Deamiter
I just follow Christ.
Ah I see where you're going. You mean to conclude that the Genesis 1-2 account must be factual because we agree that a phrase in Gen. 1 does not suggest a timeframe?the rationale is that God has already presented believers with a model of origin. there is no date though a starting point is obvious.
so the meaning is, that believers should not be doing as the secular world does, trying to pinpoint exactly when creation took place or create origin models, but to preach the truth which states that God created in the time frame mentioned in the account (6 days) and that when is not the issue,{ its investigation is a waste of time as God has hidden that from mankind}, but that God did it as He said with no adaption of secular theories added.
Unfortunately you're missing a couple key points. First of all, the Bible starts with "In the beginning God created the heavens and the Earth." There is no suggestion that the rest of Genesis 1 follows immediately after -- in fact, rather than saying "then the Earth..." the Bible says "Now the Earth..." As an allegorical refrain pointing out each of the surrounding cultures' gods and showing how each was created by the one true God (as suggested by the framework hypothesis) this makes a whole lot of sense. I won't say it's evidence against a historical narrative, but it's hardly evidence FOR a historical narrative here!
Second, if "in the beginning" was never meant as a detailed record of a particular temporal point, it in no way suggests that the rest of Genesis 1-2 are or were intended as factual. As an example, check out Mat. 19:4 where Jesus says "in the Beginning, the Creator made them male and female." Clearly Jesus' use of the phrase is referring to God's creation, but just as with my interpretation of Genesis 1:1, it neither suggests a specific point in time nor a single event (as male and female were neither created at the Genesis 1:1 "beginning" nor were they created at the same time as each other).
I think God would be quite sad if he found us hung up on insisting that creation happened in six days when he inspired the creation account as a mythological construct designed to show how God created all the things that were attributed to other gods and how we should rest one day out of seven (and year and 50th year). By insisting that the account was factual, you're taking away from the actual inspired message of Genesis 1-2 and inserting your flawed modernist interpretation.
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