If you follow the link on the bottom, you will go to a site where the author reviews a number of different possible interpretations of Genesis 1 and 2. The Day-Age theory, the Days of Proclamation approach, the possibility that God created everything to LOOK old, he even considers the viewpoint of our own Glenn Morton. Here is the third possibility:
"3. Perhaps the creation account given in Genesis 1 is a literary device used to convey the central truth that God created all the players in the grand scheme of the universe to function together. This viewpoint asserts that we cannot determine any chronological sequence from the "yoms" of "creation week." Howard J. Van Till espouses this view in his 1986 book "The Fourth Day" (page 90):
Of course Van Till, a devout Christian, emphatically believes that God created the heavens and the earth. Those heavens continue to tell the glory of God. Genesis 1's use of "creation week" as a literary device in no way detracts from the central truth that God created it all.
The "literary device" is a remarkably freeing viewpoint. No longer do we have to worry about the apparent discrepancies between Genesis 1 and 2. No longer do we have to ignore the obvious fact that God is still creating the heavens and the earth - new stars are born, and new islands like Surtsey in 1963 continue to rise out of the sea. No longer must we look in natural history for clear divisions between the "yoms", mornings, and evenings of creation week. God's creative activity continues to this day in the earth, the heavens, and in the hearts of every believer.
Instead, we can look in Genesis 1 for the symbolic meaning that surely must be present if the scientific information is not the main story. Conrad Hyers in 1983 described two parallel tracks of creation: on days 1-3 a framework was created, and on days 4-6 that framework was filled."
http://www.theistic-evolution.com/theisticevolution.html#The%20Possibilities%20of%20Genesis
In fact, the whole page is good:
http://www.theistic-evolution.com/theisticevolution.html
"3. Perhaps the creation account given in Genesis 1 is a literary device used to convey the central truth that God created all the players in the grand scheme of the universe to function together. This viewpoint asserts that we cannot determine any chronological sequence from the "yoms" of "creation week." Howard J. Van Till espouses this view in his 1986 book "The Fourth Day" (page 90):
The days of Genesis 1 are a literary device: they are story elements, not temporal specifications. Their relative lengths are a matter of no significance whatsoever. To waste time worrying about such matters is poor stewardship of our mental energies. Nonsense questions generate only nonsense answers.
Van Till declares that we will only get nonsense answers if we ask of Genesis 1 questions about physical properties and chronological sequence. "The days of Genesis 1 have nothing to do with the cosmic timetable; they are simply literary devices in the story, not actual temporal intervals directly corresponding to events in cosmic history." (page 91) Any similarity to the scientific chronology determined by astronomy, geology, and biology is purely coincidental. He adds elsewhere that we will only get nonsense answers if we ask of scientific data questions about meaning and purpose. Of course Van Till, a devout Christian, emphatically believes that God created the heavens and the earth. Those heavens continue to tell the glory of God. Genesis 1's use of "creation week" as a literary device in no way detracts from the central truth that God created it all.
The "literary device" is a remarkably freeing viewpoint. No longer do we have to worry about the apparent discrepancies between Genesis 1 and 2. No longer do we have to ignore the obvious fact that God is still creating the heavens and the earth - new stars are born, and new islands like Surtsey in 1963 continue to rise out of the sea. No longer must we look in natural history for clear divisions between the "yoms", mornings, and evenings of creation week. God's creative activity continues to this day in the earth, the heavens, and in the hearts of every believer.
Instead, we can look in Genesis 1 for the symbolic meaning that surely must be present if the scientific information is not the main story. Conrad Hyers in 1983 described two parallel tracks of creation: on days 1-3 a framework was created, and on days 4-6 that framework was filled."
http://www.theistic-evolution.com/theisticevolution.html#The%20Possibilities%20of%20Genesis
In fact, the whole page is good:
http://www.theistic-evolution.com/theisticevolution.html