I'm sorry.I've read the Bible perhaps six times cover to cover
During the fifth creative “day,” the Creator proceeded to fill the oceans and the atmospheric heavens with a new form of life—“living souls”—distinct from vegetation.
Interestingly, biologists speak, among other things, of the plant kingdom and the animal kingdom, and they divide these into sub-classifications. The Hebrew word translated “soul” means “a breather.” The Bible also says that “living souls” have blood. Therefore, we may conclude that creatures having both a respiratory system and a circulatory system—the breathing denizens of the seas and heavens—began to appear in the fifth creative period.—Genesis 1:20; 9:3,*4.
On the sixth “day,” God gave more attention to the land. He created “domestic” animals and “wild” animals, these being meaningful designations when Moses penned the account. (Genesis 1:24) So it was in this sixth creative period that land mammals were formed.
Day Five was marked by the creation of the first nonhuman souls on earth. Not just one creature purposed by God to evolve into other forms, but literally swarms of living souls were then brought forth by divine power. It is stated: “God proceeded to create the great sea monsters and every living soul that moves about, which the waters swarmed forth according to their kinds, and every winged flying creature according to its kind.” Pleased with what He had produced, God blessed them and, in effect, told them to “become many,” which was possible, for these creatures of many different family kinds were divinely endowed with the ability to reproduce “according to their kinds.”—Ge 1:20-23.
I find your detailed exposition here, and in your preceding entries, both knowledgeable and interesting. I've read the Bible perhaps six times cover to cover, and gone over the Genesis account probably a hundred or more times. Coming from an LDS background, I also have Joseph Smith's "inspired" versions of it, which in themselves are of three kinds. . . . one account renders a two-phase story where the first phase is a spiritual creation and the second phase is a temporal, which is to say, a physical 'this world' creation. Together with an "inspired translation" which purports to fix any problems in translation. . .
The net effect of an LDS perspective is we wonder why JS didn't fix the "day" definition by resorting to a word like "epoch" in it's place, wondering why if the Genesis story is an allegory in the first place and the fact being that we and other life were brought here from other planets, JS didn't just expand the story to include those "facts", wondering why JS said the earth was 5 billion years in it's course, wondering what else we just haven't been told, etc etc etc.
Still, I have long recognized the generality of the Genesis account being largely compatible with the geologic record and what we scientifically can surmise about the history of our planet from it's inception as a gathering center for gas and rock in a favorable orbit around the sun. . . .
Genesis alludes to the gas/rock phase, then to the liquid surface phase and finally to the emergence of dry land. Considering the amount of carbon dioxide in the equation, the first "sea"/atmosphere would have been pretty dense. Before photosynthesis became an established force in the equation, most of the oxygen was probably consumed in the upper crust as oxide rock, the sulfur being the first removed and deposited in the rock of lower layers with more metallic content. . . .
Before the thick atmosphere was cleared by chemical reaction removing vast amounts of carbon dioxide gas, there would have been no such thing as "daylight" or "days" . . . . . nope, no way is the Genesis account just stupid or something. Anyone with a mind for science has to recognize the validity of the basic story. . . .
plants, photosynthesis had to come first, in the developing seas and then on land. . . . then came the fish and animals. . . . and last perhaps of all, us humans. The Genesis account gets all that right.
Plants came later.... You had cyano bacteria and other single cellular organisms that did photosynthesis that filled our earth with its concentration if molecular oxygen!!!
. 21 And God proceeded to create the great sea monsters and every living soul that moves about, which the waters swarmed forth according to their kinds, and every winged flying creature according to its kind.
Well Pearl's version said whales and not great sea monsters right? And your version still says winged creatures before land animals. So you agree that your story tells about whales and birds being first before reptiles and other land creatures correct? Which is not true as far as fossil records and carbon dating goes. Bible as well says Earth was created first and then God made stars. Which is not true again as we know for sure that there are billions of stars older then Earth.
There are some differences in the terms used that arise "in translation", and it's probably a stretch to expect technical terms to be correctly applied by shepherds and plowboys across the hundreds of years between Moses and the attempt under Solomon's orders to gather the remnants of old writings and merge them together with the faithful folklore. . .. into a cohesive and compelling "faithful" narrative.
I won't choke on the fact that Bible puts some things in the fifth day, and others in the sixth day, and that it doesn't fit the fossil record exactly. . . .
Today, after only 240 years roughly speaking we Americans can't get it straight that our Constitution was a compact between sovereign states with a Federal government that was limited to specific defined powers. . . .
And, considering the probably murky primeval skies, which had more pollution generally than even Shanghai today, I can see where some anthropocentric shepherds might think the stars came later. They thought, afterall, that stars were little lanterns, not suns. . . .
And it leads to simple question. Why we would take myths written by uneducated shepherds thousands of years ago seriously?
The "6 days to create earth thing doesn't dispute science because days could mean something else." Sounds great and all, but if you weren't trying to incorporate the bible into science than you wouldn't try to find a bunch of loopholes. The 'word of God' shouldn't be trying to trick you.
Colton, If I came and told you that a virgin had given birth would you believe me just because I told you so?
I'm surprised that a physics professor would think that the laws that govern the universe can be put on hold for a short period of time with divine intervention.
Do we have any recordings that gravity has stopped working, or someone has risen from the dead?
I'm not a huge fan of what Hantlers believes, but hey he is all in. People who grew up religious then later in life just found so much evidence to contradict their beliefs so they try to cram it all into one thing. You could not have two more incompatible things, and I must admit people have done a great job making up stories that seem to make it all work. But come on... The book has been changed throughout history, or the 'meanings' of the words are different? That is just going to great lengths to avoid saying what I think a lot of people know deep down, but they are terrified to admit.
If you wanna believe that stuff it's fine, but don't try to find science in the Bible.