Yes, I know the universe was not created in seven days (or even six). And?
You asked for something the Bible says which was proved wrong. I gave you something.
No, you didn't.
Yes he did!
No, he did not.
Have you never taken part in any discussions on Genesis on this board or the BBC boards, Floo?
Plenty I suppose, I really don't remember as they aren't exactly memorable!
But you are aware that many Christians (who see themselves are holding to the inerrancy and authority of the Scriptures), from at least as far back as Origen, have understood the early chapters of Genesis to include symbolism?
But I'm afraid Leonard's post below still holds true:
Leonard wrote:
Nor do you or anybody else. The Bible contains fact and fiction and nobody, but NOBODY knows which is which in every verse.
The fact that Origen's approach involved a multi-layered approach to the scriptures, often involving several levels of symbolism*, and the fact that this in turn reflects a long-established rabbinic approach to scripture, does not in itself tell us definitively that that is how the original writer of Genesis 1 intended the original text to be interpreted. We simply cannot know - neither you nor I nor anybody were there looking over the scribe's shoulder and holding daily conversations with him as to what he meant.
You know there is a field of scholarship that refers to this writer as the
Priestly Author, who is also thought to have written most of Leviticus. This author shows an intensely pedantic approach to times and dates and every other bloody thing concerning Jewish life - so there exists the strong possibility that when he said "Days", he meant days, not vast periods of time.
However, as I said - we can't possibly know for sure. What we do know is that the religious troglodytes out there who think the world and life on it was created in six days are totally wrong.
*This 'symbolic' approach of course can go on endlessly, and is very useful if you take an inerrant view of scripture, and you have to explain away certain passages which appear to have a 'scientific' feel to them. When the findings of science eventually do away with any possibility that such scriptures could have any literal sense to them - just say "It's all symbolic" - and hey presto! the authority of scripture is rescued yet again.
Better to admit that perhaps this is what those ancient peoples thought then, and that
in these respects they were wrong. That is not to say there are not other things to be learned still from ancient scripture.