Hey TK,
TK wrote:derek--
how about the events that take place in Genesis 2? doesnt it seem unreasonable to suggest that the events noted in Gen 2 took place in the last few hours of creation day 6? it sure seems that some time (at least more than a few hours, or even 24 hrs) passes between adam's creation and the ultimate creation of Eve-- doesn't it?
No. It doesn't seem unreasonable at all. Why do you limit the activity in Gen. 2 to the "
last few hours of Creation day 6"?
Gen 1:24 And God said, Let the earth bring forth the living creature after his kind, cattle, and creeping thing, and beast of the earth after his kind: and it was so.
Gen 1:25 And God made the beast of the earth after his kind, and cattle after their kind, and every thing that creepeth upon the earth after his kind: and God saw that it was good.
Gen 1:26 And God said, Let us make man in our image, after our likeness: and let them have dominion over the fish of the sea, and over the fowl of the air, and over the cattle, and over all the earth, and over every creeping thing that creepeth upon the earth.
All of this could have been done in a moment. At that had to happen was "And God said" (even
that didn't really have to happen).
...he (Adam) had to be created;
This could have taken less than one second couldn't it? I don't see why not. 23 hours and 59 minutes left.
...he (Adam) had to be involved in tending the garden
Why is this? The text doesn't say this. It says:
Gen 2:15 And the LORD God took the man, and put him into the garden of Eden to dress it and to keep it.
The text only says that it was God's purpose, in placing Adam in the garden, to dress it and to keep it. There is no mention of him beginning this duty on day 6.
...he (Adam) had to realize he was lonely and needed a helper, God had to agree
The text does not say that Adam became lonely. It says:
Gen 2:18 And
the LORD God said, It is not good that the man should be alone; I will make him an help meet for him.
There is no mention of Adam becoming lonely and God responding to his loneliness. Even if it did, I don't see how loneliness, (or the process of coming to the realization of loneliness), would be a time consuming activity. I could go to work all day long and be lonely at the same time. God doesn't "agree" here with anything Adam said or felt, because there is no mention of Adam being lonely, let alone having a conversation with God about the matter.
...he (Adam) had to undergo rib removal surgery, and eve had to be created...
How long do you suppose this took? Surely we aren't going to compare such an event to a modern day surgery. I also think that right along with the miracle of making another human out of
Adam's rib, God could heal him right up so he could get on with business.
...he (Adam) had to name the animals...
Ok, here's the only
potential problem as I see it. But rather than rehash what has already been debated, I will just quote Steve G., since he sumarizes, (much more articulatly than I could hope to) what is pretty much my position.
<b>Steve Gregg:</b> Taken from the Sat Dec 24, 2005 3:53 am post
HERE
"On the matter of Adam naming the animals, however, I do have some thoughts. First, if Adam's task was a broad one, like the biblical example of calling all flying creatures (including bats!) by the term "bird" (e.g., Lev.11:13-19), this would save a great deal of time. Everything in the sea with fins might similarly be included under a single term, like "fish," which might include marine mammals as well (this way, the creature that swallowed Jonah might be rightly called, either "a great fish" or a "whale."
There is no reason to believe that Adam gave specific names to all the various species individually. "Kinds" in scripture may be categories nowhere near as narrow as what we call "species."
If we take Genesis 2:19-20 to mean that God brought "every beast of the field and every bird of the air" to Adam to be named, there is no reason to assume that this naming was much more detailed than the broad labels which we find in v.20: "cattle," "birds of the air," "beasts of the field,"...that covers millions of species with only three labels! If I were to say "vertebrates, invertebrates and microbes" I have with those three words mentioned every creature known to man.
There is no perceptible importance in the specific names that Adam gave the animals, whether general or specific, for the simple reason that no one today can say even what language Adam spoke, and animals have different names in different languages. We can be reasonably certain that the English word "giraffe," or the Dutch word "wildebeest," never passed Adam's lips.
So what is the significance of Adam naming the animals? It is, I think, just the same as the significance of God giving new names to people like Abraham, Jacob or Simon Peter. It is a demonstration of authority. As parents have the authority to name their children, so has God the authority over man, and man has that authority over the animals. It is this fact, and not the specific names that Adam gave to any particular animals, that I think is important here. "
<b>TK:</b>
i guess the point is that if day 6 took longer than 24 hrs, then why not the other "days" as well?
I don't think that these points have shown that day 6 took any longer than the other days.
God bless,