Job 33:6
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Yea exactly. Well, and that the something that existed before creation, was the formless earth. Just like Adam was formless, and God took Adam and gave him form. Not to say that the dust itself was not ultimately created out of nothing. But just to say that, when we read the story, it tells us the story of the molding of Adam, not the earlier ex nihilo creation of Adam. And the same would be the case for the heavens and the earth.This thread is a bit confusing. Let me tell a little joke I’ve told before. An atheist comes to God and says that science has advanced so much that mankind doesn’t need Him anymore. God says that He will leave mankind alone if mankind makes a human being out of dust. The atheist agrees and reaches down and scoops up some dust. God says, “Wait a minute, make your own dust.” Job seems to be saying that “something” existed before Genesis 1:3, and God used that “something” for the next six days to create everything on earth. The verses about creation that have been repeated in this thread make it clear that God created everything. Why is it a problem if God created that “something” before the first of the six days?
Because that's what you do with formless things, you give them form. As opposed to God creating and then after his completion, for some reason the creation is formless so God has to go back and create again a second time by giving it form.
There's only one creation going on and that's over 6 days, as opposed to two creations going on, one creation in verse 1:1 and the other creation over 6 days. Which of course, this two creation view requires the rejection of a handful of translations. Which is also problematic, among other issues.
The YEC position, when you really do take a moment to look at scripture and you break it down. Logically, It's actually very problematic. Denying a bunch of Bible translations, God's creates with the spoken word, but he doesn't do that until verse 3. So now God is creating in verse 1 without even speaking. And then the rest of the six days aren't even creation because the creation happened in verse 1. And the other 6 days, nobody even knows what's going on, He's just making plants or something.
But alternatively, it's actually really simple if we just acknowledge that the story starts with a formless Earth and then over 6 days it is created into an earth that has form. Simple as that.
But people are so dug into certain traditions that they can't just consider this simple alternative. Not even necessarily to accept it outright, but to at least understand that it is a plan and simple way of reading the text that is legitimate.
And then this straw man argument arises people conflate this with denial of ex nihilo creation rather than understanding that Moses and the biblical authors are not required to tell any particular story of creation.
If I buy a new computer and I'm excited to tell you about its processing speed and the applications it has and how much memory it can hold etc. That's an important story, that has nothing to do with how the laptop was manufactured. And there's nothing wrong with me being excited and talking about its processing speed. We don't have to get bent out of shape if the story doesn't include the original manufacturing.
It's not a question of what God is capable of or what God ultimately did in the grand story of things. It's a question of what story God wants to share.
If I go to a play on Broadway, I can appreciate that play without needing to know what year the stage was constructed or where or when all the actors were born.
And YECs argue that the story must talk about material origins in order to be important. Genesis has to talk about ex nihilo material origins otherwise it's useless to them. But to Moses and ancient Israelites, creation out of chaos is what was important. It's their story, it's not our story. It was written to them in ancient times, not written to us in Big Bang times.
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