- Mar 25, 2014
- 371
- 66
- 49
- Country
- United States
- Faith
- Baptist
- Marital Status
- Married
- Politics
- US-Republican
It sounds crazy but there are two physical creations. I've spent a lot of time studying this and have written a book that is ready to be published. What I'm going to show on this forum is only a small piece of a bigger picture. I'm really looking for peoples perspective and wanting peoples thoughts on how it impacts Christ purpose for mankind.
I will begin by asking that people interested first read Genesis 10:31 and then read Genesis 11:1 and ask yourself what is wrong with this picture? In short, the end of Genesis 10 has people on earth with different languages while the beginning of Genesis 11 shows them all having the same language.
The reason that this is the case is because they are out of chronological order. Most scholars will tell you not all events are ordered in chronological order in the Bible and many of the books themselves are out of chronological order.
The reason for me showing this is to demonstrate that chronological order is not always the case in the book of Genesis.
Now the reader should now go to Genesis 1:1 and and read then skip to Genesis 2:4 and read. The reader should notice the language in 2:4 and realize that the story and the chronology of “generations of the heavens and of the earth when they were created” begins now. This chronology begins in 2:4 and goes to the end of Genesis 4.
Also realize that the chronology of the “generations of the heavens and of the earth when they were created” took place before Genesis 1:2. or more specifically Genesis 1:1.
The reader should now read Genesis 5:1. This now begins the chronology of the “day that God created man, in the likeness of God made he him” or more clearly the generations of Adam that are in that day.
If we now travel back to Genesis 1:26 and Genesis 1:27 we see that the chronology of events described in Genesis 5 corresponds to this description of events. This collection of events transpires from Genesis 1:2 through Genesis 2:3.
Also the reader should notice that the Adam of “day that God created man, in the likeness of God made he him” was instructed to replenish the earth Genesis 1:28. This is the same thing God told Noah Genesis 9:1. The Adam of the “generations of the heavens and of the earth when they were created” was destroyed by the deep in Genesis 1:2. Yes I am claiming a second world flood.
This also explains the generational differences between those described in Genesis 4 and those in Genesis 5. An example is that Enoch is second from Adam in “generations of the heavens and of the earth when they were created” and sixth from Adam in the generations of the “day that God created man, in the likeness of God made he him”
These difference are because these are two totally different events.
There is a time difference between both collections of generational chronologies.
Also note a day is not 24 hours. This can be seen from Genesis 5. The verse appears to mean all of the generations that occurred took place in the “day God created man, in the likeness of God made him”. All these generation took place over many years not a single day.
Thoughts?
I will begin by asking that people interested first read Genesis 10:31 and then read Genesis 11:1 and ask yourself what is wrong with this picture? In short, the end of Genesis 10 has people on earth with different languages while the beginning of Genesis 11 shows them all having the same language.
The reason that this is the case is because they are out of chronological order. Most scholars will tell you not all events are ordered in chronological order in the Bible and many of the books themselves are out of chronological order.
The reason for me showing this is to demonstrate that chronological order is not always the case in the book of Genesis.
Now the reader should now go to Genesis 1:1 and and read then skip to Genesis 2:4 and read. The reader should notice the language in 2:4 and realize that the story and the chronology of “generations of the heavens and of the earth when they were created” begins now. This chronology begins in 2:4 and goes to the end of Genesis 4.
Also realize that the chronology of the “generations of the heavens and of the earth when they were created” took place before Genesis 1:2. or more specifically Genesis 1:1.
The reader should now read Genesis 5:1. This now begins the chronology of the “day that God created man, in the likeness of God made he him” or more clearly the generations of Adam that are in that day.
If we now travel back to Genesis 1:26 and Genesis 1:27 we see that the chronology of events described in Genesis 5 corresponds to this description of events. This collection of events transpires from Genesis 1:2 through Genesis 2:3.
Also the reader should notice that the Adam of “day that God created man, in the likeness of God made he him” was instructed to replenish the earth Genesis 1:28. This is the same thing God told Noah Genesis 9:1. The Adam of the “generations of the heavens and of the earth when they were created” was destroyed by the deep in Genesis 1:2. Yes I am claiming a second world flood.
This also explains the generational differences between those described in Genesis 4 and those in Genesis 5. An example is that Enoch is second from Adam in “generations of the heavens and of the earth when they were created” and sixth from Adam in the generations of the “day that God created man, in the likeness of God made he him”
These difference are because these are two totally different events.
There is a time difference between both collections of generational chronologies.
Also note a day is not 24 hours. This can be seen from Genesis 5. The verse appears to mean all of the generations that occurred took place in the “day God created man, in the likeness of God made him”. All these generation took place over many years not a single day.
Thoughts?
Last edited: