Doesn't Genesis One explicitly
state seven 24-hour days? Actually, no
it does not.
Before people realized planets
spin around an axis or obit a fusion reactor, they knew our earth and sun were
in a relationship. Each day consisted of
light and darkness of unequal but predictable periods. Predictability made days useful, so our
ancestors divided them into hours for their convenience. Men chose 24 units. God did not dictate them.
The solar relationship posed a
problem for early Christians. Since days
could not exist before the sun’s creation on the “4th day,” Augustine of Hippo
(St. Augustine , c. 400 AD) concluded
the word “day” could not mean 24-hours.
He envisioned the Bible’s first chapter as a list of commands carried
out instantly after the seventh day. An
instantaneous creation satisfied his cultures Greek based understanding of the
universe. Yet, he charged future
theologians to not hold tightly to interpretation, even his. Knowledge would change our understanding of
nature. The two must match if the text
was inspired.
His interpretation lasted until
the Reformation’s rejection of longstanding Roman Catholic dogma. Protestantism returned to a 24-hour day
interpretation. However, Protestant groups
disagreed on how creation played out.
Often Genesis 1:1 was an instantaneous creation. Others questioned why there were days if
heaven and earth were created instantly.
God’s glory became the light of Day 1 to some, but viewed as the
creation of angels and their wars (light vs. dark) by others. Adam and Eve were inserted into Day 6 and ate
the fruit while God slept, or not. Did God
create animals instantly, or did He sculpt each from clay? Were they young or full grown? Did the mammals have belly buttons? So many questions. No definitive answers.
Then there is the word “day.” The Hebrew usage of the word is similar to
that of the Greek, Latin, and English, which generally defines “day” as a
24-hour period. However, it does not
always mean 24-hours. It also means the
hours of sunlight, thus less then 24-hours.
The phrases, “The day of harvest,” encompasses more then the last day of
gleaning, and “In Abraham’s day,” entails an entire lifetime. This simply means context determines length
of the word “day” in each of these languages.
Consider the active verbs:
create, hover, separate, made, gather, produce, increase, fill. Each one
paints a picture of work. Work takes time. Every part of Genesis
One implies time. God utilized time, watching or tweaking each particle,
one at a time.
Psalm 90:4 says, “A thousand
years in your sight are like a day that has just gone by, or like a watch
in the night.” (NIV) The writer bluntly states time is our concern, not
God’s. Many early Jewish and Christian
writers believed the psalmist meant the creation “days” lasted a thousand years
each. They used “thousands” as the
concept of a huge number. Things have
changed. We can restate the psalmist’s sentiment in our vernacular: A
billion years in your sight is like an hour that has just gone by, or a
millisecond in the night. Changing units
does not change the meaning. Time does
not encumber God.
The Hebrew words translated “evening”
and “morning” actually mean, “end” and “beginning.” The translation enforces a tradition, not the
gist of the words. As the context of
Genesis One is nature, we need to ask why the writer chose to segment creation
into “days,” separated by an end and a beginning. The answer to that question is poetic structure,
which I will discuss in my next blog.
Amazingly, if not read as a list, this Bronze Age text matches standard
science perfectly.
Several forms of ancient poetry
deliberately hide clues to unlock meaning. Genesis One repeats every
detail except one, that of season. Seasons have ends and beginnings just
like that of days. Seasons can last less
then 24-hours or linger for years. Therefore,
poetically, the word “day” can be interpreted as a cosmic “season.” Whatever time it took things to come into
existence is how long that day/season lasted.
Seasons. God reveals creation to us in bits and pieces.
Religious and scientific knowledge did not arrive overnight, and each have come
and gone to come again. The accumulation and rediscovery process spans
the entire existence of humanity. Every insight awakens new questions
begging for answers. That same process exists in Genesis One, where new
things built upon previous events.
Let us be amazed at the vastness
of time and the joy God expressed in creating our universe.
To be continued:
[Lessons from Creation’s Parables: Genesis and Standard
Science, Sung as One, by Jo Helen Cox.]
Genesis Revisited
#1 – What to Worship
Genesis Revisited
#2 – Beliefs Held
Genesis Revisited
#3 – Who Is the Creator?
Eden Revisited
Also in this series:
Genesis Revisited
#1 – What to Worship
Genesis Revisited
#2 – Beliefs Held
Genesis Revisited
#3 – Who Is the Creator?
Genesis Revisited #5 – A Poetic Creation
Also see series:
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