The passage is out of context with the usage of days as described in Genesis. Peter is using a figure of speech to describe the relevance of time to God. In the Genesis account the time is directly related to man and the physical universeâs point of view. See here:
answersingenesis.org/home/area/faq/docs/day_thousandyears.asp
I was speaking to the ineffability of God, my point stands *because *Peter is unable to say what God
is and has to settle for what God
is like.
Keep in mind that in Exodus when God commanded the Israelites to obey the Sabbath:
Would anyone argue that Exodus is not presented as literal historical literature? That these events did not happen? That God giving us the ten commandments is a figurative story? God directly tells us to obey this commandment in LITERAL days, that He then directly relates to the LITERAL days of the Creation week to follow His example. Or should we interpret this to mean that we work for 6 thousand years and rest for a thousand?
Thatâs a false dichotomy. Again, I believe that Exodus is historical literature but that some events are not meant to be taken literaly, such as God going up and down in Exodus 3:8 and again in Exodus 19:20.
Some article of interest concerning Genesis can be found here to clarify things:
Should Genesis be taken literally?
answersingenesis.org/creation/v16/i1/genesis.asp
The days of creation: A semantic approach
answersingenesis.org/tj/v5/i1/semantic.asp
From that second link:
5. God defined days
This objection has two different expressions, yet the thing they have in common is that they question the ability of God to communicate accurately. It has been argued that the âdaysâ are to be defined from Godâs perspective, and so are called âGod-divided daysâ.45 If this is correct, and such âdaysâ are of unknown duration in human terms, then arriving at a correct interpretation of Genesis 1, or for that matter any biblical passage, is
utterly hopeless.
âŚThis kind of argumentation [God defined days] makes biblical interpretation a difficult task, if not impossible. The interpreter can never be certain if God means what He said in one place as opposed to another. If God cannot mean exactly what He says, then
we have absolutely no hope of understanding the Scriptures. Also the inspiration and inerrancy of His Word can no longer be defended. The view expressed by Buswell opens the door for a return to the days of the judges where** âeveryone does what is right in his own eyesâ at least in terms of biblical interpretation.** God chose to communicate through the vehicle of human language, so interpretation must comprehend the extra-linguistic referents that are a vital part of human language.
All that talk about âutter hopelessnessâ and âno hopeâ and moral relativism are why I (and Brother Guy) pity the Fundimentalists. They can put on a show but I know from my own personal experience as a Fundi that the coherence of Godâs message is not demonstrated amongst non-Catholic churches. It is
already the case that apart from the Catholic Church ââeveryone does what is right in his own eyesâ at least in terms of biblical interpretation.â
Brother Guyâs opinion that fundamentalists âdonât have faithâ and so cling to Creationism is mislead as are many who suffer from the false notion that Creationists read everything âhyperliterally.â Iâd say itâs because Brother Guy has no faith in what God Himself has spoken, etched with fire on stone and divinely revealed to us about how God said He created everything. Brother Guy has no faith in the testimony of the Holy Scriptures that include Genesis and Exodus and would rather cling to the secular interpretations of a consensus of falliable menâŚ
Bible literalists know that their well intentioned bible studies to not yield the unity that our Lord promised. They canât acknowledge Godâs ineffability or theyâll be âutterly hopelessâ having âabsolutely no hope of understanding the Scriptures.â On the other hand, they canât abandon what faith they do have. So they commit to biblical literalism no matter the cost. (Not that I blame them, their conception of God is far far better than no God at all.)
The Catholic solution to all this âutter hopelessnessâ is of course the Holy Spirit and the infalability that he gives the Church. Bible literalists are stuck between a rock and a hard place, but I have good news! That rock is the one that Christ founded his church upon when he said: Matt 16:18 And I tell you, you are Peter, and on this rock I will build my church, and the powers of death shall not prevail against it.
