Page 22 - Creationism - Student Textbook w videos short
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How long did it take God to Create the Universe?

                                    As we read the account of creation, you notice that God numbered the days of
                                    creation.  He spoke it into existence and He did it in six days.  People ask, "Well
                                    what about the word day, can't it mean an eon of time?"  It's the plain old
                                    Hebrew word yom; it means day. It's used in the Bible to indicate a 24-hour
                                    normal solar day or sometimes to refer to the daylight portion of a day. You
                                    might say, "I'll be gone four days," and you mean four days, both day and night.
               Or you might say to someone, "This has been a beautiful day," and you're referring to the daylight
               portion of it. You use the word the same way the Hebrews used it.

               When yom is modified by a number, universally, and without exception, in Scripture it refers to a
               normal solar day. Now sometimes "day" is used in Scripture to refer to some period of time not
               precisely defined.  Job said, "My days are vanity." Psalm 90 verse 9 says, "Our days are passed away."
               And that's not defined, but we understand what that means, a period of time. But even at that, day
               still means some finite succession of normal days, not some vast age of millennial years, or millions of
               years.

               If God is that powerful, why take six days.  Why not do it all at one moment? The answer is He took six
               days because He wanted to establish a pattern. In Exodus chapter 20 He gives us the pattern.

               "Remember the Sabbath day to keep it holy, six days you shall labor, do all your work. But the seventh
               day is the Sabbath of the Lord your God. In it you shall not do any work, you or your son, or your
               daughter, your male or your female servant, or your cattle, or your sojourner who stays with you. For in
               six days the Lord made the heavens and the earth, the sea and all that is in them, and rested on the
               seventh day. Therefore the Lord blessed the Sabbath day and made it holy."

               God wanted to establish a pattern for mankind. And that pattern was, you work six days and you have
               one day when you set it aside to rest and replenish your body and focus on worshiping God.
               God chose to do it in six days to set a pattern for us.

               Now if in fact it took Him billions of years, then the pattern is ridiculous. God's work of creation set the
               pattern for man who bears His image...six days you work and one day you worship.

               There's absolutely nothing whatsoever on the pages of Genesis 1 and 2 that allows anything but a six,
               24-hour, solar-day creation. It may offend the evolutionists but that doesn't change the truth.

               The Day-Age Theory

                                         Many sincere bible scholars feel a need to accept and fit the geological age
                                         system to the creation account that they have created the Day-Age Theory
                                         as the best interpretation of Genesis 1.  By doing so they are trying to
                                         equate the days of creation with the ages of evolutionary geology.

                                         Much like the Gap Theory, the Day-Age Theory encounters many problems
                                         which render it invalid.


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