Pizzaguy
Member
- Jan 19, 2011
- 2,907
- 6
I think that the crisis in thought over the age of the earth goes to one argument and one only: those who believe in a 10,000 year (or younger) earth and creation do so out of well-meaning faith.
They see early Genesis as God's literal explanation of how He started things, how He created things. These people believe that you can read the bible word-for-word and gleen from it a literal meaning, almost without interpretation at all. You simply read the words and take them literally. (There are those who go so far as to say that, IF you can't get away from porn, that is, "your eye offend you", you should blind yourself to save your own soul. YES, these people believe that Jesus WAS advocating causing physical harm to yourself to save your soul).
I find this viewpoint admirable from a spiritual sense. These people put such faith in God, they will be a "fool" for God before they believe any source outside the Bible.
But I can't quite join them. There are stretches you must make to reconcile this "biblical" view with observation. These problems are numerous, they start with the problem of the speed of light (how could I see stars 500,000 light years away if all of this has only been here 10,000 years?) and move on to other areas.
Personally, I dont think that God "fabricated" or compromised anything to make the universe look old, if it isn't. My opinion is that the earth and universe ARE probably a few billion years old to as much as hundreds of billions of years old.
I don't see early Genesis as a technical description of creation - I see it as stating "GOD DID IT", but not at all HOW he did it. As I have previously posted, less than one tenth of 1 percent of the bible describes His acts of creation. It seems to me that this fact alone tells us that he didn't see much importance in providing us a description of His creative work.
He just wanted us to know that HE did it.
How old is the earth? I don't know - but it appears to be VERY old, at least in human terms.
They see early Genesis as God's literal explanation of how He started things, how He created things. These people believe that you can read the bible word-for-word and gleen from it a literal meaning, almost without interpretation at all. You simply read the words and take them literally. (There are those who go so far as to say that, IF you can't get away from porn, that is, "your eye offend you", you should blind yourself to save your own soul. YES, these people believe that Jesus WAS advocating causing physical harm to yourself to save your soul).
I find this viewpoint admirable from a spiritual sense. These people put such faith in God, they will be a "fool" for God before they believe any source outside the Bible.
But I can't quite join them. There are stretches you must make to reconcile this "biblical" view with observation. These problems are numerous, they start with the problem of the speed of light (how could I see stars 500,000 light years away if all of this has only been here 10,000 years?) and move on to other areas.
Personally, I dont think that God "fabricated" or compromised anything to make the universe look old, if it isn't. My opinion is that the earth and universe ARE probably a few billion years old to as much as hundreds of billions of years old.
I don't see early Genesis as a technical description of creation - I see it as stating "GOD DID IT", but not at all HOW he did it. As I have previously posted, less than one tenth of 1 percent of the bible describes His acts of creation. It seems to me that this fact alone tells us that he didn't see much importance in providing us a description of His creative work.
He just wanted us to know that HE did it.
How old is the earth? I don't know - but it appears to be VERY old, at least in human terms.