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                        "THE CASE FOR CREATION"

                 The Case For Six Literal 24 Hour Days

INTRODUCTION

1. I believe it fair to say that any casual, first-time reader of
   Genesis...
   a. Will conclude it teaches all things were created in six days
   b. That those days were six literal 24 hour days

2. The popularity of the theory of evolution has led many to...
   a. Discount any literal interpretation of Genesis 1
   b. Seek biblical support for a less literal understanding of the days
      of creation

[On the other hand, there are good reasons to take the Genesis account
at face value, for both biblical and scientific reasons.  From a
biblical perspective, let's consider some...]

I. ARGUMENTS FOR SIX LITERAL 24 HOUR DAYS

   A. HEBREW LEXICONS AND DICTIONARIES...
      1. Lexicographers consistently cite the enumerated days of Genesis
         1:1-31 as examples of a solar day - Robert V. McCabe, A Defense
         Of Literal Days In The Creation Week
      2. The following examples were offered by McCabe (plus one that I
         found):
         a. The Dictionary Of Classical Hebrew - Clines
         b. A Hebrew And English Lexicon Of The Old Testament - Brown,
            Driver, Briggs
         c. The Hebrew and Aramaic Lexicon of the Old Testament
            - Baumgartner, Stamm
         d. Theological Dictionary of the Old Testament - Saeboe
         e. New International Dictionary of Old Testament Theology and
            Exegesis - Verhoef
         f. Dictionary Of Biblical Languages With Semantic Domains:
            Hebrew (Old Testament) - Swanson
      -- These lexicons and dictionaries cite the days of creation as
         literal 24 hour days

   B. SEMANTIC CONSTRAINTS FOR SINGULAR USE OF "DAY"...
      1. "When yôm is used in the singular and is not part of a compound
         grammatical construction, it is consistently used in reference
         to a literal day of 24 hours or to the daytime portion of a
         literal day." - McCabe, ibid.
      2. "The extended, non-literal meanings of the term yôm are always
         found in connection with prepositions, prepositional phrases
         with a verb, compound constructions, formulas, technical
         expressions, genitive combinations, construct phrases, and the
         like. In other words, extended, non-literal meanings of this
         Hebrew term have special linguistic and contextual connections
         which indicate clearly that a non-literal meaning is intended.
         If such special linguistic connections are absent, the term yôm
         does not have an extended, non-literal meaning; it has its
         normal meaning of a literal day of 24-hours." - Gerhard F.
         Hasel, as quoted by McCabe
      -- The semantic use of the singular suggests a literal day

   C. NUMERIC QUALIFIERS AND "DAY"...
      1. "When each day of the creation week is summarized, the singular
         'day' is modified by a numerical qualifier, 'first day' (v.5),
         'second day (v.8), and sequentially continuing to the 'sixth
         day' (vv. 13, 19, 24,  31)." - McCabe, ibid.
      2. "When yôm is qualified by a number, it is almost invariably
         used in a literal sense." - ibid.
      -- The numeric qualifiers suggest a literal day

   D. SEQUENTIAL NUMBERING AND "DAY"...
      1. "The sequential use of the ordinal  numbers "first" through
         "sixth" for each day of the creation week, followed by the
         "seventh day" indicates a chronological progression of days."
         - E. J. Young, as referenced by McCabe
      2. "What seems of significance is the sequential emphasis of the
         numerals 1-7 without any break or temporal interruption. This
         seven-day schema, the schema of the week of six workdays
         followed by 'the seventh day' as rest day, interlinks the
         creation "days" as normal days in a consecutive and non-
         interrupted sequence." - Hasel, ibid.
      -- The sequential numbering suggests a literal day

   E. EVENING AND MORNING AS QUALIFIERS OF "DAY"...
      1. "So the evening and the morning were the ____ day." - Gen
         1:5,8,13,19,23,31
      2. "Whether 'evening' and 'morning' are used together in a context
         with yôm (19 times beyond the 6 uses in Genesis 1) or they are
         used without yôm (38 times), they are used consistently in
         reference to literal days." - McCabe, ibid.
      -- The use of morning and evening suggest a literal day

   F. SEQUENCE OF EVENTS AND "DAY"...
      1. Problem one
         a. Fruit trees and seed-bearing plants were created on the
            third day - Gen 1:11-12
         b. Much vegetation requires insects for pollination
         c. Insects were not created until the sixth day - Gen 1:24-25
         d. It would be impossible for many plants to survive long
            periods without insects
         e. "A symbiotic relationship between plants and animals is
            coordinate with literal and successive days in Genesis 1,
            but this would not be the case if the days refer to extended
            periods." - McCabe, ibid.
      2. Problem two
         a. "If days are figurative and if there is any consistency in
            interpretation, then there must extended periods of light
            corresponding to 'morning' and of darkness corresponding to
            'evening.'" - ibid.
         b. "This would guarantee that both plant and animal life would
            be unable to survive." - ibid.
      -- The sequence of events suggest a literal day

   G. SCRIPTURAL CONSIDERATIONS...
      1. In the Old Testament
         a. "There are two passages, dealing with regulations for the
            observance of the Sabbath that cogently reinforce a literal
            interpretation of the days in the creation week." - McCabe,
            ibid.
         b. "These passages are Exo 20:8-11 and Exo 31:14-17." - ibid.
         c. "According to these two texts, the references to the
            creation week are not analogous - man's rest is not simply
            like God's rest on the seventh day - instead, man is to
            imitate the divine Exemplar. Since God worked for six days
            and rested on the seventh, the nation of Israel must follow
            his example." - ibid.
      2. In the New Testament
         1. The origin of man and marriage was "from the beginning of
            the creation"
            a. Man was created male and female "from the beginning" - Mk
               10:6; cf. Gen 1:27
            b. The institution of marriage soon followed - Mk 10:7-8;
               cf. Gen 2:20-24
            c. If it was ages after "the beginning of creation", this
               would not be true
         2. Death and corruption was a consequence of Adam's sin
            a. By man came death, in Adam all die - Gen 2:17; cf. 1Co
               15:21-22
            b. By man's sin, the earth was cursed - Gen 3:17; cf. Ro
               8:20-22
            c. If the "days" of Genesis 1 are long periods of time,
               death and corruption occurred long before Adam
      -- The scriptural considerations suggest the Genesis account
         should be taken literally

[Such are some of the Biblical or scriptural reasons for taking Genesis
1-2 at face value.  It is certainly not an exhaustive treatment of the
subject.  For more information, including resources that subscribe to a
literal view of the days of Creation from a scientific perspective, here
are some...]

II. RESOURCES FOR SIX LITERAL 24 HOUR DAYS

   A. FROM A BIBLICAL PERSPECTIVE...
      1. A Defense Of Literal Days In The Creation Week - Robert V.
         McCabe, Professor of Old Testament at Detroit Baptist
         Theological Seminary
      2. Creation Days And Orthodox Jewish Tradition - Paul-James
         Griffiths
      3. A Summary Of Evidence For Literal 24-Hr Creation Days In
         Genesis 1 - Andrew S. Kulikovsky
      4. The Days Of Creation:  A Semantic Approach - James Stambaugh
      5. Studies About The Days Of Genesis 1 - David E. Pratte
      -- These resources argue that the case for six literal 24 hour
         days is biblically sound

   B. FROM A SCIENTIFIC PERSPECTIVE...
      1. Institute For Creation Research - Henry M. Morris, Duane Gish
      2. Answers In Genesis - Ken Ham
      3. The Creation Research Society
      4. Creation Ministries International
      5. Bible.ca's Scientific Evidence For Creation - Don Patton, Steve
         Rudd
      6. A List Of Over 175 Scientists - who accept the biblical account
         of Creation
      -- These resources argue that the case for six literal 24 hour
         days is scientifically sound

CONCLUSION

1. Before rejecting that God created all things in six literal 24 hours
   days, one should ask...
   a. Is it consistent in regards to Hebrew syntax as found in the
      Bible?
   b. Is it in harmony with the rest of the biblical record?
   -- For those who accept the Bible as the Word of God, such concerns
      should be paramount

2. One should also ask...
   a. Must we force our view of Genesis 1 to fit popular evolutionary
      thinking?
   b. Is it scientifically necessary to do so?
   -- Has the theory of evolution been proven as it relates to origins?

To help answer the latter questions, our next two lessons will focus on
problems with the theory of evolution...
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