Berserk
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recoverer,
I would say "no" but let me illustrate a way in which I think you raise a valid issue. The Genesis story of the 7 days of creation (1:1-2:4) is a piece of poetry designed for liturgical worship in the Jerusalem Temple. The Hebrew word for "day" can mean "an age". The sun is not created until the 4th "day." That in itself rules out the notion of 24-hour days of creation. Each of the first 6 days concludes with the liturgical phrase, "Even came, morning followed--the first (second, etc.) day." But this phrase is omitted from the 7th day, the Sabbath rest. This implies that we are still in the 7th day of creation. So Genesis makes the valid point that creation proceeds in stages, but not necessarily exactly 7 stages. The number 7 is used here to justify the Jewish practice of Sabbath rest on the 7th day.
Also, consider this. In the ancient Near East, it was widely believed that the stars are affixed to a dome which separates the waters above from the waters below. So they imagine "waters" to fill what we know to be outer space. God does not interfere with their scientific naivite. But notice how Genesis reads if we read "outer space" where the Bible places waters. "And the wind of God moved over the waters (= outer space). Then God said, `Let there be light (Genesis 1:2-3).'" Wind in outers pace implies an explosion resulting in light--a poetic image of the Big Bang. Notice also that God does not simply speak vegation and animal life into being. Instead, we are told, "Then God said, Let the earth bring forth (1:11, 24)" vegetation and animal life. This image assumes the Near Eastern image of the Earth Mother, the ancient equivalent of Mother Nature. Thus, in a sense, God steps aside and let's Mother Nature evolve life. Also, notice that. like modern evolutionary theory, Genesis teaches that life begins in the sea and proceeds through birds, mammals, and finally humans. The creation of humanity in God's image (1: 26-27) is a poetic way of saying that "we are destined to "participate in the divine nature (2 Peter 1:4) and in that sense we can be considered sparks of divinity.
In Proverbs 8:30, Wisdom (an equivalent of Mother Nature) speaks poetically about its role in creation:
"I was beside the master craftsman, delighting Him day after day, ever at play in His presence, at play everywhere on His earth."
The word "play" here implies a pointlessness or randomness that can be understood as functionally equivalent to the evolutionary principle of random selection. In a poetic prophetic text, God reveals to Isaiah that the earth is a "circle" (Isaiah 40:22). Profound scientific insights can be detected in biblical creation theology as long as we take it poetically rather than literally. The story of Adam and Eve (2:4b- 3:24) is a totally separate creation myth designed to teach the essence of good and evil but absurd if taken as literal history.
Moses leads the Israelites across the divided sea of reeds, a lake near their place of captivity, not the Red Sea. The Hebrew literally means 'sea of reeds" and there are countless reeds by the lake in question, but none by the Red Sea. This lake divides about once a century through a combination of wind and tide. The miracle is the synchronicity of this rare event happening just when the fleeing Israelites need it to escape the Egyptian army. Thereafter, "sea" (including the Sea of Galilee in the Gospels) becomes a symbol of the forces of chaos in our lives. The Israelites are forced to survive decades in the Sinai wilderness. Wllderness later becomes a biblical symbol for the dry periods of our spiritual quest or for what Catholic mystics call "the dark night of the soul."
The Gospels document real miracles performed by Jesus, but not to provide historically accurate information about the "stunts" Jesus performed. Rather, details of Jesus' miracles are preserved that allow these true stories to function like parables. For example, when Jesus' heals the blind, the story is shaped to make a point about spiritual blindness.
Don
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