Days or eras?
Everybody seems to be grasping for straws to prove that their preacher is right... A lot hangs on that: a preacher trying to squeeze God into the limitations of thirteenth-century human understanding is dependent on a whole lot of people who are willing to shut off their intelligence for the comfort of believing that they belong to the in-group that's in the right. This is why we need dogma, not for any purposes of communion with God.
Who says that unless something pops up out of nothing like a magician's trick, it can't have been made by God? Aren't we all made of the dust of the earth--carbon, water, minerals, etc.--like every living thing since the beginning of life? What's so hard about accepting the truth of Genesis, that God made everything all the way from where there was nothing, and also accepting the evidence he's left us of the geological and paleontological processes he used?
If you really believe in the six calendar days of creation, six 24 hour revolutions of the planet, take another look at Genesis. Gen. 2:4 talks about the day when the Lord made the heavens and the earth. One and the same day? Gen. 1:6-8 says the heavens were made on the second day and Gen. 1:9-11 says the earth was made on the third day. Two separate days. Or look at Gen. 1:26-31: Man and woman were made on the sixth day, within the same 24 hours. But Gen. 2 describes how all the animals were made and named before Eve was made from Adam's rib. Adam sighed, "At last!" Not a lot of patience there, if it was just the afternoon of the sixth day? But according to Gen. 1:24-25, land animals and birds were made before man and woman. Confusing. Then Gen. 5:1 talks again about the day Adam and Eve were created.
Why point all this out? Because it shows that if you insist on believing that a "day" in the creation account is 24 hours, you just can't make sense of it. Things are made worse by the fact that Gen. 1 came from one tradition and Gen. 2 from another. Still, the reputation and revenue of a lot of preachers depend on enough of us swallowing the notion of 24 hour creation days. Anyway, where's the logic in insisting on six calendar days of creation but accepting that the earth is round and doesn't form the center of the universe? If you're going to be stuck in the 13th century, be serious about it!
Think a little about the words used in the Bible, and in common usage. Very often "day" means an era or a period of time. Who are we to tell God how he's allowed to work, just because our forebears, who provided the ammunition for all the fundamentalists in the preaching market, didn't know anything about archeology and paleontology? Did Bronze Age Hebrews know anything about those sciences? No. Still, Genesis, as it was recorded then, had to be understandable to them. Look at Genesis and look at the evidence in the earth: It all agrees if you just allow God to use the word Day for an era when something happened. In fact, the Elohim sect providing Gen. 1 had it more right than the Yahwists providing Gen. 2, when their merger took place sometime between the 9th and the 4th centuries BC.
The important thing about Genesis 1 is, that as Bronze Age creation myths go, it's in its own class altogether. It credits the One God of Israel with all of creation, all the way from nothing. All the other creation myths, on the other hand, talk about actions of beings somehow pre-existing when it all began; they can be discounted as serving no other purpose than generating revenue for those who still can get some mileage out of them.
A good way to begin from nothing is with a Big Bang that generates all the energy to provide both matter and energy for a whole universe. Does anybody really think evolutionists can disprove the existence of a Creator by saying that it all happened slowly? If for some reason there were a universe without a Creator, it would be dead and cold already. Worlds and life can only be the result of the loving work of a Creator.
I guess it's fun to argue about carbon dating and all that, but try a leap of faith: God is actually great enough to use long, slow processes for his creation work. Not even Charles Darwin denied the existence of a Creator; the notion that evolution is somehow against belief in God is of a much later date. Hanging on to ideas that have withstood the assault of 600 years of scientific progress may be comforting, since they free you from the need to think, but there's merit to using your God-given intellect, too.
Best,
Greg