What you omit is that all of this happened on the 3rd "evening and morning" - the "third day".
Third evening and morning -- Third day
11
Then God said,
Let the earth bring forth grass, the herb that yields seed,
and the fruit tree that yields fruit according to its kind, whose seed
is in itself, on the earth; and it was so. 12
And the earth brought forth grass, the herb that yields seed according to its kind, and the tree
that yields fruit, whose seed
is in itself according to its kind. And God saw that
it was good. 13
So the evening and the morning were the third day.
The text says that the plants themselves were brought forth. The text does not say that the earth merely "brought forth seeds" -- ( a trick that the evolutionists tell us -- takes them about a billion years to do)
4Th evening and morning - 4th day
14 Then God said,
Let there be lights in the firmament of the heavens to
divide the day from the night; and let them be for signs and seasons, and for days and years; 15 and let them be for lights in the firmament of the heavens to give light on the earth; and it was so. 16 Then
God made two great lights: the greater light to rule the day, and the lesser light to rule the night.
He made the stars also. 17 God set them in the firmament of the heavens to give light on the earth, 18 and to rule over the day and over the night, and to divide the light from the darkness. And God saw that
it was good. 19
So the evening and the morning were the fourth day.
The 4th evening and morning. 4th day follows the 3rd day. But in your story many years "follow the 3rd evening and morning".
I didn't omit anything. You proved the point. God didn't just create the grasses, herbs, and trees. The EARTH brought them forth. Which takes...wait for it...TIME.
Indeed it takes a few billion years according to evolutionists to make a lifeless dead planet come up with plants.
God did it in a day.
I think we all can see that contrast. Moses is not writing the text for Darwin. He is not an evolutionist by any stretch - and neither were the newly freed egyptian slaves. what you would read into the text - simply is not in the text at all.
Trees do not produce fruit and seed in one day.
The lifeless earth does not "produce" a seed or a tree in one day according to evolutionists.
Our argument is that "God CAN" cause the flood, cause the earth to bring forth fully formed trees - etc.
It does not say "God created the grass, etc."
Actually that is exactly what it says
"Thus
the heavens and the earth, and all the host of them, were finished. 2 And
on the seventh day God ended His work which He had done, and He rested on the seventh day from
all His work which
He had done. 3 Then God blessed the seventh day and sanctified it, because in it He rested
from all His work which God had created and made."
The evolutionist's point goes directly after the Creator's own claims about what "He made" what "He Created" during each single "evening and morning" -- as HE states it -
It says the EARTH brought them forth.
It says God supernaturally caused the Earth to do what it did. The Text does not say "And God waited 2 billion years for the dead lifeless earth to figure out some way to bring forth plants".
We call see that clearly.
They sprouted as opposed to being BANG-THERE THEY ARE, God Created them. He created the earth, and the earth brought forth.
So the munging wrench of the text should read "And God created the earth then let the lifeless dead earth have a few billion years to figure out how to bring forth plants".
Really? That is what the egyptian slaves were "reading into the text"??
Who seriously goes for that??
Yes, WE do. Plants growing to produce seeds takes time. Trees growing to produce fruit takes time too. More than a day.
Billions of years according to evolutionists.
I have no doubt that everything since Creation is God-created. But the text says God created the Earth, and the Earth brought forth plants and trees.
No it does not. It says that the earth brought forth all plants on the third evening and morning because on that third evening and morning
God said,
Let the earth bring forth grass, the herb that yields seed,
and the fruit tree that yields fruit according to its kind, whose seed
is in itself, on the earth; and it was so. 12
And the earth brought forth grass, the herb that yields seed according to its kind, and the tree
that yields fruit, whose seed
is in itself according to its kind. And God saw that
it was good. 13
So the evening and the morning were the third day.
The text does NOT say - and a few billion years later the earth brought forth grass.
The text does not say "And God said let the earth bring forth plants and evening and morning were the third day -- then after a few billion years the earth brought forth plants".
Our disagreement has nothing to do with whether God did it. That would be heresy. Our disagreement is, simply, the time frame, which really doesn't matter.
The text says the time frame is 7 evening and mornings - 7 days.
And the newly freed egytian slaves were not inclined to "read into the text" many flights of fancy needed to satisfy a long-future-evolutionist-world-view.
We all know that to be true.
I don't speak for evolutionists. But I don't believe that your strict-literal interpretation has any weight,
until you read the text and see that the 7 day timeline is "in the text" not in "flights of fancy and imagination" and is summarized in legal code as "
SIX DAYS you shall labor...for in SIX DAYS the Lord made" Ex 20:8-11.
All flights of fancy come to a sudden halt as God summarizes the 7 day timeline of Gen 1:2-2:3 in pure legal code leaving no room for "imaginative insert".
Days or not figurative evening and morning, sun, moon, earth, plants etc are all real object and the timeline is "in the text" as 7 days.
Impossible to ignore.
Moses wrote it so that the newly freed Egyptian slaves would accept the historic account just as it was given.
in Christ,
Bob