I wish there was a way that I could challenge those PHDs to find examples of the word Yom being used to represent a period of time other than 24 hours when being attached to a number value. Nobody uses the word Yom or even Day for that matter in that context because it would be utterly confusing to the reader or listener. They had words like Dor H1755, Cheled H2465, Eth H6256, and Paam H6471 to convey times, ages, periods, or occurrences. So it wouldn’t make any sense to use a word that could have an alternate meaning that would make the statement ambiguous without further clarification when they could use other words that would not cause any confusion at all to the reader or listener. And the term “there was evening and there was morning” only drives the point even further that these were 24 hour periods because if they weren’t 24 hour periods that term would be completely USELESS in the verse. It would serve absolutely no purpose at all. What would be the point of writing “there was evening and there was morning” if there were millions, billions, or even trillions of evenings & mornings? Why would that term be included in the statement if the word Yom was referring to an age or an epoch? It doesn’t fit the description of an age or an epoch, it’s not in any way connected to or in reference to an age or an epoch? The term “there was evening and there was morning” ONLY refers to the end of day and the beginning of a new day. There is not evening of an age or an epoch and there is no morning of an age or an epoch. The evidence is there brother, I know it doesn’t line up with what science tells us but ask yourself this, are they 100% positive how old the earth is? Do they have all the data that God has? No, they’re shooting in the dark based on what minuscule information they have, it’s their best guess which is why these are theories not actual proven facts because they can’t prove it. That’s the best they can do is make an educated guess based on the information they have now and that guess has been changing for over 100 years as they receive new information to calculate into the equation. People like Hugh Ross are scientists and as such they have to try to maintain some sort of credibility with the science community otherwise their entire reputation as a scientist would be ruined. They would be the laughing stock of the scientific community and their careers would be ruined. So they have to maintain some sort of science based theology in order to hang on to everything they’ve worked so hard for for decades. What Hugh Ross is doing is good because he’s trying to provide evidence to the scientific community that there is a causal agent in creation. He’s evangelizing to the scientific community, if you’ve watched his videos then you know this because he talks about it all the time. So he has to make compromises in order to make that work because he can’t just come to them with the straight gospel and convince them because everything they’re being taught directly contradicts the miracles of God. So he has to try to establish a middle ground where they are able to see a possibility of God being the causal agent in creation so in order to do that he has to reconcile the scriptures with science otherwise he’s not going to convince anyone in the scientific community of the existence of God. Now this might seem to work great for the creation account all by itself but ultimately it all falls apart when you start getting into the rest of scripture because the Bible is not a scientific book. People hanging on to science are not going to be able to believe that a woman instantly turned into a pillar of salt because she looked back at the city of Sodom while it was being destroyed. They’re not going to be able to believe that a man actually walked on top of the Galilee Sea. This is why I don’t understand why people insist on trying to reconcile creation with science because you still have countless other miracles in the Bible to deal with. If people can’t believe that these miracles did actually take place as they were written then how can they actually say that they believe in the Bible when in reality they’re really not believing in it? You can’t separate the miracle of creation from the other miracles of the Bible and it seems like that what people are trying to do. OEC believers say they believe that Jesus did die and came back to life 3 days later yet modern medicine tells us that it is impossible. So what’s the point of ignoring what modern medicine tells us but not ignoring what geology or astronomy tells us? All that does is make us inconsistent in our methodology. In my opinion in order to maintain consistency in our methodology we have to pick a side otherwise we’re just bouncing back & forth between science and scripture and never actually establishing any solid foundation.