Did God create the earth in 6 days x 24 hours ? Consider the following:
Did God complete the creation in six days? This has been the perpetual question. When Genesis says that He created the sky on the third day, and the sea creatures on the fourth, does it mean a twenty-four-hour timeframe? If this is true, it would mean that on the fifth and sixth day, almost a million species of sea and land animals materialize in forty-eight hours. Some say that the Creator has unlimited power to make these happen quickly, but whither the need to rush? Wouldn’t God take time to design the varieties of trees and flowers, as well as different kinds of marine creatures and land animals? Personal opinion aside, however, the question is does day mean twenty-four hours? Or is it a figurative expression?
Authors use words according to the subject matter. The way of writing and choice of words depend on the genre. For science, the contents are factual and can be interpreted in a literal manner, such as water boils at 100 degrees Celsius at sea level. Marketing materials tend to hype or exaggerate in order to stir our interests. We write business letters formally, compared to the colloquial way we type emails or mobile texts to friends. In the Bible, the word day refers to a stage; God created light in the first stage, followed by the sky in the second phase, and so forth. The creation took place in six distinct stages, not literally in six days. However, stage would not fit the prose of religious writing; day was a more appropriate choice of word.
The creation took place in organized stages. At the first phase, light was created, followed by the sky, then the land and sea. Later, in distinct stages, God created the stars, vegetation, flying creatures, sea habitants, and finally, land animals, followed by man and woman. He did not create randomly, so to speak: He did not make the stars, then the land, some living creatures, and then create more stars again; instead, He proceeded in an orderly way.
Why did the Bible use the word day instead of stage or phase? The word day fits the prose of writing in religious scriptures. For different subjects, be it engineering, human literature, fiction, magazines or newspapers, there are different ways of writing. Chemistry books are written in a factual way, while consumer magazines use words to capture our interests and promote sales. In Chinese culture, the word day can refer to heaven or the deities that dwell in heaven -- and this is not a unique view; it is not unusual for earthly beings to look at the sky and moon, and wonder if there are gods that live far beyond the stars. In the Bible, in the context of creation, day alludes to a passage of time.
In the first chapter of Genesis, at the end of each day, the Bible said, “There was evening and there was morning.” However, if the sun and moon were created on the fourth day, how did evenings and mornings happen during the first three days? As well, notice the order: It was not morning, then evening. Instead, it was the reverse: Evening, followed by morning. I believe that evening means the end of a stage, not sunset. And morning means the beginning of another phase, not sunrise. As well, it does not mean that the amount of time for each day was the same. In all probability, to gather the land into one place would take much less time than to create the thousand kinds of sea creatures.
Moses said to the people, “For in six days the Lord made the heavens and the earth, the sea, and all that is in them” [Exodus 20:11]. But back then, could they have known that, in the context of creation, the word ‘day’ was figurative? Indeed, I believe that Moses would be amused at the thought of how thousands of kinds of living things – falcons, kingfishers, leopards, giraffe, hens, worms, ants, ant-eaters, cats and so on – would materialize suddenly in seventy-two hours, as if God had used CGI (computer graphics interface).
The abovementioned is adapted from "Understanding Prayer, Faith and God's will"