arieh0310:
Scripture also seems to be clear about ex nihilo:
John 1:3 Through him all things were made; without him nothing was made that has been made.
2 Maccabees 7:28 “Son, look upon heaven and earth, and all that is in them: and consider that God made them out of nothing”
Romans 11:36. For of him, and by him, and in him, are all things: to him be glory for ever. Amen.
Isaiah 44:24. Thus saith the Lord thy redeemer, and thy maker, from the womb: I am the Lord, that make all things, that alone stretch out the heavens, that established the earth, and there is none with me.
All but the 2 Maccabees scripture align perfectly with creation ex materia. Many Biblical scholars including even some counter-LDS protestant scholars are acknowledging that the Bible does not authoritatively speak one way or the other about creation ex nihilo. In fact most Biblical scholars are acknowledging that Genesis does speak of creation from pre-existing matter.
Since I have this on my computer already here is what May says about 2 Macc 7:28.
Gerard May was quite clear about these passages.
Creatio ex Nihilo:
The best known, constantly brought forward as the earliest evidence of the conceptual formulation of the doctrine of creation ex nihilo, is 2 Maccabees 7:28. The need for caution in evaluating this is apparent from the context in which there is talk of creation ‘out of nothing’. There is here no theoretical disquisition on the nature of the creation process, but a paraenetic reference to God’s creative power: the mother of seven martyrs calls her youngest son to steadfastness by holding before his eyes that God, who has shown his might by creating the world and mankind ‘out of non-being’, will ‘in time of mercy’ awaken the righteous from death. A position on the problem of matter is clearly not to be expected in this context. The text implies no more than the conception that the world came into existence through the sovereign creative act of God, and that it previously was not there.
In addition to this another German scholar translates the passage:
Schmuttermayr:
“not out of things being, i.e. already existent individual things”
May points out that those who embraced creation from eternal matter regularly spoke of creation “out of non-being.”
Charity, TOm