Vance,
I pretty much take Dick Fischer's view in his book The Origins Solution. His view is a very literal view of Genesis yet is an abiogenesis TE view. In fact, his view is more literal than any of the so-called young earth literal views. He carefully takes into consideration the two different Hebrew words translated create and make. He assigns Gen. 2:4, "Day of creation" = "generations of the heavens" to the six days of creation, demonstrating an old earth. He takes Gen. 1 and Gen 2 to be separate events. This means Adam is not the first man, but instead is, as Paul says, the first Adam (in contrast to Christ the last Adam). The purpose of the Flood was not to wipe out all men, but to wipe out all descendants of Adam. Fischer demonstrates from the Bible that the Flood was local and recent, not global as the YECs claim nor long ago as the OECs claim.
I would add that no man today is a descendant of Adam or at least those few that are Adam's genes are so diluted as to be of no consequence.
I agree with Fischer that the Bible allows TE, but I don't believe the science does.
Vance said:There is currently a spectrum of belief regarding origins, and this is tied loosely to how literal one reads Scripture and/or the degree to which one is willing to allow the evidence of God’s Creation inform their beliefs *about* that Creation. We must keep in mind that every position except the one on top, the Flat-earthers, involves a certain degree of allowance of scientific knowledge to influence Scriptural interpretation.
...
So, where do you fit in? I don’t necessarily want everyone to post their "number", but it is interesting to see it all laid out like this. If any have suggestions or tweaks to make to the this list, go ahead and say so.
I pretty much take Dick Fischer's view in his book The Origins Solution. His view is a very literal view of Genesis yet is an abiogenesis TE view. In fact, his view is more literal than any of the so-called young earth literal views. He carefully takes into consideration the two different Hebrew words translated create and make. He assigns Gen. 2:4, "Day of creation" = "generations of the heavens" to the six days of creation, demonstrating an old earth. He takes Gen. 1 and Gen 2 to be separate events. This means Adam is not the first man, but instead is, as Paul says, the first Adam (in contrast to Christ the last Adam). The purpose of the Flood was not to wipe out all men, but to wipe out all descendants of Adam. Fischer demonstrates from the Bible that the Flood was local and recent, not global as the YECs claim nor long ago as the OECs claim.
I would add that no man today is a descendant of Adam or at least those few that are Adam's genes are so diluted as to be of no consequence.
I agree with Fischer that the Bible allows TE, but I don't believe the science does.