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According to th bible, how old is the Earth?
Mods, if this turns into a debate please feel free to move this thread.
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#2
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The bible doesn't say how old the earth is but a guy did add up all the generations listed in Genesis and came up with a figure around 6000 years.
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#3
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5768 years.
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#4
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#5
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Most people take as their starting point Ussher's chronology. It adds up the individual numbers. There are some potential flaws --- how long between creation and the expulsion from Eden? A week, seventeen years, 4.3 billion? The Bible doesn't say.
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#6
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#7
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#8
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#9
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Last edited by Uncommon Sense; 11-01-2007 at 07:15 AM. |
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#10
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I do concede that some of the calculations are arguable, and there are some disputes about the dating of some events, but if one wants to know where the "5768" comes from, the above is the answer. |
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#11
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Read it again. Where does THE BIBLE say how old the earth is. Last edited by askeptic; 11-01-2007 at 10:22 AM. |
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#12
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#13
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#14
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#15
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Gee, and I was just going to say that I trust cmkeller's figure, since he knows the folks who wrote the book...
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#16
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Please let me remind everyone of what the OP's exact question was:
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#17
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P.S. Are there are any "logical" chronologies besides Ussher and the Seder Olam Rabbah?
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#18
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#19
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Ussher's scholarship was highly respected in the period and his chronology was accordingly particularly influential. But it's really only the fact that this leads to the long-running tradition of incorporating his dates into the margins of Anglican bibles that led to his being the version that is remembered at the expense of all the others. That his is now the only name popularly associated with such exercises obscures the reality that there was a range of competing schemes in his day and for some time afterwards. |
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#20
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How can the different calculations vary by so much, though? They're all based on adding up the numbers in "so-and-so was such-and-such an age when he begat his son, the other guy", right? Each step will have a spread of at most a year (depending on how far into his such-and-such year so-and-so was when he did the begetting), and if you assume the average for each, the error should only accumulate as the square root of the number of begettings. And I know there weren't 250,000 generations recorded in the Bible, so how do dates vary by five centuries?
__________________
Time travels in divers paces with divers persons. --As You Like It, III:ii:328 |
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#21
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#22
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Anyhow, I'm not sure when Cain and Abel were born, but the maximum garden time was less than 130 years, not 900. Last edited by Voyager; 11-02-2007 at 12:22 PM. |
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#23
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1 Kings 16:8 "So Baasha slept with his fathers, and was buried in Tirzah: and Elah his son reigned in his stead. ... "In the twenty and sixth year of Asa king of Judah began Elah the son of Baasha to reign over Israel in Tirzah, two years." So Baasha died in the 26th year of Asa's reign. 2 Chronicles 16 "In the six and thirtieth year of the reign of Asa Baasha king of Israel came up against Judah, and built Ramah, to the intent that he might let none go out or come in to Asa king of Judah." So Baasha built a fortified town in the 36th year of Asa's reign, when he had been dead 10 years. The man was a workhaolic 2 Kings 24:8 "Jehoiachin was eighteen years old when he began to reign" 2 Chronicles 36:9 "Jehoiachin was eight years old when he began to reign" And so forth. there are literally dozens of these sorts of contradictions, some of them resulting in errors of many hundreds of years. There are various ways to "reconcile" them, and depending on what methods the genealogist uses will influence the times of the generations. |
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#24
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#25
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Sorry I was away from this thread for a while, but here goes:
Askeptic: Quote:
Heaven and Earth created (Genesis 1:1): Year 1. Adam created 5 days later - on the Jewish New Year (Genesis 1:26): Year 2. Adam begets Seth at age 130 (Genesis 5:3): Year 132. Seth begets Enos at age 105 (Genesis 5:6): Year 237. Enos begets Kenan at age 90 (Genesis 5:9): Year 327. Kenan begets Mehallallel at age 70 (Genesis 5:12): Year 397. Mehallallel begets Yered at age 65 (Genesis 5:15): Year 462. Yered begets Enoch at age 162 (Genesis 5:18): Year 624. Enoch begets Methuselah at age 65 (Genesis 5:21): Year 689. Methuselah begets Lemech at age 187 (Genesis 5:25): Year 876. Lemech begets Noah at age 182 (Genesis 5:28): Year 1058. Noah in 600th year of his life (i.e., 599 years old) when flood begins (Genesis 7:11): Year 1657. Noah's son Shem begets Arpachshad two years after the flood began 1 (Genesis 11:10): Year 1659. Arpachshad begets Shelah at age 35 (Genesis 11:12): Year 1694. Shelah begets Ever at age 30 (Genesis 11:14): Year 1724. Ever begets Peleg at age 34 (Genesis 11:16): Year 1758. Peleg begets Reu at age 30 (Genesis 11:18): Year 1788. Reu begets Serug at age 32 (Genesis 11:20): Year 1820. Serug begets Nahor at age 30 (Genesis 11:22): Year 1850. Nahor begets Terah at age 29 (Genesis 11:24): Year 1879. Terah begets Abram at age 70 (Genesis 11:26): Year 1949. Abraham (originally Abram) begets Isaac at age 100 (Genesis 21:5): Year 2049. Isaac begets Jacob at age 60 (Genesis 25:26): Year 2109. Jacob and his family go to Egypt when Jacob was aged 130 (Genesis 47:9): Year 2239. Israelite Exodus from Egypt after 210 years of slavery 2(Midrashic commentary to Exodus 12:40): Year 2449. Solomon begins construction of first Jerusalem Temple, 480 years after the Exodus, which is four years into his reign (I Kings 6:1): Year 2929. First Temple destroyed after 410 years3: Year 3339. Second Temple construction begins after 70 years of Jewish exile 4: Year 3409. Second Temple destroyed after 420 years (Talmud, Tractate Avodah Zarah, page 9a - this is not Biblical, obviously, but is based on how they dated their documents, so it's somewhat contemporary): Year 3830, which is historically known to be year 70 of the current calendar system. 2007 is 1937 years after that, which gives us year 5767 from creation. The Jewish New Year has already occurred since the last anniversary of the Temple's destruction, which gives us 5768. 1The phrase "2 years after the flood" must mean after the flood began rather than after it ended, because Noah was 500 when Shem and his brothers were born (Genesis 5:32) which would make Shem somewhere in the 98-99 range when the flood began (depending on what day he was born), in the 99-100 range when it ended. The year following the flood's end, Shem would be 100-101. Genesis 11:10 says that Arpachshad was born when Shem was 100 years old, 2 years after the flood, so that must mean after the onset of the flood. 2 years after the end of the flood, he would have been at least 101, possibly 102. 2Exodus 12:40 says that "The settlement of the Israelites that they lived in Egypt was 430 years." However, it can be proven from previous verses that Israelites were not actually in Egypt 430 years: Levi's son Kehath came to Egypt with Jacob (Genesis 46:11) and died at age 133 (Exodus 6:18). Kehath's son Amram lived till age 137 (Exodus 6:20). Amram's son Moses was 80 when the Israelites left Egypt (7:7). So even if Kehath arrived in Egypt the day he was born, Amram had been born the year Kehath died, and Moses born the year Amram died, they could have been in Egypt no more than 350 years. This forces a different understanding of the verse. Therefore, the Midrash concludes that the word "settlement" is more properly translated as "lifestyle", i.e., they lived in a manner of foreigners for 430 years, which the Midrash says is when G-d made a covenant with Abram indicating that his descendants would be foreigners in others' lands for 400 years (Genesis 17). The first descendant of Abraham for whom the 400 years are reckoned is Isaac, and from Isaac's birth until Jacob went to Egypt is 190 years (Jacob born when Isaac was 60, and 130 years old when went to Egypt), leaving 210 years as the actual time in Egypt. 3I was intending to write a completely annotated time-line of the Kings of Judah to demonstrate this number in detail, but I just didn't have the time to finish it yet, and I didn't want to return to this thread a ful week or so after the above question was posted. So here's the summary number, and details, if you wish, can follow. 4Difficult to properly source, as the names of Persian kings used in the book of Ezra are difficult to correlate precisely with what is considered to be known of Persian kings by secular history. Some names thought by secular historians to refer to different individuals are considered by Jewish historians recorded in the Talmud to be alternate titles for the same individual. Nonetheless, even most secular time lines still accept that there were 70 years between the two Temples. Secular history tends to place the destruction of the first Temple and the second Temple about 160 years earlier than Jewish history does. |
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#26
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slight hijack (please)
Mods - if this should be a separate thread, I apologize and will start one if necessary -
How special was Noah, for example, to be given at least 600 years? Why did he live such a long life? Was he blessed for some reason? Wasn't he just another guy? |
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#27
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#28
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The disagreements get worse if we include Orthodox Christians. This is because the Septuagint gives different numbers in the early stages than the Hebrew text numbers quoted by cmkeller. The two generally agree on the quoted lifespans of the Patriarchs, but many of the ages for the begetting are systematically each a century older in the Septuagint. Those numbers have almost invariably been ignored in the Jewish and non-Orthodox traditions, but do mean that Orthodox Christians traditionally push their biblically-derived date of Creation back as far as 5586 BCE. |
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#29
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Ussher's calculations are as good as any, and was a decent scholarly analysis of Biblical text. The general range (say, up to 10,000 years) given by the Bible was unquestioned until modern science revealed it to be ridiculously far off. At the point assorted re-interpretations were applied so as to not render the Biblical age nonsense. No one relying on the Bible itself would (or did) interpret the age of the earth to be anything older than several thousand years. "The Bible doesn't say" is a silly wiggle-room argument advanced to protect the inerrancy of Scripture. While it may be technically correct, it implies that the Bible allows for the earth to be 4.6 billion years old. It does not, and the assorted contortions to make it seem so are foolish. |
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#30
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Pedant, haven't you seen my comments in this thread? It has already been stated that the information in the Bible is in conflict with the scientific understanding of the age of the Earth. It is unnecessary to belabor this point further here. If you want to debate this question, or make comments on the foolishness other interpretations, please feel free to open a thread in Great Debates. Thank you for your attention. Colibri General Questions Moderator |
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