioning as indicators of time (“signs, seasons, days, years”) to terrestrial observers. The Hebrew verb wayya'aś in v.16 should better be rendered “Now [God] had made the two great luminaries, etc.,” rather than as simple past tense, “[God] made.” (Hebrew has no special form for the pluperfect tense but uses the perfect tense, or the conversive imperfect as here, to express either the English past or the English pluperfect, depending on the context.)
Genesis 1:20-23 relates that on the fifth creative day God fully developed marine life, freshwater life, and introduced flying creatures (whether insects, lizards, or winged birds). It is interesting to observe that the fossil bearing strata of the Paleozoic era contain the first evidence of invertebrate animal life with startling suddenness in the Cambrian period. There is no indication in the pre-Cambrian strata of how the five thousand species of marine and terrestrial animal life of the Paleozoic era may have developed, for there is no record of them whatever prior to the Cambrian levels (cf. D. Dewar, “The Earliest Known Animals,” Journal of the Transactions of the Victoria Institute 80 [1948]: 22-29).
Genesis 1:24-26 records that in the sixth and final stage of the creative process, God brought forth all the land animals after their various species (lemînāh in v.24 and lemînēhû in v.25 mean “according to its kind,” whether the antecedent was male or female in grammatical gender), culminating finally in the creation of man, as discussed more extensively above.
In this connection, a comment is in order concerning the recurring formula at the end of each creative day: “And it was/became evening, and it became/was morning, a second day” or whatever ordinal it might be). The reason for this closing statement seems to have been twofold. First, it was necessary to make clear whether the symbolic unit involved was a mere sunrise-to-sundown day, or whether it was a twenty-four-hour day. The term yôm (“day”) could mean either. in fact, the first time yôm occurs is in v.5: “And He called the light day, and the darkness He called night.” Therefore, it was necessary to show that each of the creative days was symbolized by a complete twenty-four-hour cycle, beginning at sunset of the previous day (according to our reckoning) and ending with the daylight portion, down to the setting of the sun, on the following day (as we would reckon it).
Second, the twenty-four-hour day serves as a better symbol than a mere daylight day in regard to the commencement and completion of one stage of creation before the next stage began. There were definite and distinct stages in God's creational procedure. If this be the true intention of the formula, then it serves as no real evidence for a literal twenty-four-hour-day concept on the part of the biblical author.
Some have argued that the reference in the Decalogue (commandment four) to God's resting on the seventh day as a basis for honoring the seventh day of each week strongly suggests the literal nature of “day” in Genesis 1. This is not at all compelling, however, in view of the fact that there was to be any day of the week especially set aside from labor to center on the worship and service of the Lord, then it would have to be a twenty-four-hour day (Saturday) in any event. As a matter of fact, Scripture does not at all teach that Yahweh rested only one twenty-four-hour day at the conclusion of His creative work. No closing formula occurs at the close of the seventh day, referred to in Genesis 2:2-3. And, in fact, the New Testament teaches (in Heb. 4:1-11) that the seventh day, that “Sabbath rest,” in a very definite sense has continued on right into the church age. If so, it would be quite impossible to line up the seventh-day Sabbath with the Seventh Day that concluded God's original work of creation!
One last observation concerning the word yôm as used in Genesis 2:4. Unlike some of the modern versions, KJV correctly renders this verse “These are the generations of the heavens of the earth when they were created, in the day that the Lord God made the earth and the heavens.” Since the previous chapter has indicated that there were at least six days involved in creating the heavens and the earth, it is abundantly evident that y óm [sic] in Genesis 2:4 cannot possibly be meant as a twenty-four-hour day—unless perchance the Scripture contradicts itself!
Taken from Encyclopedia of Bible Difficulties by Gleason Leonard Archer, Jr. Copyright 1982 by Zondervan Corporation. Used by permission of Zondervan Publishing House.