- Oct 4, 2010
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Hi skywriting,
I wrote:
I just wanted to explain this a little further. I think I may have in an earlier post, but now that we're into 500+ posts it likely bears repeating.
My efforts here are not intended to be able to pinpoint exactly what year the earth was created. The question has been asked where in the Scriptures we might honestly, and with some conviction, find the understanding that the earth is only 6,000 years old. I have answered that question by counting out, as best I can, the years of age of the various men found in the Scriptures beginning with Adam.
Now, your conviction is that the ages weren't given to us for that purpose. That may be. However, it does still serve that purpose. Whether or not God intended to cause those ages to be written for the purpose of determining roughly the age of His creation -- they do!
So, my question to you, since you seem to hold that those ages were not intended for the purpose for which I have used them: Are the ages wrong? Is it not true that when Adam was 130 years old that he had a son named Seth? Is the account of the following men and their ages when they had particular offspring not true? Some have made the case that some generations may have been skipped. Is it your contention that hundreds or thousands of generations were skipped? If so, do you have any substantiating evidence of this? As I have said, my purpose isn't to pinpoint a date, but to merely defend the seemingly clear teaching of the Scriptures that we live in a created realm of existence that isn't nearly as old as science would have us believe. That yes, there is some fairly clear evidence that the age of this created realm may well be about 6,000 years according to evidence found within the Scriptures. Whether or not it is one's belief that such evidences were intended by God to be used as such. The evidence does, in fact, exist.
That's it! So, you are free to defend your position that the ages weren't written in the Scriptures for the purpose that I have used them, but unless you can offer some evidence that such an accounting isn't reliable, then such an argument is really of no purpose for this discussion. Pointing out that various people who have tried in the past to use the ages for such purpose and have come up with answers as much as 1,000 years difference, doesn't really change the answer to the OP's question. I'd honestly be very glad to see that believer's different understandings of the age of this created realm were only as much as 1,000 years different. Again, my effort isn't to pinpoint a starting date, but to give an answer that offers some Scriptural evidence that this created realm is nowhere near thousands, millions, or billions of years in existence, but very likely closer to 5,6 or 7 thousand years in existence.
Your argument, in a nutshell, is that since men who have studied this issue have come up with a relatively small difference in the age of the creation, then we have to throw out any confidence in a relatively young creation of this realm in which we live. I don't find that to be a valid response to the differences.
God bless you.
In Christ, Ted
I wrote:
I'm ok with the numbers being a few hundred years different. That anomaly is explained based on the source text that was used. The masoretic text and the septuagint text have a base difference of a couple of hundred years. I'm fine with that.
I just wanted to explain this a little further. I think I may have in an earlier post, but now that we're into 500+ posts it likely bears repeating.
My efforts here are not intended to be able to pinpoint exactly what year the earth was created. The question has been asked where in the Scriptures we might honestly, and with some conviction, find the understanding that the earth is only 6,000 years old. I have answered that question by counting out, as best I can, the years of age of the various men found in the Scriptures beginning with Adam.
Now, your conviction is that the ages weren't given to us for that purpose. That may be. However, it does still serve that purpose. Whether or not God intended to cause those ages to be written for the purpose of determining roughly the age of His creation -- they do!
So, my question to you, since you seem to hold that those ages were not intended for the purpose for which I have used them: Are the ages wrong? Is it not true that when Adam was 130 years old that he had a son named Seth? Is the account of the following men and their ages when they had particular offspring not true? Some have made the case that some generations may have been skipped. Is it your contention that hundreds or thousands of generations were skipped? If so, do you have any substantiating evidence of this? As I have said, my purpose isn't to pinpoint a date, but to merely defend the seemingly clear teaching of the Scriptures that we live in a created realm of existence that isn't nearly as old as science would have us believe. That yes, there is some fairly clear evidence that the age of this created realm may well be about 6,000 years according to evidence found within the Scriptures. Whether or not it is one's belief that such evidences were intended by God to be used as such. The evidence does, in fact, exist.
That's it! So, you are free to defend your position that the ages weren't written in the Scriptures for the purpose that I have used them, but unless you can offer some evidence that such an accounting isn't reliable, then such an argument is really of no purpose for this discussion. Pointing out that various people who have tried in the past to use the ages for such purpose and have come up with answers as much as 1,000 years difference, doesn't really change the answer to the OP's question. I'd honestly be very glad to see that believer's different understandings of the age of this created realm were only as much as 1,000 years different. Again, my effort isn't to pinpoint a starting date, but to give an answer that offers some Scriptural evidence that this created realm is nowhere near thousands, millions, or billions of years in existence, but very likely closer to 5,6 or 7 thousand years in existence.
Your argument, in a nutshell, is that since men who have studied this issue have come up with a relatively small difference in the age of the creation, then we have to throw out any confidence in a relatively young creation of this realm in which we live. I don't find that to be a valid response to the differences.
God bless you.
In Christ, Ted
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