Assyrian
Basically pulling an Obama (Thanks Calminian!)
They are parts of a day, not a whole day. Together, they do not equal a day. They can also used figuratively such as in Psalm 90, or used as part of a day in a figurative passage, such as the parable of the Labourers in the Vineyard. evening morning and day are literal within the context of the story, but the story itself is figurative.I'm sorry? How exactly do "evening and morning" not describe a day?
It was certainly interpreted that way in the NT, but that wasn't a literal interpretation of Hosea, that is, it wasn't what Hosea was talking about. Hosea was using day figuratively, saying God was going to revive and raise up Israel, he wasn't giving a timetable. Was Israel raised up on the third day? I what way were they raised up on the second day?Isn't this a reference to Christ being resurrected on the third day?
If day with a number means it has to be a literal day, then how can Ezekiel's fast have a figurative meaning of the years of Israel's punishment? Wasn't that the whole point of the fast anyway?...and didn't Ezekiel literally fast for those many days...?
They are literal within the parable but the parable itself isn't literal, Jesus was talking about religious Jews being jealous of the tax collectors and prostitutes being welcomed into the kingdom of God. But morning, evening, day, numbers and hours only have meaning within the structure of the story, not the meaning of the parable.Right...but the words themselves in the parable are to be taken literally. And, it's clearly a parable, while Genesis is not. You still haven't proven your point.
You are of course assuming Genesis isn't a parable or figurative. But that is a different issue from the claim days with numbers mean it has to be literal. I have show you language doesn't work that way, that literal uses of numbers with time can be used in figurative passages.
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