JGS, I'm not asking why the author didn't explicate. I'm asking why there are inconsistencies. If you actually went through my points one by one, then we could have a discussion here. Why did birds exist before land animals? Why did water exist before land? Etc. It would be great to have these addressed. I don't know how the "there was darkness on the surface" gets by any of these issues.
According to most polls, YEC is a prevalent view, even when looking at the general public at large.
They are comparing the developement of man not YEC. Further the majority believe that God had a hand in creating man which I have no argument with and it's a pretty close margin between the two polls about whether man evolved over time with God's help or was simply flat out created. Not exactly an overwhelming majority.
As I look further down the link it becomes even more clear that it backs up what I say, especially this one:
1999: Beliefs among conservative Christians:
In 1999-NOV, Focus on the Family, a Fundamentalist Christian agency, concluded a poll of their web site visitors concerning their beliefs, mainly about age of the earth. Results were:
God created the universe, but I don't know when: 46%
God created the universe thousands of years ago: 43%
God created the universe billions of years ago: 10%
Life came into being and evolved on its own: 1%
I don't have a clue: 0.4% 6
So 56% of Christian Conservatives have a hard time believing the earth and the universe were created thousands of years ago and that was 11 years ago. Believe it or not, conservative Christians are not the only Christians out there. Once again, if you knew that, it wold make understanding a Christian's beliefs a whole lot easier. But feel free to continue telling me what I believe.
Mgoblue201 said:
It doesn't matter how many times you mention something else that occurred in another place in the Bible (which you yourself haven't even quoted yet) if the contextual clues from the first chapter of Genesis itself makes it obvious that it is talking about a literal seven days. There has to be a good reason to apply it in this case, and you just haven't mentioned any. At best it is gross negligence on the author's part based on the prior figure of how many people still believe it.
Lastly, your run around on the topic of the origins of life are exaspirating. Either you accept the evidence we have now or don't. But don't claim that there is absolutely nothing.
Hmmm...Maybe if I cap this:
YOU HAVE NOT PROVIDED EVIDENCE. STOP SAYING YOU HAVE. SINCE YOU HAVEN'T THEN OF COURSE I DON'T ACCEPT IT.
You are correct. I avoid quoting because I hate being accused of cherry picking. Each verse must stand for itself but you have the whole of science to back up a fictional idea. It is usually completely worthless because I know the person I'm quoting to won't actually bother to consider it as has been the case throughout this entire discussion. You have gotten the verses you've read off to me wrong and I have acknowledged when I was incorrect.
What exactly is the point of quoting from a book you don't believe in? If you ask I'll provide some (You haven't yet have you? If you have I apologize for missing it). Otherwise, I've got better things to do with my time than wasting my horrible typing skills.
Why it would be odd for a person that has no time constraints whatsoever to be bound by a very human time constraint just because the man he chose to write Genesis wasn't a literalist

lol ) is beyond me.
But just like the other fallacies made by you and others about what Genesis says, all you had to do was read the first few chapters better to figure out what would be a no brainer regarding my views unstead of fake teaching me about a book I already know.
Things we know from science and from what the Bible tells us if we actually read it. I'm mixing them together:
-The universe is billions of years old based on the time light travels
-The earth is billions of years old
-God is timeless
-There is no exact time reference in the first few chapters of Genesis, including the warning to Adam that he was going to die the day he ate the fruit.
-That the seventh day never ended unless the writer was too stupid to remember that too.
-The writer was a human being living in ancient times prior to microscopes and telescopes &, what the heck, kitchen sinks since you or someone else will probably throw that in there too eventually.
- The Bible was not written in English. Do you know the Hebrew word for day used here? Maybe you should.
Now why exactly is it impossible to accept my view of creation when the signals point to it - unless you don't believe in God in the first place? Your lack of belief is a fair position and one I couldn't care less about. Why not view mine the same way?
One last point about this birds and animals thing which is kind of a pointless argument if looked at from your viewpoint. After all, would any evolutionary process be happening in a literal 24 hour period in the first place? So why does it matter if this is an error?
However, wiki'ing the info from a purely evolutionary timeline revealed a small gap between the 3 groups- reptiles, birds, & mammals. However, since this is a creation account & not a purely evolutionary timeline, why would someone find it odd that God
created things in the order listed?
I think I've said enough that at this point I can just copy and paste the answers!