T
Theofilus
Guest
logical bob said:We know that modern animals and plant evolved from earlier species in a continuous process. The first ones did not appear fully formed.
Actually, we "know" no such thing. The original poster asked that we not debate evolution vs. creation, so I won't go into it now. Maybe I'll request permission from the moderators to post in the science section and discuss it there later. My appologies to the original poster for my part in derailing this thread.
totopic
If you want to use the information given in the Bible to figure out the age of the earth, there is nothing wrong with that, but there are a few things you should keep in mind.
Any attempt at dating creation will be based to a large extent on genealogies. Although the Jews kept very good genealogical records, they didn't follow the same rules as we do today. Levirate mariages, for example, make it possible for someone to be born many years after his legally recognized father dies. Also, they used the term "son" rather more loosely than we do. Jesus was called the "son of David" and the Pharisees called themselves "children of Abraham". Genealogies in the Bible will, therefore, never give exact dates. They can, however, give a good estimate of the time in question.
There are some gaps of unknown duration. We do not have a list of people's ages from Jacob to Moses, for example. Abraham was told that his decendants would be "strangers in a country not their own" for four hundred years (Gen. 15:13), but we are told that the "sojourning of the children of Israel" was 430 years (Ex. 12:40). Which do we use, 400 or 430? And when do we start counting the years, when Joseph came to Egypt, or when his father and brothers came many years later?
After the Israelites leave Egypt, we don't have much to go on until we get to king Solomon. I Kings tells us that he started building the Temple "in the fourth year" of his reign, and that this was "In the four hundred and eightieth year" after the exodus. The phrase "in the ... year" can mean any time during that year. Also, as I understand it, the method of determining what was the first year of a kings reign varied. Sometimes, the first year of a kings reign was the entire calendar year (according to the calendar of the time) during which the king came to power. In other cases it was the first calendar year that started after his reign started. In still other cases the first year was the 1-year period starting from the time he became king.
All of these things and others mean that we can't know exactly the date of the creation. Many people, both Jews and Christians, have tried calculating such a date, and they all agree that, according to the information in the Bible, the earth was created about 6000 years ago. The most precise (not necessarily accurate) date I've ever heard was one calculated by a 17th century bishop named James Usher. He figured that the first day of creation began at nightfall preceding Sunday, October 23, 4004 BC.