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07-20-2003, 09:08 PM | #101 | |
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07-21-2003, 12:04 AM | #102 | |||
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Apparently ancient Jewish scholars (perhaps at about the time much of Genesis was being written down) used the Bible (like the genealogies) to calculate the age of the earth. That forms the basis for the Jewish calender. It seems they genuinely believed that that was the age of the earth, (or at least the time when Adam was "created") rather than it being based on a non-literal historical account. Hugh Ross's site Reasons To Believe gives five examples of people who didn't think the days in Genesis were literal. (I think those people were in the minority at the time) Some places say that Augustine (given as an example) believed that all things were created together, instantaneously. http://www.asa3.org/archive/asa/199804/0345.html The earliest person mentioned there is Josephus. http://www.religioustolerance.org/ev_date.htm Says "estimates of the age of the Earth and the rest of the universe:" "5555 BCE: A data produced by Josephus, a Jew from the 1st century CE." "5481 BCE: A second date estimated by Josephus in the 1st century CE." Maybe he thought each day of creation was a century or something. The reference may be questionable though: "Young’s Analytical Concordance of the Holy Bible, 8th Edition," "Creation" entry, (1939). Cited in Don Batten, "Which is the recent aberration? Old-Earth or Young-Earth Belief?," Creation, Vol. 24, #1, Pages 24 to 27. See: http://www.answersingenesis.org Anyway, I think there is a lot of evidence that early Hebrews and early Christians (e.g. Jesus and Paul) believed in taking things historically which you would think would just be non-literal (perhaps based on a little truth). You said that Genesis came out of an oral traditional... surely whether it was intended to be literal (historical) or not would have been passed down too... (like how we know that Santa is kind of historical and real - in a pretend way) Jobar: Quote:
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