Bart, are you even reading me? How could you think this is what I am saying. Look at my own words in this very thread:You're attempting to correlate solar days with a "literal" interpretation on a one to one basis. That goes contrary to what I believe you've stated before that it is possible to arrive at a non-solar day interpretation employing a literal hermeneutic as well.
If you want to have a conversation about this, I expect you to give me the same respect I give you and take my words at full value. I've said three times in this very thread that you can take yom to refer literally to an age. How you can think that I'm saying that a literal reading of yom must mean solar-day is absolutely beyond me. That's more of the same . . . attributing an idiotic position to someone that they don't hold, and, in fact, that they have expressly and overtly rejected. It is, at the very least, a straw man. I've said nothing contrary to the idea that the yomim of Gen 1 could be taken literally as eras or ages. What I HAVE said is that the CFs who employed a literal hermeneutic DID NOT come to that conclusion; not that they COULD NOT. I said that the CFs who DID NOT come to a solar view used an allegorical hermeneutic, not a literal one, which claim to use. If, then, you are using a literal hermeneutic to come to a day-age view, WHICH IS ALLOWABLE IN MY VIEW, you cannot claim the CFs as precedence, because they did not come to that conclusion using that method.I wrote:Modern theologians use literal interpretation on Gen 1 -> Non-Solar days.
The day-age view attempts to take the Bible literally and come to a non-solar day view, which is fine, but if you are to be intellectually honest you must admit that no one before you has ever come to a day-age view while taking the Bible literally.
Concerning the first, we must all agree that the day-age view does attempt to take the text literally insofar as it is looking at one of the many perfectly normal referents for the word yom: namely, an age or era. As such, the day-age view, as classically stated and defended on this site, holds to a literal hermeneutic and rejects an allegorical approach to Gen 1.
You are not understanding me correctly. I'm saying the same thing I have always said. You will find three things in the CFs as it relates to hermeneutics and the interpretation of the yomim:If I understand you correctly, you're now changing that up or modifying it by asserting that you will not find an ECF employing the terms and support for such a position in the same manner that it is now employed. By inference you are then claiming that today's YEC position finds more support among ECFs because those ECFs who presume literal days were present then, and further those ECFs (a majority by many counts, but at least certainly significant and including some key ones) who did not hold to literal days then did not emply a literal hermeneutic.
1. Some used a literal hermeneutic and always came to a solar day view;
2. Most used an allegorical hermeneutic and came to a non-solar day view;
3. None, using any hermeneutic, came to a day-age view.
All of this is absolutely at odds with what day-age advocates claim when they say that their position has precedent in the CFs. Where you do have precedent is that:
1. Some CFs employed a literal hermeneutic, just as you do;
2. Some CFs came to a non-solar-day view, just as you do.
You cannot, though, say that some CFs employed a literal hermeneutic and came to a non-solar day view, as I can and do. You further cannot say that any of the CFs proposed the yomim to be ages. Your position is completely unprecedented before the 17th century. That doesn't make it wrong. It does mean you have no historical support. I have never said anything any different from that. That is the position I have always maintained.
You have to put that in a syllogism to show me the circularity, because I see none. Can you show me a CF who used a literal hermeneutic and held the day-age view of Gen 1? For that matter, can you show me ANY CF who held to the day-age view of Gen 1? Can you show me ANY CF who held to a non-solar day who also employed a literal hermeneutic?What I believe you're missing is again something we've discussed in the past, and that is that a literal hermeneutic or historical-grammatical approach if that term is more accurate in your mind, doesn't preclude a symbolic or a metaphoric application if that was the original intent of the passage and it is tied into the understanding that the original audience would have read the passage in question. This can certainly apply to broad types or forms of biblical passages but in the end this must be determined by the immediate context and elements of the passage in question, not just an arbitrary formulaic hermeneutic applied from the outside.
You taking those ECFs who line up with your position and accepting by inference that they musts base that position on the same methods you employ to reach it, while then asking for explicit evidence of those ECFs who don't or writing them off as employing a non-literal hermeneutic. Instead of simply allowing them to speak for themselves and accepting that they could see it one way or the other without necessarily framing their approach to the question using different means than you assume, you set it up as an either-or proposition with different standards of proof applied to each position to arrive at the conclusion you've adopted in the first place.
That seems circlular to me.
I realize that the majority of the CFs held to an allegorical hermeneutic. That's why I disagree with a large portion of their theology.
So, again, if you are going to charge me with circular reasoning, demonstrate it rather than merely assert it. If I am being circular, it should be very easy. Put my argument in a syllogism that begs the question. As it stands now, my argument, in syllogism, is as follows:
1. The day-age view takes the yomim of Gen 1 to literally refer to ages;
2. None of the CFs took the yomim to literally refer to ages
3. Therefore, none of the CFs held to the day-age view.
Against this, YECs can say:
1. The solar-day view takes the yomim of Gen 1 to literally refer to solar days;
2. Several CFs took the yomim of Gen 1 to literally refer to solar days;
3. Therefore, several of the CFs held the solar-day view.
Thus, YECs can claim precedence from the CFs for their views. Day-age advocates cannot.
Are you suggesting that the CFs who expressly stated that they believed they days of Gen 1 to be solar days were NOT using a literal hermeneutic? May I ask what kind of hermeneutic Irenaeus was employing when he said this?I would place the same challenge to you that I believe you have to OECs. Can you provide passages from the ECFs that demonstrate the thought process and heremeneutic that you are claiming was prevelant by the same progression of evidence and thought you used above or are you simply taking evidence where an ECF appears to accept a solar day as proof that they arrived at that conclusion using the same approach that you've used?
- For in as many days as this world was made, in so many thousand years shall it be concluded. And for this reason the Scripture says: "Thus the heaven and the earth were finished, and all their adornment. And God brought to a conclusion upon the sixth day the works that He had made; and God rested upon the seventh day from all His works."(6) This is an account of the things formerly created, as also it is a prophecy of what is to come. For the day of the Lord is as a thousand years;(7) and in six days created things were completed: it is evident, therefore, that they will come to an end at the sixth thousand year.
Now, I've provided many quotes from CFs explaining their belief in solar-days. So you tell me, if they were not employing a literal hermeneutic, what were they employing? If "solar day" isn't a literal interpretation of "yom," what is?
Bart . . . when someone uses a word according to its normal usage, that is called taking a literal hermeneutic. You don't have to project that on anything. If you actually think that they took the word yom to refer to a solar day, but that somehow they were not taking the Bible literally, then the burden of proof is on you to show how that could possibly be.You don't see an inconsistency in that claim or a double standard set-up by your projecting the very structure of your hermeneutic back upon them and then claiming it draws it out?
I'm sorry, but the underlined part is just absurd. When the CFs were using literal solar days as a basis for their eschatology, and then you say they didn't take the text literally, I don't know what there is left to say. How you can possibly suggest that in taking the text literally they weren't taking the text literally boggles my mind.No, to my knowledge there is not an ECF who employs the same progression of to arrive at a non-solar day. To my knowledge there is not an ECF who does the same to reach the conclusion of a solar day. It simply makes sense to me that if the original words and context of the passage could be taken to mean either that there people of any era or christian community (or Jewish for that matter) who took it either way and in the ECF cases I don't see the length of the day garnering any great attention in any of the writings than it being an assumption which they don't see the need to discuss at great length and which they then went on to incorporate usually in some other context anyway.
Attempting to then go back to this situation and ruling out the significance of the position you're inclined to reject as somehow not valid or present because your demand of a clear laying ot of the underlying reasoning is not met, while then turning around and pointing to those ECFs who espouse your view as having been met by inference is applying a double standard and inconsistent.
I'm making a VERY simple claim, Bart:
Those CFs who took yom to have a normal referent ALWAYS took a solar day view/
Those CFs who took yom to have an abnormal referent usually came to an instantaneous creation view, and never a day-age view.
Both of those statements are testable. You show me one CF who took yom to have a normal referent and concluded with a non-solar day view, then my argument is refuted. You shoe me one CF who took yom to have an abnormal referent and concluded with a day-age view, then my argument is refuted. Until then, the day-age view has NO precedence in the CFs.
Does that make it wrong? Of course not. It just makes it unprecedented, and it means you should stop appealing to people like Augustine in support of your view when he expressly repudiated it:
- Creation, therefore, did not take place slowly in order that a slow development might be implanted in those things that are slow by nature; nor were the ages established at the plodding place at which they now pass" (The Literal Meaning of Genesis, vol. 1; John Hammond taylor, trans. Newman Press, 1962), 141; 4:33).