Just curious as to what basis you have for wanting Barbarian to believe that "day" must mean a literal 24-hr day, but yet dismiss "his" meaning of "morning and evening" as requiring a Sun.
Greetings Free,
I understand that Barbarian may keep his belief but think that you are putting the shoe on the wrong foot when you say that I dismiss his meaning. It is he that states that the day can not in any circumstance mean 24 hours. I have asserted, with evidence, that a 24 hour day is exactly what Moses meant.
As far as time being related to the existence of our sun? Even considering Einstein's thoughts there is no connection between a single star and the existence of time. I do see that there is a connection between the speed of matter and time but have never heard of Barbarians theory advanced, that the
Sun itself must exist for time to remain constant. Have you?
yom is, in fact, used to indicate widely varying periods of time in other places in the OT.
You are, I assume, as familiar with the arguments surrounding the Hebrew word, YOM and it's various uses. Although it may be used to mean a period of greater than 24 hours, as in, "In the day of King Uzziah," which would sound more comfortable in English as, "In the days of King Uzziah..." it is never used in that sense when combined with cardinal and ordinal numbers indicating very specific time periods and certainly may not be used in that manner when speaking about the 7th day being the Sabbath day. In point of fact, the starting times and the ending times were set up according to the appearance of the dawning and setting of the sun. Although Time itself existed before God created the sun, as you know, the sun and the stars and other heavenly bodies were made for signs and seasons, for days and years. They were created after the fact to show (illuminate) the ORDER that exists in God and in all of His creation. That being the case, it can not mean millions of years.
If you wish to defend Barbarians conclusion as a loophole, I would ask you to explain how one day could have a variable amount of time when compared to another. Find one instance where cardinal and ordinal numbers indicating sequence includes your meaning and my whole thought will come to nothing. Baring that, admit that it is at least possible that a day
can mean 24 hours. Some have spoken about the first few seconds of the Big-Bang, a theory that I do not hold to, but the idea is that the first day could have been only milliseconds long. Subsequent 'days' are considered of variable length in order to make the apparent contradiction between what God has stated and what men believe palatable. My opponents wish to state emphatically that a day can not mean 24 hours. There are numerous Scriptures that may be brought to prove this, that a day can mean a period of 24 hours. Look at what Moses spoke of in Exodus, chapter 20 to start.
Also notice that Barbarian has spoken to suggest that I include 'additions' to Scripture while supporting my premise, that a "day" may mean 24 hours. That is simply untrue. It was not me who stated that Moses held what the Lord said to be 'myth' or mytho-poetic, nor did I compare the Holy Scripture to the beliefs of heathens citing Mount Olympus. Free, let me ask you directly: Do you believe that Adam and Eve existed or are they a figment of the imagination like Zeus? Barbarian has classified Genesis along with other 'mythopoetic' narratives and has stated, "I'm very skeptical that educated Greeks really thought that there was a city of Gods at the top of Mt. Olympus." He has wisely refrained from further expression of these radical ideas, but I would like to ask you now if the idea of a literal Garden of Eden and a literal week of creation holds more merit than the concept of Mount Olympus and Greek gods to you.
Free, I notice that you've also addressed Free Christian regarding the sun in Revelation. But it was me who pointed out the problem with Barbarian's thought that time itself is dependant on the existence of the sun by way of asking him a question that he chose to not answer. The question: If the sun is necessary for time to continue or to flow fluently, what about the time to come? Does God depend on creation or is it the other way around?