Scripture was not written by scientists for scientists; it was written by men living in ancient times. The Genesis account, penned by Moses around 1450 BC, was written when people were living in the late Bronze Age. Primitive stone and bronze tools were used to work the land, to make weapons, and to build homes. Writing as we known it was recently introduced, but not a widespread skill. The great emphasis of day-to-day life was to find food for survival. Natural science was limited to personal observation. Many in those days were polytheistic; they worshiped natural phenomena such as the sun, the moon, stars, fire, and water. Moses, author of the creation account in Genesis, had been
educated in This is the background against which the Genesis account should be read and understood. People 3,500 years ago had no concept of “knowledge” like we have in our time. That which could not be seen or experienced personally would be beyond their ability to understand. In Genesis, much emphasis is placed upon creation “days” (translated from the Hebrew word yowm). In English-speaking circles these days are commonly interpreted to be 24-hour days. As noted above in chapter 2, these “days” should not be the focal point of discussion. Given the background of Jewish people, including Moses, events far distant in time would make little sense and likely could not be understood. The use of yowms to describe the process of creation seems a logical choice to convey a difficult concept in a language and account that could be grasped by Moses’ contemporaries. A matter of days? Genesis
depicts how God created the earth and all its inhabitants in six
yowms. Ancient Hebrew had a very limited vocabulary (about 6,000
words). Moses used this word yowm, commonly rendered “day,”
though it has several other meanings elsewhere in the Bible: ום, יום
[yowm /yome/]
2,274 occurrences; translated
as “day” (2,008 times), “time” (64), “chronicles + ”
(37), “daily” (32), “ever” (17), “year” (14),
“continually” (10), “when” (10), “as” (10),
“while” (8), “full” (8), “always” (4), “whole”
(4) and translated variously (44).[5] Therefore,
it also denotes “time,” “period of time,” and similar
concepts. Independent whether yowm is a 24-hour day or some other
expression of time, the text of the first chapter of Genesis shows
some remarkable insights: ·
There is one God: The
vast majority of ancient religions are polytheistic, just like the
Egyptian beliefs. Genesis
sets forth the concept of One God. ·
God is outside His creation: The
gods of the ancients were represented by natural phenomena,
usually the sun (the Egyptian god Ra)
or moon (worshiped as Thoth
by the Egyptians). In Genesis, God created the universe: “In
the beginning God created the heavens and the earth” (Genesis
1:1). ·
There was a beginning: Most ancient religions believed the universe had existed forever. Until
the middle of the twentieth century even many scientists still
believed the universe had always existed. Only during our
generation has science – astronomy in particular – proved
conclusively that the universe had a starting point (Big Bang
cosmology). How was Moses aware of this? ·
The beginning was not by chance.
The
beginning did not just happen; it occurred because God caused it (“God
created…”). Big Bang cosmology still has no answer to that
claim (see Exhibit #1: How
Could the Big Bang Happen? in chapter 3). ·
Original conditions were not suited for life: Whatever the precise condition of earth’s primordial atmosphere might
have been, scientists agree it could not have supported life.
Genesis confirms added steps were needed once the earth was
created. ·
Non-life preceded life.
Vegetation preceded animal life: According to Genesis, God created plant life at the
end of the third day. This is consistent with natural science,
which claims[6]
amino acids form proteins or RNA which lead to living organisms.
Vegetation is essential to produce oxygen for our
atmosphere so that animal life could appear. ·
Simple preceded complex:
The fossil record leads to the conclusion of natural science that
simple organisms preceded more complex life forms. Genesis
describes the same order of events. ·
Mankind appears at the end:
According to scientific observations, modern man appeared once
recently in the geological record, later than all other life
forms. Genesis teaches that God created mankind on the last day of
creation. Amazing, even mind-boggling! Those words come to mind when one realizes
how accurately the 3,500 year old Genesis account describes what
human science has only figured out over the last 50 years or so.
More than any generation before us, we have the scientific
knowledge that shows that Moses was correct. But how could Moses
have known – unless by revelation from God – how our world
came to be? Read on about: (3) Exhibit #2: We descend from Adam, Eve, Noah [1] Time Magazine, November 13, 2006, pages 48-55. [2] Richard Dawkins, The God Delusion (2006). [3] Francis S. Collins: The Language of God: A Scientist Presents Evidence for Belief (2006). [5]
Strong, James: The
Exhaustive Concordance of the Bible : Showing Every Word of
the Test of the Common English Version of the Canonical Books,
and Every Occurrence of Each Word in Regular Order (1996),
[6] But cannot explain life, see Exhibit #5: Life Cannot Have Started by Chance in chapter 5.
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