Gap Creationism
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Template:Creationism2 Gap Creationism, also called Restitution creationism or Ruin-Reconstruction, are terms used to describe a particular set of Christian beliefs about the creation of the Universe and the origin of man. The concept of the Gap Theory was not invented by Thomas Chalmers in the early 1800s, but can be traced back to the time when Jesus lived. Certainly it became quite popular when it was promoted by the Scofield Reference Bible in 1909.
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Rationale
Gap Creationists believe that science has proven beyond reasonable doubt that the Earth is in fact far older than can be accounted for by merely adding up the ages of Biblical patriarchs, as given in the Book of Genesis. By taking the age of each father at the birth of his son, and adding the "six days" of creation, Young Earth Creationists thereby arrive at an age for the earth, concluding that the Earth is only 6,000 – 7,000 years old. In order to hold the two seemingly-contradictory viewpoints that the Bible is inerrant in all matters of fact as well as faith and doctrine and that the Earth is very ancient, they must account for the supposition that certain facts about both the human past and the age of the Earth have been omitted from the Biblical account rather than falsified by it.
One approach to this problem is to state that between the six days of Creation and the Fall of Man and the subsequent initiation of human history there must have been a "gap" in the story of thousands of years, perhaps even tens of thousands or millions of years.
Varieties
Many Gap Creationists postulate that this gap occurs between the seventh day, the one of rest, and the account of the Fall of Adam and Eve and hence that of Mankind though the agency of the temptation of Satan in the form of a snake. According to this theory, this amount of time would be sufficient for all of the geologic events which have happened to make the appearance of the Earth to be quite old.
Another popular approach is to assume that the gap occurs between Gen 1:1 and Gen 1:2. This postulates that the earth was initially created whole and complete and that all geologic events pointing to an old Earth (and, perhaps, even evolution) occurred before some event that throws the Earth into the chaos described in Gen 1:2. One explanation for the event that throws the Earth into chaos is the fall of Lucifer (Satan), as the creation account does not describe when his fall occurred, but at least two Old Testament accounts, and one account recorded in the Gospels as having been spoken by Jesus, are presumed to describe the fall of Lucifer. Those who hold this viewpoint on when the gap occurred point out that the "clock" on the "six days of Genesis" could not have started "ticking" until the (re)emergence of light in Gen 1:3 as that verse indicates that this was the evening and morning that make the first day of Genesis, and light had to be present to initiate an evening.
However, this argument (that the light had to be present to initiate an evening) requires restricting the meaning of the Hebrew word "evening" (עֶרֶב) more narrowly than the Hebrew demands. While the word frequently is equivalent to the English word evening (the period of time just before until just after sunset), at times it is referring to the entire night when no light from the sun is visible. For example, in Job 7:4 the same Hebrew word is used and clearly refers to all of the night (which is how virtually all translations render it). In the passage in question (Gen. 1:5), "evening" and "morning" are said to constitute an entire day. Thus, the context strongly suggests that "evening" was meant to refer to "night" (the period of dark); and "morning", to "day" (the period of light).
The viewpoint that a gap took place between verses 1 and 2 makes the events within the "six days of Genesis" an act of re-creation (restoration of the Earth) rather than initial creation, and is part of the ideas held by some adherents of Dispensationalism as recorded by Rev. Clarence Larkin in his book Dispensational Truth. One of the stronger arguments for support of this viewpoint is found within the wording of Genesis 1:2 where the verse states that the "earth" (as a planet) was already a physical entity, covered in "waters" and existing in space-time, before God said "..let there be light" at Genesis 1:3.
Although the Bible gives no specific time for the interval between the initial creation (Genesis 1:1) and the start of the regeneration (Genesis 1:3), some Gap Theory advocates see it as being merely thousands of years at the most on the basis that "a day with the Lord is as a thousand years and a thousand years as a day" (see: Day-Age Creationism), while the majority of others feel that it must be considerably longer than that to account for what mainstream science describes as the "geologic record"; This "Old Earth" Creationist view is at considerable variance with "Young Earth" Creationists, although both doctrinal schools are found within Christian fundamentalism.
Criticisms
The Ruin-Restoration theory relies on translating Genesis 1:2 as "became without form and void" instead of "was". Critics argue that the rendering "became" requires the Hebrew idiom "to be" and the preposition "to" (Hebrew le). They also argue that the waw disjunctive grammar means that it is a parenthetical statement describing the earth as it was first created; the translation "became" would have used the waw consecutive, describing the next event in a sequence.
Gap theorists often rely on the King James Version (KJV) translation of Genesis 1:28 as "replenish the earth", i.e. "refill". However, when the KJV was translated in 1611, "replenish" meant "to fill completely" (cf. replete), which is what the Hebrew word male meant.[1]
Critics argue that the finished creation was described as "very good", which they claim is incompatible with the Fall of Satan and a destructive "Lucifer Flood" that destroyed the alleged previous creation. And the long-age interpretation of the fossil record shows human and animal death before Adam, whereas Scripture teaches that death is "the last enemy" (1 Cor. 15:26) resulting from Adam's Fall (Gen. 3:17, Romans 5:12—19, 1 Cor. 15:21–22).[2]
Critics also contend that the gap theory leaves some issues unresolved, because many secular long-age proponents deny any sort of worldwide flood, whether Luciferian or Noahian.
See also
- Creation belief
- Cosmology
- Biblical cosmology
- Existence
- Timeline of the Big Bang
- Ultimate fate of the Universe
- Creation (theology)
- Creation science
- Creationism
- Creator god
- Dating Creation
- Young Earth Creationism
- Day-Age Creationism
- Old Earth Creationism
- Cosmogony
- Cosmological argument
- Theism
- Intelligent design
- C.I. Scofield
- Finis Jennings Dake
External links
- Ole Madsen, Denmark. The Gap Theory Page — The Gap theory page
- Johnson, Gaines R. 1997. Christian Geology — Rightly-Dividing Geology and the Book of Genesis Beyond the Gap Theory of Christian Creationism (supports KJV-Onlyism)
- Grigg, R., 1997. From the beginning of Creation: Does Genesis have a gap?, Creation 19(2):35–38 (why YECs reject the gap theory)
- Custance, Arthur C. Without Form and Void — Chap. 1 (A Long Held View) (Claimed support for Gap Theory prior to the time of Thomas Chalmers).
- Fields, W.W., 1976. Unformed and unfilled: A critique of the gap theory ISBN 0-964-16590-2 (mainly addresses above claims)
- Answers In Creation - Old Earth Creationism
- Answers in Genesis, another creationist pagede:Lückentheorie (Theologie)