Where are you getting this information? Is/was this taught by the ancients(Hebrews)? Where is the documentation for this? The Torah?
I second the motion! Where is the documentation for your statement, Yokefellow?
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
Join For His Glory for a discussion on how
https://christianforums.net/threads/a-vessel-of-honor.110278/
https://christianforums.net/threads/psalm-70-1-save-me-o-god-lord-help-me-now.108509/
Strengthening families through biblical principles.
Focus on the Family addresses the use of biblical principles in parenting and marriage to strengthen the family.
Read daily articles from Focus on the Family in the Marriage and Parenting Resources forum.
Where are you getting this information? Is/was this taught by the ancients(Hebrews)? Where is the documentation for this? The Torah?
The text itself tells you. It's logically absurd to have mornings and evenings without a sun. As even ancient Christians like St. Augustine pointed out. This is why most Christians recognize that the creation story is not a literal history.Can you show me anywhere in God's Word that it says that mornings and evenings in the creation story are not literal ones?
No. The very next verse says their 'eyes were opened'.Here is just one issue. You wrote, "Boom. Now they are toast. Dead on the ground." The very next verse says, "Then the man and his wife heard the sound of the Lord God moving about in the orchard at the breezy time of the day, and they hid from the Lord God among the trees of the orchard." Dead people don't hear sounds or hide from others.
I get it from the Bible, although there is bit of a 'Life Hack' that I use to help me interpret.Where are you getting this information? Is/was this taught by the ancients(Hebrews)? Where is the documentation for this? The Torah?
Oh dear so modern weather forecasters who talk of sun rise and sun set are believers in a flat earth.The Bible account speaks of mornings and evenings before there was a Sun to have them. So, as even ancient Christians knew, this tells us that the days of the creation story are not literal days.
The text itself tells you. It's logically absurd to have mornings and evenings without a sun. As even ancient Christians like St. Augustine pointed out. This is why most Christians recognize that the creation story is not a literal history.
Yes. That's how it tells us that it's not a literal history. It's logically absurd to suppose actual mornings and evenings without a sun to have them.The Bible clearly and unmistakably says that "God called the light “day” and the darkness “night.” There was evening, and there was morning, marking the first day."
[/QUOTE]Oh dear so modern weather forecasters who talk of sun rise and sun set are believers in a flat earth.
[/QUOTE]Has it never occurred to you that day and night do not depend on there being a sun?
Can God keep track of time without owning any form of clock?
Yes. That's how it tells us that it's not a literal history. It's logically absurd to suppose actual mornings and evenings without a sun to have them.
Actually it does.You define "morning" and "evening" in terms of sun; the Bible doesn't.
That is not logically absurd. God (Who Jesus is) certainly is not bound by death. But it is logically absurd to assert mornings and evenings with no sun to have them.Logically absurd" has nothing to do with it; there are many things that God does that defy logic. Raising His Son from the dead, for example.
That is not logically absurd. God (Who Jesus is) certainly is not bound by death. But it is logically absurd to assert mornings and evenings with no sun to have them.
Because "morning" is when the sun rises and "evening" is when the sun sets, that makes it logically absurd to claim literal mornings and evenings with no sun to have them.Just because you think it's "logically absurd" doesn't make it untrue.
Because "morning" is when the sun rises and "evening" is when the sun sets, that makes it logically absurd to claim literal mornings and evenings with no sun to have them.
As you see, it's even more strongly dependent in Hebrew than it is in English.
No point in arguing otherwise.
[/QUOTE]They are terms used to denote a day, so yes they indicate as you admire that the genesis account is of a six literal days.
It is his inability to calculate the passage of time without aids like a sun, moon or stars.