So Your saying that the third hour was 9:00 PM and the sixth hour was Midnight and the ninth Hour was 3:00 AM. Makes no sense.
You appear to be mixing the NT with the OT.
So Your saying that the third hour was 9:00 PM and the sixth hour was Midnight and the ninth Hour was 3:00 AM. Makes no sense.
You appear to be mixing the NT with the OT.
Lol...
Of course your own second 'option' seems right to YOU....you're a YEC!
That would be like saying that you are going to take a road-trip and either walk, or ride on an animal, like the NT writers would have done.....when you have the option to drive a car, or fly in an airplane, etc....and make things happen at modern speed.
Keep those lame excuses coming...
A lot of things changed from the OT to NT but not the hour of the day.
Acts 2:15
15 For these are not drunken, as ye suppose, seeing it is but the third hour of the day.
oddly enough, I was an oec for most of my life.
I like to read stories from literary magazines.
over time, I became more sensitive to tone than I had been.
I think it was my increasing awareness of the difference between the tone of genesis and what I believed
that led me to yec-ism.
I had to ask myself, "if I'd never read this story before, and someone told me it was from a hindu veda, I would have said, 'Looks like they think one of their gods made the world in a really short time, like a week' ".
Then that would be inconsistent with how the previous six were handled.
You have a lot of denial going on...
I don't think that's a good analogy.
I do drive a car.
but when it comes to reading the scriptures, I think it's good to slow down, be sensitive to other things one might learn while searching.
yes, it is inconsistent. the writer says that the seventh day was different, that God set it apart.
If you lived in a cave, and ignored General Revelation, then I suppose you could have a YEC worldview.
Therein lies your problem.
You don't actually study scripture in the original languages.
Gods ways never change.
Thus...you must have faulty interpretation.
you raise some good points, there.
I think adam naming all the animals is an issue for both those who want to see six literal days and those who want to match the story up with science.
like, did adam really name all the hundreds of thousands of insects?
(though, it occurs to me just as I write this, maybe adam named general catagories, like 'insect', and a few of the large land animals... lions, tigers, bears.)
'at last' is interesting... if adam is formed as basically a teenager, but still just a few hours old, maybe the wait seems long to him.
"finally, I've been waiting, like, forever"
Anyway, It is my personal belief that in the beginning God created the Heavens and the Earth. The Earth is untold millions if not billions year old. Could I be wrong, yes I was not there. The Earth became void and full of darkness. This is not something that God would create. I mean just going by His demeanor and how He is light. Also there is no mention of the other planets as they had already been created in the beginning. There was stuff here on Earth before Adam and it was corrupt and God destroyed as He did in Noah's day. Water covered the surface of the Earth and God said let there be dry ground. This word is a word of permission and not creation. Furthermore the stuff scientist dig up and try to tie it evolution, is the stuff that was here before Adam.
he said it was a yom, a period of time, not a day.
The Earth didn't become void and full of darkness. It just was void and full of darkness. God had created space, time and matter, but He hadn't yet given that matter form. The Gap Theory is bogus, as is the billions of years timeline necessary for it to seem halfway plausible. Finally, evolutionary philosophy goes all the way back to the Hindu Brahmins of India, back in 1200BC. That's a couple hundred years after Moses wrote the Torah (including Genesis). There's no place for evolution in the life of a Christian.
But we already know your views against the Gap idea, and how you will create consternation against it in trying to wrongly associate it with man's theories of evolution.
So when Apostle Paul taught in Rom.8 about God placing His creation into a state of vanity and in bondage, which shows it at one time was NOT in a state a vanity, where does His Word show that happened when Adam and Eve disobeyed God? Show me Scripture.
But we already know your views against the Gap idea, and how you will create consternation against it in trying to wrongly associate it with man's theories of evolution.
So when Apostle Paul taught in Rom.8 about God placing His creation into a state of vanity and in bondage, which shows it at one time was NOT in a state a vanity, where does His Word show that happened when Adam and Eve disobeyed God? Show me Scripture.
Nonsense. The Gap Theory only came about to try to reconcile the millions and billions of years belief that was being pushed by people who believed some version of evolutionism and long ages (based on their assumptions about geology), before it became the mainstream in Darwin's time.
'The gap theory has come in different forms since its conception in the early 1800s. It was a response to the long geological ages that were coming to the forefront, from a naturalistic worldview of the earth’s geological history, in the late 1700s.'
A helpful article for you to check out:
Genesis 13 undermines gap theory - creation.com