I am extremely hesitant to affirm or deny any biblical account, even those in the OT, because they reflect the imposition of modern understandings on events about which we actually know little or nothing.
I have read that for centuries, and including this one, that some have consigned the creation story to the realm of “myth” for reasons that simply reflected their understandings of physics.
For example, “let there be light” was consigned to myth because in Genesis it precedes the creation of the sun and stars. They couldn’t be light previously, they opined, because light comes from stars. But in fairly recent times, virtually all astrophysicists have come to accept the “Big Bang” theory, in which a tiny “speck” of immensely intense energy exploded and expanded. So, according to that, light, being energy, would have preceded the formation of stars, which are composed of matter…of atoms that didn’t even exist for a considerable time after the Big Bang. That’s not me or the interpretation of some biblical exegete. It’s physics. Light preceded the stars.
And “darkness was on the face of the deep” preceding the creation of the world. What was “the deep”? Was it the oceans, as some have thought, or was it the “deep” of a nothing that didn’t even contain a “space” that is more and more considered to be a “thing” rather than the “nothing” we have thought it to be.
And “the waters” over which the Spirit of God moved? Was it H2O in that passage? Some astrophysicists assert (with plenty of high-end math behind them) that the “Big Bang” was generated by the partial collision of two or more billowing “membranes” which are more or less equivalent to dimensions. What, indeed, was the vision or mental image presented to the writer of Genesis?
What is all of that? Fact is, we simply don’t know, though it is fascinating to think about.
Did Moses part the Red Sea or “Reed Sea” or whatever it was? Well, we know now that “wind set-down” can cause a phenomenon like that, and occasionally does.
Which opens up another fascinating inquiry into the nature of miracles. Were miracles a “suspension of the laws of nature” as many have thought, or are they the result of coinciding natural events intended by God from all eternity, with all things set in motion in such a way as to accommodate things like the parting of the Red Sea? In some ways that seems more awe-inspiring than God simply intervening in time to tell the Red Sea to part despite its otherwise prevailing inclination not to do so. Might the laws of physics, instead, have required the event, with everything necessary to that obedience having been set in motion at the creation of the Universe, to coincide at exactly the right moment with the movement of the Israelites?
In other words, are the things we consider to be “supernatural” in one way, “supernatural” in a far more complex way? And should we demand of the Bible that it correspond to the level of understanding of the early 21st Century or criticize it if it doesn’t seem to do so?
Consider just a grasshopper. There are probably trillions of them, and they have been around for what? Millions of years. And yet, the grasshopper I see today is indisputably the descendant of millions of years of grasshoppers, and only one line of grasshoppers (most of which died out long ago). And before that line of grasshoppers there was (evolutionists tell us) previous histories of previous creatures (most of which died off without reproducing) that led to the evolution of the very first grasshopper.
Now, there’s a statistical (at least statistical) miracle almost beyond all comprehension. All those millions of years of grasshoppers that did NOT die before reproducing, and in a single direct line producing the grasshopper I see before me.
We accept such things without ever considering the statistical near-impossibility of my seeing this particular grasshopper on a particular day in a particular place, and having functioning human eyes to see it and recognize it. And yet, when it comes to the bible, we choke on even accepting far easier things like the collapse of the walls of Jericho or Moses producing water out of rock by striking it.
I’m cautious, that’s all.