Is
The Bible Unscientific?
"But
what about the scientific objections to the Bible?" asks
the unbeliever. "Surely you must admit that a scientist
cant possibly believe everything in the Bible?"
To
hear people talk like that, you would think that every scientist
was an unbeliever. But this is very far from the truth.
I
personally know many well qualified scientists who know the
Bible far more intimately than almost any of its detractors.
They include two full professors in British universities,
and at least a dozen with doctorates awarded for scientific
research. Nearly every one of the Bible-reading scientists
known to me has come to the conclusion that the whole Bible
is true. And there are thousands of other scientists outside
my own circle-including some eminent men in their field -
who are equally convinced of the truth of the Bible.
Since
scientists are divided in their opinions about the Bible,
we can afford to look at the matter without prejudice, and
form our own opinions. What, then, are the real facts?
First
of all, it is important to realise that science and the Bible
do not often come into contact. There is no reason why they
should. They are concerned with different things.
Science
is concerned with the question of how things happen.
But the Bible tells us why things happen.
To
appreciate the distinction, consider the question of death.
Medical science is gradually unlocking Natures mysteries,
and explaining what happens in our organs as we grow old and
die. This new knowledge is very valuable. It has enabled doctors
to combat death so effectively that the average span of human
life has been doubled within a century.
But
science can never explain (a) why we die, or (b) the way to
live for ever. This is the Bibles job. It tells us:
"
The wages of sin is death, but the gift of God is eternal
life, through Jesus Christ our Lord."1
In
this one verse the Bible explains both (a) why we die-because
of sin-and (b) the way to live for ever-by accepting Gods
gift.
Thus
science and the Bible each have their place. Each tells us
something we could not learn from the other. Usually their
spheres of interest do not overlap.
But
sometimes the two do come into contact. Then the question
arises: does the Bible conflict with scientific knowledge?
To
answer this question we must look carefully at the two main
areas where conflict is said to occur. One of these is in
the stories of miracles in the Bible. The other is the account
of creation in Genesis.
It
is essential to do this in a spirit of reasonableness. There
are some Christians who take the attitude, "If science
contradicts the Bible, so much the worse for science. Who
cares?" And there are some scientists whose reaction
is the exact opposite: "Of course the Bible is unscientific.
Its a load of ancient folklore."
Both
these shut-minded attitudes are sadly mistaken. They do no
service to Christ, to Science, or to Truth. Neither Bible-believers
nor scientists have anything to lose from thoughtfully considering
the other sides point of view. They have much to gain from
doing so.
Miracles
The
general public seems to think that scientists are unusually
logical people, with minds as accurate as electronic computers.
But those who work among scientists know that this is not
true.
We
scientists are just as human as anyone else. We make the same
foolish mistakes, and we suffer from vanity, impatience and
prejudice, just like the rest of mankind.
When
a scientist declares that miracles cannot happen, he is not
stating a scientific fact. He is merely expressing his own
prejudiced opinion. And a thoroughly unscientific opinion
it is, too.
Professor
Horrobin, a medical scientist who shows no sign of being a
Bible-believer, has recently warned his fellow scientists
about this. He says:
"
The scientist begins with the belief that the universe operates
entirely according to law. He begins by believing that unique
events which cannot be explained by natural law do not happen.
Since by definition, by act of faith, the scientist excludes
miracles from the realm of science, he can hardly use science
to demonstrate that they cannot occur.
"The
non-occurrence of miracles is part of the scientific creed.
It is therefore arguing in a circle to say that science demonstrates
that miracles do not occur. The premise is the same as the
conclusion. - . . I am not saying that true miracles do Occur.
All I am showing is that science has not demonstrated that
they do not occur, and nor will it ever be able to make such
a demonstration."2
Horrobin
is unquestionably right. Scientists cannot prove that miracles
do not occur. They assume it.
This
is not just perverseness on the part of scientists. We have
to make this assumption about our experiments, for a very
good reason. We should never make any progress unless we did.
Let
me illustrate what I mean. Some years ago medical scientists
noticed a horrifying increase in the number of deformed babies
being born. They could conceivably have said, "This is
a miracle. This is a curse from God on our wicked world."
But
that would have gone against the basic principle of science:
"Look
for the cause." So scientists ruled out the idea of a
miracle, and looked for a scientific explanation. They found
one. The deformities were being caused by a drug, thalidomide.
It
is therefore reasonable, and necessary, for every scientist
to say to himself, "I shall assume that miracles are
not occurring in my laboratory today."
But
some scientists are not content with this. They want to go
a big step further. They add, "And I shall also assume
that miracles never have occurred, anywhere, and never will."
This is not necessary, and not reasonable either. No scientist
who has thought the matter out would ever make such an absurd
statement.
Science
cannot possibly tell us whether the miracles recorded in the
Bible occurred or not. All that science can do is to agree
with common sense, and admit that the Bible miracles could
have occurred.
But
is it likely that they really did? To answer that question
we must look more closely at the facts.
The
Miracles of the Bible
The
very first thing a scientist looks for in a new theory is
what he calls "internal consistency". In other words,
do the various parts of the new theory agree with each other;
or does one part contradict another? Before he does anything
else, the man who produces a new theory must make sure it
is internally consistent.
You
would be surprised how many promising new theories fall down
because of this. Internal consistency does not prove a theory
true. But it does at least give the new theory a chance.
The
great thing to remember about the miracle stories of the Bible
is this. They are part of an internally consistent picture.
In other words, they are what you would expect.
Christianity
is an altogether miraculous religion. The existence of an
inspired Bible is a miracle. The coming of the Son of God
into the world was a miracle. His resurrection was a miracle.
Our hope of eternal life, in a world where death is the universal
rule, is a miracle. The fact that God hears prayer is a miracle.
Against
this background, is it surprising that the Son of God, and
some of the prophets and apostles, are reported as working
some miracles? Of course not. It would have been much more
surprising if they hadnt worked any miracles!
There
is another important point in favour of accepting the miracle
stories of the Bible. They are all so eminently sensible.
None of them occurs without a good reason. They all take place
in a seemly way.
Most
of the miracles of Jesus were miracles of healing. A few involved
the most extreme form of healing-restoring the dead to life.
On a few occasions He provided food or drink or money for
people who needed it. Twice He rescued His disciples from
probable shipwreck.
This
leaves only one miracle unaccounted for: the cursing of the
barren fig tree. And we saw in the previous chapter that there
was an extremely good reason for this.
So
every single miracle of Jesus was performed for a purpose.
Every one was necessary. He never did anything merely to be
able to say, "Look, everybody! See what wonderful things
I can do." He was, in fact, tempted to use His power
in that way, but refused to do so.3
His
miraculous birth from a virgin was equally necessary. He had
to have one human parent. Otherwise He would not have been
able to share our human feelings. But He can, because through
His mother He inherited our weak human nature. Consequently,
as the New Testament says,
"
We have not a High Priest who is unable to sympathise with
our weaknesses, but one who in every respect has been tempted
as we are-yet without sinning."4
Without
one human parent He would never have known what temptation
was. But if He had had two human parents He could never have
conquered every temptation. And the last three words of the
quotation above declare that He did conquer all temptations.
He had to have one divine Parent to inherit enough strength
to do that.
So
the virgin birth is not just a wonder-story tacked on to the
Gospels as an afterthought. It was an absolute essential to
the life and work of Jesus. Without it He could never have
been what He was.
This
is equally true of His resurrection from the dead. Gods plan
of salvation revolves around it. Our assurance of eternal
life depends upon it, says Paul.5 And, as we saw in Chapter
7, it provides a powerful argument for belief in the Bible.
All
the miracles in the Bible fall into this general pattern.
They all have a purpose, even though, in a few cases, the
purpose is not obvious at first glance. And they all fit into
the overall theme of the Bible, namely, the working out of
Gods great scheme of redemption for our world.
Bible
miracles are on an altogether higher level than the miracles
recounted in other ancient books. The book of Tobit, written
between 200 and 100 B.C., tells how a demon called Asmodeus
slew one after another the seven husbands of a Jewish girl
on their wedding nights. But then she married Tobias, and
this time the demon was driven off by the smell of burning
fish, and so they all lived happily ever after.
If
the Bible contained stories like that, we might have something
to worry about.
Language
We Can Understand
The
Bible always recounts miracles in the language of the common
man. This again is what you would expect. If God had told
us the exact scientific explanation of the miracles we probably
should not be able to understand half of them, even today.
And earlier generations would not have understood a word of
it.
A
university lecturer in geography once said to me, "I
never like to touch a drop of liquor until the sun goes down."
It would have been childish had I replied, "As a geographer,
old man, you should know that the sun doesnt go down; the
earth goes round."
Yet
people make just that sort of objection to a story in the
Book of Joshua. Towards the close of a successful battle,
night was drawing on. Joshua prayed for the opportunity to
complete the mopping-up operations. His prayer was answered.
The record says: "And the sun stood still, and the moon
stayed."6
So
the objectors rush in with their fatuous comments. "This
teaches that the earth is the centre of the universe, and
the sun and moon go round it!"
Or,
only one degree less absurd: "This would mean that the
earth stopped rotating for a time. That would have been like
slamming on the brakes in a bus travelling at a thousand miles
an hour. The earths surface would have been wrecked."
If
Joshua could have heard these comments, how he would have
laughed. "Dont be awkward," he might have said.
"I merely intended to convey the idea that God miraculously
lengthened the daylight for me. I was not concerned with the
astronomy, or the physics, of the situation. My readers understood
me perfectly, and I dont see why you shouldnt."
Similar
principles apply to a number of other miracle stories. When
Jesus went to heaven, He went "up". His rising body
disappeared into a cloud.7
This
was not intended to teach that the earth is flat, and that
God lives just above the clouds. It conveys a simple message
which men of all ages have been able to understand. We live
on earth; God lives somewhere else, called heaven.
We
do not know, and we need not care, just where that is-or even
if it has a location within the "space-time continuum"
that scientists speak of. When the work of Jesus on earth
was done, He went to join His Father. That is all we need
to know.
One
more comment, before we leave miracles. Always resist the
temptation to pooh-pooh something because it sounds unlikely.
Scientists are always coming unstuck when they do that.
When
I was a small boy my mother told me of balls of fire that
would sometimes descend from the sky during thunderstorms.
"Thunderbolts", she called them.
At
secondary school I was told that this was an old wives tale.
The standard dictionary of the day8 said that thunderbolts
of this sort were "imaginary", and that settled
it.
But
not for long. Nowadays thunderbolts are "in" again.
They have a new name, "ball lightning", to make
them respectable, and eminent scientists publish papers about
them.9
Some
people have never been able to accept the idea that God knows
everything. "Its an utter impossibility," they have
said, "for any Being, no matter how mighty, to store
up all the information there ever was, on every subject."
This
sort of objection looks pretty feeble, nowadays. There is
a chemical in our bodies, called DNA, that stores up information
in its molecules. Those blue eyes you inherited from your
mother, for example, were passed on from her to you by a molecule
of DNA.
A
scientist has described how efficiently DNA holds information.
"
The information stored in one mans DNA would, if put into
books, require a shelf to hold them so long that it would
go round the earth ten million times."10
If
those shelves were put into a tightly packed library, in book-cases
ten shelves high, with gaps only five feet wide between them,
the library would fill the whole of Europe and Asia, or nearly
half the total land surface of the earth. And thats the amount
of information now thought to be stored in your own body.
The
Flood
Of
all the miracles recorded in the Bible, the biggest by far
is the Flood. It is also the one that has provoked the greatest
amount of disbelief.
In
this particular case the objections are not unreasonable.
They deserve careful consideration. If the Biblical Flood
ever took place, it ought to have left some traces. Where
are they?
In
the old days the answer given to this question was, "Everywhere".
For many centuries it was thought that the varied surface
of the whole earth was just as the Flood had left it. But
when men began to study geology, about two centuries ago,
problems began to arise. A great deal of evidence was found
that showed the structure of the earths crust has been millions
of years forming. The idea of a world-wide flood was gradually
abandoned by practically all geologists, for want of evidence.
From
time to time some Bible-believer has tried to prove that the
foundations of modern geology are quite false, and that the
earlier "Flood Theory of Geology" fits the facts
better. Price11 tried this in 1923; Morris and Whitcomb12
in 1962.
Even
many Bible-believers, who would like to be convinced, have
found these arguments unconvincing.13 So it is not surprising
that practically all geologists reject the theory of "Flood
Geology". Without wishing to dismiss it out of hand,
I can only say that it is not an impossible theory but a very
unlikely one.
Fortunately
there is a much simpler solution to the problem of the Flood.
It depends to some extent on a recognition of our old friend,
Hebrew idiom.
This
affects the issue in two ways. First, as we shall see in Chapter
*3,
Hebrew methods of dating were not exact like ours. Because
of this we cannot be at all sure when the Flood occurred.
It may have been many thousands of years ago.
Secondly,
we need to consider the following Biblical statements:
(a)
All countries came to Joseph in Egypt to buy corn.14
(b)
The nations under the whole heaven became afraid of
Israel.15
(c)
Ahab looked everywhere for Elijah, missing no nation or
kingdom.16
(d)
Nebuchadnezzar ruled wheresoever the children of men dwelt.17
(e)
Cyrus ruled all the kingdoms of the earth.18
(f)
In Pauls day the gospel was preached to every creature
under heaven.19
In
all six passages the words in italics look like a tremendous
overstatement. Obviously they were not intended to be taken
literally. We are up against a Hebrew idiom, which can fairly
be stated like this:
When
the Hebrews spoke of "All the peoples of the earth"
(or some such phrase) they often meant it in a limited sense.
They meant either "All the peoples with whom we have
contact", or "All the peoples with whom God is dealing."
We
must take this into account when we read the Genesis record
of the Flood. This says that "All the high hills that
were under the whole heaven were covered."20 Does this
necessarily include Ben Nevis and the Himalayas and the Rockies,
and all the other mountains that Israel had never heard of?
In the light of the sayings (a) to (f) quoted above, the answer
seems inescapable: no.
Under
this watery covering, "All flesh died that moved upon
the earth."21 Did this necessarily include the kangaroos
in Australia, and the llamas in South America? To any Hebrew
reader the most reasonable answer would again be: no.
This
all adds up to one thing. There is nothing in Genesis to prove
that the Flood was world-wide. In the idiom of its Hebrew
readers, Genesis indicated that the Flood certainly affected
all of that part of the world with which God was dealing.
It does not tell us whether or not it affected the rest of
the earth.
The
cradle of human civilisation was the land of Iraq, and especially
the valleys of the Tigris and Euphrates. This is the area
where Eden was. This was the country where the Tower of Babel
was built. This was Abrahams homeland. This, and the land
stretching northward to Ararat,22 must have been the area
where the Flood occurred.
It
may have occurred in the days when the whole human race (and
I am speaking now of "true men", "sons of Adam"-see
Chapter 23) lived in that area. If so, the whole human race
except Noah and his family would have perished in the Flood.
In this case it must have happened a very long time ago, and
any direct evidence of it would seem to have been erased by
time.
But
there is plenty of geological evidence of an indirect nature
to support the possibility of a great flood having occurred
in those parts. Some very great earth movements have occurred
in this area since the end of the last Ice Age-that is, during
the past ten or fifteen thousand years. The region is surrounded
by four seas, the Black Sea, the Caspian, the Mediterranean
and the Persian Gulf. If the whole region was once depressed
below sea level, great walls of water would have rushed in
from all sides. The Genesis Flood might well have happened
in this way.
To
sum up, we do not know for sure whether the Flood was worldwide
or not. Although there are many obstacles to believing in
a world-wide Flood, and no real evidence that one ever occurred,
the difficulties can be resolved by regarding the Flood as
a more local affair. The idiom of the Old Testament strongly
supports such an interpretation.
Consequently
there is no reason for disbelieving in the Flood, and one
overwhelming reason for believing: Jesus Christ believed in
it.23
Creation
The
Bible starts off with a grand statement: "In the beginning
God created the heaven and the earth."24
In
the old days men regarded this as an obvious truth. The universe
did not come from nowhere. Somebody must have made it. If
God did not make it, who did?
But
nowadays men are not so simple-minded. They pounce on that
word, "somebody". "Why assume it was made by
a person?" they ask. "It might just as well have
been made by the action of natural forces."
There
is one thing wrong with that argument. Scientists have so
far failed completely to explain how the universe could have
come into being on its own. And even when they try to do so,
they still find themselves using the word "creation".
The
fly in the atheists ointment is a scientific law called the
Second Law of Thermodynamics. This says that in any system
of things, something called "entropy" keeps on increasing.
We have found the law to be true for every system we have
been able to investigate, from tiny little test-tubes in the
laboratory, right up to the world as a whole. There is every
reason to suppose that it applies to the solar system, and
to the greatest system of all-the universe.
What
is this "entropy"? It can only be defined accurately
by using the language of mathematics. But it is near enough
to say that it means "mixed-upness". It applies
particularly to the mixed-upness of the heat in a system.
For
example, when you add cold cream to boiling coffee, the cream
warms up and the coffee cools down. Very soon you have a cup
of "coffee-with-cream", all at the same temperature.
Now try and get back your cold cream and boiling coffee. Obviously,
you cant. Why not? Because mixed-upness always increases,
never decreases.
Think
of your house and garden as a self-contained system. In winter
you have a nice warm house in an unpleasantly cold garden.
Go away for a week, and leave the house to itself. It cools
down to the temperature of the garden. The "entropy",
mixed-upness, of the system has increased.
As
soon as you come home you set to work to put things right.
You want to reduce the mixed-upness, and make the house hotter
than the garden again. There is only one way you can do this.
You could, if you were desperate, burn your furniture and
floorboards. But this would not last long. Sooner or later
you would have to bring in a source of heat-coal, gas, oil,
electricity-from outside. There is nothing you can
do inside a closed system to reduce its mixed-upness.
Bringing
in heat from outside is fine for you. But it is not so good
for the world as a whole. Every time you heat your house you
help to increase the mixed-upness of the world. One day all
the worlds sources of heat-coal, and oil, and natural gas,
and uranium for atomic power stations, and any other sources
we may yet discover-will all be used up. The earths mixed-upness
will have become complete.
There
will then be only one hope for the future. We shall have to
bring in heat from outside. This would mean relying on the
sun as our only source of heat.
But
the sun is losing weight at a tremendous rate. It is millions
of tons lighter now than when you started reading this chapter.
One day the suns resources will all be finished. Then the
mixed-upness of the solar system will have reached its limit.
After
that we might, if we were clever enough, bring in energy from
outside the solar system. But this would only increase the
mixedupness of the universe as a whole. Eventually the mixed-upness
of the whole universe would be complete.
And
that would be that.
I
have been speaking as if Man were solely responsible for increasing
the mixed-upness of the universe. In fact he is only making
a very small contribution to Natures own programme. The universe
is increasing its own mixed-upness by natural processes at
a fantastic rate, without any help from us.
This
means that the universe can be likened to a wrist watch, steadily
ticking away. There are, however, two very different theories
as to what kind of a wrist watch it is. Some scientists regard
it as being like an ordinary wrist watch, that was wound up
once and will go on running down until it stops. A second
group of scientists think of it as more like a self-winding
watch, that will go on ticking away for ever.
But
in both theories the scientists cannot quite get away from
the need for a Creator. In both theories they still use the
word "creation", despite themselves.
The
first theory is often called the theory of the "Big Bang
Universe". According to this theory there must have been
a time, long ago, when the "watch" was first "wound
up"; that is, when the universe was at its starting point,
as un-mixed-up as it could possibly be. One leading adherent
to this theory, Professor A. R. Ubbelohde of London University,
shows no sign of wanting to uphold a belief in God. Yet in
a book dealing with this topic, he describes the universes
starting point as: "The Heat Birth of the world, in a
kind of luminous dawn of creation in time."25
In
another part of the same book he discusses whether we
might ever be able to reverse the universal tendency towards
increasing mixed-upness. By a highly mathematical argument
he shows that we cannot, but that it might be done by "intelligent
beings not dependent on our ordinary methods."26
Apart
from the use of the plural, this reads like an excellent definition
of God. "Intelligent beings not dependent on our methods",
indeed! How determined to resist the obvious can you get?
Why cant the Professor say, "The Creator could do it"?
The
other theory of the universe is officially called the "Steady-State
Universe" theory. But, in practice, its adherents prefer
to use a more descriptive title: "The Continuous-Creation
Universe".27
This
theory proposes that, to keep the mixed-upness of the universe
constant, fresh matter is being created throughout the universe
all the time. The amount needed would be vast. The Astronomer
Royal estimated it at the equivalent of 50,000 bodies the
size of our sun, being created every second.28 Yet
the theory does not explain how this matter could be created,
or what (or who) is doing the creation.
Which
takes more faith? To believe in a theory like this? Or to
believe that "In the beginning God created the heaven
and the earth"?
A
Six-Day Job?
"Its
not the actual fact of creation that bothers me," said
Larry. "I can accept that easily enough. What I cant
swallow is the teaching of Genesis that God did the whole
job in six days, just a few thousand years ago."
A
great many people will sympathise with Larry. If Genesis really
did teach this, then it would be in head-on collision with
the facts of science. And by, "facts of science",
I mean facts; not just theories, or opinions, but well established
facts.
Many
of the statements trotted out by scientists about prehistoric
events are only opinions. I shall be discussing some of these
in the next two chapters, where the origin of life will be
considered.
But
we cannot treat the facts of geology like this. Many lines
of evidence show that the earth is immensely old. Much of
this evidence is too technical to discuss here. Some of it
is extremely simple.
The
earths crust abounds in fossils. These are pieces of rock
bearing traces of plant or animal life. For instance, coal
is fossilised vegetation. Although only a small part of the
earths crust has been explored, a million million tons of
coal have already been discovered.
That
may not sound very much, but it is actually enough to provide
half a bucketful for every square yard of the earths surface.
And a far greater quantity of coal must still lie undiscovered.
It is obvious that countless generations of plants and animals
must have lived and died to produce all the fossils in the
earth.
Some
Christian writers have disputed this. They have argued that
perhaps all these fossils were produced at one time, either
at the time of the Flood or of some earlier worldwide disaster.
But this is quite impossible. Coal is almost pure carbon,
whilst vegetation contains only a small proportion of carbon.
Consequently it must have taken something like a ton of vegetation
to produce a hundredweight of coal. Even if Noah had lived
when the earth was completely covered with dense jungle, there
would still not have been nearly enough vegetation in his
world to produce all the coal that exists today.
Others
have suggested that God created all these fossils just to
mislead scientists. This obviously will not do. As one Christian
writer has said about this, "God is not the Author of
a lie-even a white lie."29
There
is a better way to approach the problem. That is, to accept
the evidence that the earth is many millions of years old,
and then to have another look at Genesis to see what it really
does tell us.
We
must begin by realising that Genesis was never intended to
teach science. It was written in very simple language, to
teach some profound truths to all mankind. Those simple words
made sense to the Hebrews in the dawn of civilisation. The
marvel is that they still make a very favourable impression
on many scientists today.
The
simplicity of the language is itself remarkable. It is said
that the vocabulary of Genesis 1 contains only seventy-six
root words, in the original Hebrew.30 Just what is this simple
language trying to tell us?
We
have already had a number of lessons in not jumping to conclusions.
Hebrew is a highly figurative language, full of word-pictures
and figures of speech which are not intended to be taken literally.
Hebrew idiom is quite different from English idiom.
So
there is no simple answer to the question, "What does
Genesis 1 teach?" The general picture is quite clear.
It teaches that God created the universe and everything in
it. But when we try to understand the details, various possibilities
arise.
One
suggestion is that the chapter describes a re-creation, not
the original creation of the earth. It begins with a picture
of an earth "without form and void". This expression
is used by Jeremiah in a passage where he is talking about
a land brought to destruction.31 So, this theory suggests,
the earth was teeming with life in earlier geological ages,
and then, for some reason, God wiped everything out. Then
He restored it to working order, as described in Genesis 1.
There
are many variations on this theme. It has fairly recently
been advocated by Dr. L. M. Davies, a geologist with high
qualifications.32 He argued that the withdrawal of the suns
light brought on a sort of "super ice age", long
before the ice ages of recent times. This would have destroyed
every living thing, and set the stage for the events described
in Genesis I.
When
is a Day Not a Day?
There
are two major objections to all these "re-creation"
theories. First, they depend upon a global disaster so tremendous
as to wipe out every vestige of life on earth-and yet so gentle
as to have left no record to show geologists that it ever
occurred.
Secondly,
Genesis 1 does not seem like a re-creation story. It reads
like a record of the entire creation as we know it. In the
days when scientists were not ashamed to refer to the Bible,
one wrote in a leading scientific journal:
"The
order in which the flora and fauna are said, by the Mosaic
account [the Genesis story, written by Moses] to have appeared
upon the earth, corresponds with that which the theory of
Evolution requires, and the evidence of geology proves."33
This
is broadly, though not precisely, true. We must also explain
the appearance of the sun, moon and stars on the "fourth
day" of Genesis
-that
is, about half way through the work of creation. This can
be done fairly simply. It probably means that they became
visible at that time, through the thinning mists of the cooling
earths atmosphere.
The
order of events in Genesis 1 then becomes remarkably close
to the order that a modern geologist would draw up. Many scientists
have been deeply impressed by this similarity. It seems far
too great to be a mere coincidence. No, it seems almost undeniable
that Genesis 1 is a broad picture of the entire geological
history of the earth-and a remarkably accurate one, at that.
In
that case, what are we going to do about those six days?
In
our day and age that should present no problem. (Whats that-"our
day and age"? Evidently here is one expression
where a day is not a day.)
Now
consider Genesis 2: 4, which concludes the record of creation
with a one-sentence summary:
"
These are the generations (the story) of the heavens and of
the earth when they were created, in the day that the
Lord God made the earth and the heavens."
So
Genesis evidently uses "day" in a figurative sense.
The whole process took six days. Yet those six days added
up to only one day. If a day always means a day, then this
arithmetic becomes impossible. But if a day means "a
period", everything makes sense.
Moreover,
during the first five-and-a-bit of those six days there were
no men or women upon the earth. Those "days", therefore,
are unlikely to have been days measured on a human scale.
They must surely have been days measured on Gods scale-and
those are very different from the days we know.
In
two places the Bible warns us that Gods time scale is far
greater than ours. Peter says that "one day is with the
Lord as a thousand years, and a thousand years as one day."34
Moses
stretches out the time scale still further, when he says that
"a thousand years in Thy (Gods) sight are . . . as a
watch in the night."35
These
statements are obviously not meant to be taken as literal
scales, like the "one inch to one mile" of an Ordnance
Survey map. They are merely warnings, expressed in poetic
language, that the eternal God is not bound by the same time
scale as ourselves. So one way of solving our problem is to
say that the world was created in six "divine days".
And those days can be as long as the geologists want to make
them.
But
there is an even better way of viewing Genesis 1. The "days"
may not have been the actual days when God did the work
of creation. They could have been the days on which God
revealed the story of creation to one of His inspired
historians. This idea goes back to a nineteenth-century German,
J. H. Kurtz, and has been worked Out in great detail by a
modern archaeologist.36
If
we view Genesis 1 in this way, practically all the problems
disappear. It harmonises with the teaching of the rest of
the Bible. It enables every scientist to hold up his head
and say, as did the first astronauts ever to approach the
moon: "IN THE BEGINNING, GOD CREATED THE HEAVEN AND THE
EARTH."37
To
many a scientist this not only makes sense. It solves a problem
that science cannot touch.
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