Realitybites said:
Oldbear83 said:
It appears I may be the only person here who sees this as a narrative by Moses, how he started the Pentateuch.
The Bible starts with "In the Beginning, God"
That's on purpose. Moses was a humble man called by God to lead a people to a promised nation, yet most of those people had no real knowledge of Who God was, even who they were as a people.
So there they were, out in the wilderness trying to understand what this was all about, and Moses told them about God, about the Covenant, about the Law and about the Plan.
This was not about Math, Physics, or Government. This was Moses introducing Hebrews who had known only life in Egypt - and therefore their culture was based on Egypt for most of the people - to the One God, and His special plan for the Hebrew people.
How long it took God to create the world misses the point.
Many people have taken this sort of a position...either approaching the entire thing as an allegory (as you seem to do), or applying a day-age hypothesis as BTD does, or even inserting an evolutionary gap as Cyrus Scofield did in his study bible's notes on the Book of Genesis. The issue that all these approaches run headlong into is that it is only a literal reading of the text that demand a literal savior and as I've mentioned before, that the Christian story is one of a devolutionary (sin -> death) not evolutionary (death -> life) world.
The other issue is that at what point do you start treating the Genesis account as factual history? Chapter 4? Chapter 5 says that Adam lived 930 years and proceeds to go on to chronicle shortening human life spans. Do we throw that out too? What about Genesis 7 that details the flood? Or is everything before Chapter 10 that lists the generations of Noah invalid? But wait...now we are at Chapter 11, the Tower of Babel and the confusion of languages. Keep that or toss it?
Pretty soon you've tossed the inspiration of half the book of Genesis or more.
Dude, do you even read before firing off a retort?
I did
not say 'Genesis' is allegory, I said
you are missing the point when you obsess on esoteric details.
Think about it - you have a nation out in nowhere, with no real idea what is coming next. Do you really think the Hebrews gathered around Moses and asked how long it took for the Earth to form? Do you think their top concern was gravitational effects on durative dilation?
Genesis was about beginnings on many levels - the world, the Hebrew people, the nation of Isreal yet to be, the law and the Covenant. Moses found a way to explain things in a manner which satisfies any reasonable question. That's not about 'allegory' or some literary device, it's about Moses
introducing the Hebrew people to their place and purpose, and creating the opportunity for them to know God in their lives in a way unique in the world.
Now it seems you are playing at legal loopholes. I have written before how Jesus strongly rebuked such stunts. You may recall the story (
was Jesus making an allegory?) where a Pharisee was 'thanking' God for his blessings, and bragging about how well he kept the law, while sneering at the tax collector across the way. The tax collector, for his part,
was guilty of sin because he did not dare to raise his eyes from the floor, but begged God for mercy. You may recall that it was the tax collector, not the erudite and educated Pharisee, who was reconciled with God, per Christ.
Same. Thing. Here.
I personally consider
Genesis to be true in its claims, especially its history. But my
faith does not hinge on humans confirming Scripture, because God does not need the approval of men.
Busy TarpDuster also brought a very solid point of reason about how you count days, when night and day were not separated until the Fourth "Day" in the Genesis account. You ducked that point, you know, which is a problem if you want to obsess on crossing all the i's and dotting the t's, as a friend of mine used to say.
But in the end, I and many millions of believers manage not to lose
any of the inspiration, the beauty, the wonder, of the Genesis accounts, just because you can't accept that your details are just that, peripheral.
That which does not kill me, will try again and get nastier