(March 17, 2015 at 8:19 pm)Jenny A Wrote:On creation Day 4, the sun, moon, and stars became distinctly visible on the earth’s surface for the first time. The earth’s sky prior to day 4 would have had a heavy overcast appearance (but translucent) of carbon dioxide and water vapor. Plant growth increasing consumption of this carbon dioxide & water vapor resulted in the atmospheric transformation from translucent (had allowed electromagnetic non-visible sunlight spectrum to reach the earth’s surface to provide energy for photosynthesis) to a transparent atmosphere. Light created before Day 4, visible on earth on day 4. Again, after the first verse 'In the Beginning....' the frame of reference changes from the cosmos, to the earth for all references to 'days'.(March 16, 2015 at 1:13 am)snowtracks Wrote: Even the English word 'day' requires context, i.e., " in their grandfather's day", or "day of the dinosaurs". The creation passages are completely harmonious with science when the Hebrew word 'Yom' is correctly interpreted in context as 'a long but finite period of time'.
Day Four: God add light to vault in the sky, the sun and moon respectively, also the stars. Also he separated day from night. Apparently they were all mixed up before. Ooops, didn't the stars come before the earth and the moon later yet? Oh and how do you get vegetation before the sun?
Atheist Credo: A universe by chance that also just happened to admit the observer by chance.