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Lesson 20 (Intermediate Lesson 10)
Creation vs. Evolution - Part II
Apologetics Press Intermediate Christian Evidences Correspondence Course
Bert Thompson, Ph.D. and Eric Lyons, M.Min
DOES THE BIBLE LEAVE ROOM FOR EVOLUTION?
Let’s face it. It is a very unpopular idea in science to suggest that God
created the Universe. And it is even more unpopular to suggest that
He did it in six literal, 24-hour days. After all, according to many scientists
the Universe took billions of years to form, and thus in their view it would
be preposterous to believe that it was created in just six days. As a result of
high-pressure scientific intimidation, and because of the popular prevailing
idea of an ancient Cosmos, many people have tried to find ways to fit evolution
and its billions-of-years time frame into the biblical account of Creation.
In essence, they want to continue to say that they believe in God and the
Bible as His Word, but they also want to say that they believe in certain portions
of evolutionary theory as well. As the old saying goes, they want to “have their cake and eat it, too.” So the question arises: Can both the Bible
and evolution be true? [The standard textbook definition of evolution excludes
God since it states that: (a) the Universe is self-contained (and thus
could not have been created by any outside force); and (b) evolution itself is
a completely natural process. Therefore, those who claim to believe in both
evolution and the Bible generally are known as “theistic evolutionists.”
Theistic (which derives from theos, the Greek word for God) evolution is
the view which suggests that God started the process and then let evolution
take over from there.]
The first two chapters of the Bible reveal how God—in six days—created
the heavens, the Earth, and all of the animals, plants, and humans that existed.
Exodus 20:11 sums it up like this: “For in six days the Lord made the
heavens and the earth, the sea, and all that is in them, and rested the seventh
day.” The Bible clearly states that everything in the Universe, whether in
the heavens or on the Earth, was created in those six days. And so it is here
that the Bible and evolution encounter their first major conflict. Evolution
claims that everything in the Universe came into being by a slow, gradual
process that took billions of years; the Bible states that it took only six days.
Obviously, both concepts cannot be true.
In order to accommodate the Bible to an evolutionary scheme, billions of
years somehow must be inserted into the biblical record. But where, exactly,
can this vast amount of time be placed to guarantee such antiquity?
There are only three possible options. The time needed to guarantee an old
Earth might be placed: (a) before the creation week; (b) during the creation
week; or (c) after the creation week. Let us explore each of these options.
Time Before the Creation Week: The Gap Theory
Those who attempt to place the billions of years necessary for evolution
before the creation week generally advocate what has come to be known as
the Gap Theory. This theory suggests that a vast “gap” of time (of billions of
years) should be inserted between Genesis 1:1 and Genesis 1:2. During this
time God supposedly created a fully functional Earth complete with animals,
plants, and even humans who lived before Adam. That creation, the theory
suggests, was destroyed as the result of a rebellion fomented on Earth
by Satan. The raging war between Satan and God supposedly left this planet“without form and void” (Genesis 1:2), which, it is claimed, accounts for the
myriad of fossils present in the Earth. Then, starting in Genesis 1:2, God “recreated”
(or “restored”) the Earth in six literal, 24-hour days. Thus, Genesis
1 is the story of an original, perfect creation, a judgment and ruination
(the Earth in its “without form and void” state), and a re-creation.
While at first glance this may appear to be an alluring theory, it cannot
possibly be true if the biblical record is taken at face value. First, the Gap Theory
blatantly contradicts Exodus 20:11: “For in six days the Lord made the
heavens and the earth, the sea, and all that is in them, and rested the seventh
day.” If God made everything in six days, how many things did He
make before those days? The answer, of course, is none.
Second, there is no biblical evidence whatsoever to substantiate the claim
that Satan’s rebellion against God took place on the Earth. The idea of a so called
cataclysm that destroyed the initial Earth is not supported by an appeal
to Scripture, but instead is a concept that has been imposed on Scripture
from outside sources by those attempting to defend the necessity and
validity of the Gap Theory.
Finally, the Gap Theory is false because it implies that humans died before
Adam and Eve. The inspired apostle Paul observed that death entered this
world as a result of Adam’s sin (1 Corinthians 15:21; Romans 5:12; 8:20-
22). Paul also stated that Adam was the first man (1 Corinthians 15:45).
Yet, if the Gap Theory is correct, there existed a band of sinful people who
lived many years before Adam. Additionally, Moses recorded in Genesis 1:31
that everything God had created was “very good”—a very strained interpretation
if the Earth and its inhabitants already had been destroyed. The simple
fact of the matter is that Paul and the Gap Theory cannot both be right.
A word of caution is in order here, however. In their attempts to oppose
evolution and to make the case for the biblical account of origins, some creationists
(who no doubt are well intentioned) have misinterpreted, and thus
misapplied, the teachings of two important New Testament passages. The first
of those passages is Romans 5:12-14.
Therefore, just as through one man sin entered the world, and death through sin, and thus death spread to all men, because all sinned. For until the law, sin was in the world, but sin is not imputed when there is no law. Nevertheless death reigned from Adam to Moses, even over those who had not sinned according to the likeness of the transgression of Adam, who is a type of Him who was to come.
The second passage is 1 Corinthians 15:20-22:
But now Christ is risen from the dead, and has become the firstfruits of those who have fallen asleep. For since by man came death, by Man also came the resurrection of the dead. For as in Adam all die, even so in Christ all shall be made alive.
The portions of these two verses (shown in bold type) that are emphasized
by certain creationists stress the fact that death entered the world as a result
of man’s sin. The argument set forth, therefore, is as follows. Gap theorists
suggests that there were billions of years of happenstance, contingency,
incredible waste, death, pain, and horror after God’s initial creation. The
Bible states quite specifically, however, that human death did not exist until
Adam and Eve sinned against God. The Gap theorist’s scenario, therefore, is
apodictically impossible, because it requires the death of untold thousands
of species of plants, animals, and humans.
But is it correct to say that there was absolutely no death of any kind prior to Adam and Eve’s sin? No, it is not. To say that there was no human death prior to the fall of man is to make a perfectly biblical statement. The passages
in Romans 5 and 1 Corinthians 15 make that crystal clear. However, using
those same scriptures to suggest that not even plants or animals could die
ignores the specific context of each of the passages and is a serious abuse of
the texts under consideration. Paul’s presentation in Romans 5:12-14 and 1
Corinthians 15:20-22 had nothing whatsoever to do with the death of either
plants or animals. Rather, an examination of the two passages reveals that, in the context, he was discussing only the death of humans—a death
which resulted from the tragic events that transpired in the Garden of Eden
after Adam and Eve’s willful sin.
Time During the Creation Week: The Day-Age Theory
Because of the dismal failure of the Gap Theory to provide an adequate
means of inserting billions of years into the Genesis record, some have suggested
that perhaps the days discussed in Genesis 1 were not literal 24-hour
periods but instead were long eons of times during which evolution could
have taken place (a concept known as the Day-Age Theory). After all, we are
told, the word translated “day” in Genesis can have up to seven different
meanings, and on rare occasions even can refer to a long period of time.
Thus, according to proponents of the Day-Age Theory, the creation week
was seven long spans of time that consisted of millions or billions of years
each. Is that the case? How long were the days of the creation week, really?
A straightforward reading of the text in Genesis 1 indicates that Moses
wanted his readers to understand, in no uncertain terms, that the six days
of creation were literal 24-hour periods. The available evidence reveals several
reasons why we can know that these days were not millions or billions
of years, but rather were approximately the same kind of days we experience
currently. First, whenever the Hebrew word translated as “day” (yom)
is preceded by a numeral (in non-prophetical passages such as Genesis 1),
it always carries the meaning of a 24-hour day. Second, whenever the
word “day” appears in the plural form (yamim) in non-prophetical literature,
it always means a literal day. In fact, the Old Testament uses yamim in this manner more than 700 times, and it always means a literal day in its
non-prophetic usage. Therefore, when Exodus 20:11 states: “For in six days (yamim) the Lord made the heavens and the earth,” there can be absolutely
no doubt that the text means six literal days.
Third, yom is both used and defined in Genesis 1:5. “God called the light
Day, and the darkness he called Night. So the evening and the morning were the first day” (emp. added). The word yom accompanies the words“evening” and “morning” over 100 times in non-prophetical passages in
the Old Testament, and each time it refers to an obvious 24-hour day.
Fourth, if the “days” of Genesis were not days at all, but long geological
periods, then a problem of no little consequence arises in the field of botany.
Plants came into existence on the third day (Genesis 1:9-13). If the days of
Genesis 1 were long geological ages, how did the plant life survive millions of
years of total darkness? Also, how would the plants that depend on insects
for pollination have survived the supposed millions or billions of years between“day” three and “day” five (when insects were created)?
Fifth, while Jesus was on the Earth He taught that man and woman were
here “from the beginning of creation” (Mark 10:6; cf. Matthew 19:4). Paul affirmed
this same sentiment in Romans 1:20-21, where he stated that man and
woman have been here “from the beginning of the creation” when they were“perceiving the things that were made.” The Day-Age Theory, on the other
hand, places man at the end of billions of years of geologic time. Both cannot
be true!
Sixth, in Genesis 1:14, Moses stated regarding the Sun, Moon, and stars:“Then God said, ‘Let there be lights in the heavens to divide the day from the
night; and let them be for signs and for seasons, for days and for years.’” If
the “days” were millions or billions of years, then, pray tell, what would the“years” have been?
Finally, we need to ask the question: If God had wanted us to know that
He created the world in six literal days, what other words could He have used
than the ones He did? Or if we wanted to explain to someone else that God created everything in a literal six days, what words would we use? The answer,
of course, is that both God and we would use the exact words that appear
in Genesis 1. The author of Genesis had other ways to say that the periods
were long eons of time. He could have employed the Hebrew word
dôr, which means a long period of time. But he did not; instead he used the
word day, modified it with the phrase “evening and morning,” put numerals
before it, and in Exodus 20:11 made it plural. He used practically every
means at his disposal to show that the days were not long periods of time but
were literal 24-hour periods. Thus, the idea that the billions of years needed
for evolution occurred during creation week simply cannot be defended.
You can trust your Bible when it records: “For in six days [not six billion years—BT/EL] the Lord made the heavens and the earth, the sea, and all that is
in them, and rested the seventh day” (Exodus 20:11).
But what about 2 Peter 3:8? Doesn't it indicate that “with the Lord one
day is as a thousand years and a thousand years as one day.” Isn't this New
Testament passage teaching that the days of Genesis could have been very
long periods of time? No, it is not. Let us consider the passage in its appropriate
context. In 2 Peter 3:8, the apostle’s discussion has nothing to do with
the length of the days in Genesis 1. Rather, he is discussing the “last days”
(3:3; i.e., the Christian dispensation) and Christ’s Second Coming. Some,
said Peter, would suggest that since Christ had not returned already, then
He was not going to return—ever! But Peter reminded his readers that God
is not bound by time. He can do more in one day than humans can do in a
thousand years, or, conversely, He may wait a thousand years to do what
humans wish He would do in a day. Nevertheless, God keeps His promises
(3:9). It is interesting to note, is it not, that from a reading of the text, God
recognizes the difference between an earthly day and an earthly thousand
years. It also is interesting to note that Peter did not say that a day is a thousand
years or a thousand years is a day, but that a day is “as” a thousand
years and a thousand years is “as” a day. God always has recognized the
difference between an earthly day, month, and year. 2 Peter 3:8 proves that
He is able to communicate the difference to human beings. What did He say
the time periods in Genesis 1 were? Days!
After the Creation Week
We have seen that the time needed for evolution to take place cannot be
placed before the creation week because the Bible says that God created
everything in six days.We also have seen that vast amounts of time cannot
be placed during the six days of creation because they were literal, 24-hour
periods. The only possible place left for the eons of time, then, is after the
creation week.
Those who wish to place the billions of years needed to accommodate
evolutionary geology after the creation week are few and far between, because
the Bible contains lengthy and extensive genealogies that extend all
the way back to Adam. And one of the messages of those genealogies is that
man has been on the Earth since the beginning, and that beginning
was not very long ago.
In one sense, the Bible tells us exactly how old the Earth is. In Mark 10:6,
Jesus stated that “from the beginning of the creation, God made them male
and female.” How long have humans been on this Earth? Jesus said “from
the beginning of the creation.” Genesis 1:26-31 explains that God chose the
sixth day of the creation week to form mankind from the dust of the ground.
He chose the first day to construct the Earth. Thus, the Earth is exactly five
days older than humanity!
So, in order to determine the age of the Earth, we must determine how
long man has been here—which is not as difficult as it may seem. Speaking
in round figures, how long has it been since Jesus Christ visited the Earth?
Answer: about 2,000 years. Secular history volunteers that piece of information
via its designation of dates as “A.D.” (i.e., anno Domini, meaning “in the year of the Lord”). Next, we must determine how many years came
between Jesus and Abraham. Fortunately, secular history also volunteers
that figure, which turns out to be around 2,000 years. These two figures can
be obtained from practically any secular history book.
The final number we must uncover is the number of years between Abraham
and Adam. Once we know this figure, simple addition of the three will
give us the approximate age of the Earth. Note, however, that the figure representing
the period between Abraham and Adam cannot be retrieved from
secular history (nor should we expect it to be!), since the Great Flood during
Noah’s day destroyed most, if not all, of the records pertaining to that
time period. Then how can the figure be obtained?
In Luke 3, the physician/writer listed 55 generations between Jesus and
Abraham—a time frame archaeology has determined to be approximately
2,000 years. In that same chapter, Luke documented that there were only
20 generations between Abraham and Adam. But how much time, total, do
those twenty generations cover? Since Genesis 5 and 11 list the ages of the
fathers at the time of the births of their sons between Abraham and Adam, it is
a simple matter to calculate the approximate number of years involved—a
figure that turns out to be around 2,000. In chart form the information appears
as follows:
| 1. Present time to Jesus | 2,000 years |
| 2. Jesus to Abraham | 2,000 years (55 generations) |
| 3. Abraham to Adam | 2,000 years (20 generations) |
The fact that the 55 generations between Jesus and Abraham cover 2,000
years, while only 20 generations between Abraham and Adam cover the
same amount of time, is explained quite easily on the basis of the vast ages of
the patriarchs (like Methuselah, for example, who lived 969 years).
Some have argued that the genealogies in Genesis 5 cannot be used to
demonstrate the approximate age of the Earth because they are riddled with
huge gaps. But in Jude 14, the writer noted that Enoch was “the seventh
from Adam” (he is listed exactly seventh in Genesis 5:21). Therefore, we know
that there are no gaps between the first seven patriarchs, because Jude confirmed
the accuracy of the Old Testament in this regard. That leaves only 13
generations with potential gaps between them. But in order to accommodate
the evolutionary scenario which suggests that man has been on the
Earth (in one form or another) approximately 3.5 million years, you would
need to insert over 290,000 years between each of the 13 generations. It
does not take a wealth of either Bible knowledge or common sense to see
that this quickly becomes ludicrous. Who could believe that the first seven
of these generations are so exact, while the remaining 13 contain “gaps” of
over a quarter of a million years? What type of biblical exegesis is that?
While it may be true on the one hand to say that an exact age of the Earth
is unobtainable from the information contained within the genealogies, at the
same time it is important to note that—using the best information available
to us from Scripture—the genealogies hardly can be extended to anything
much beyond 6,000 to 7,000 years. For someone to suggest that the genealogies
do not contain legitimate chronological information, or that the genealogies
somehow are so full of gaps as to render them useless, is to misrepresent
the case and distort the facts.
CONCLUSION
Numerous theories have been concocted to allow people to believe in evolution and yet still try to maintain a belief in the Bible as God’sWord. However, it soon becomes clear that either the Bible is true or evolution is true, but they cannot both be true because their teachings are contradictory. A person cannot believe both the Bible and evolution, and remain consistent. It is an “either…or” decision, not a “both…and.” Scientific theories change, but “the Word of the Lord endures forever” (1 Peter 1:25).
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