The Timepiece Argument for the Days of Creation
By Kyle Pope

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the struggle between the conflicting beliefs of evolution and creation some
have sought middle-ground in a view that interprets the days of creation in
Genesis as indefinite periods of time (perhaps thousands or even millions of
years long). The appeal to accept such a view relies upon the assumption that
chemical, astronomical, and geological evidence demands that we view the
universe as millions (or billions of years old). It is important to recognize
that most evidence that is viewed in this way relies on the assumption that material
laws and conditions have remained constant. If God created these laws, not only
is it impossible for us to know that they have remained constant (since we were
not present to observe the past), but also there is no reason to assume that
God did not create a full-grown universe. That is to say, just as Adam
appears to have been created as an adult, one looking at Adam would be mistaken
to assume that he underwent the normal processes of birth and growth to bring
about his maturity.
Aside
from these factors, for the Christian who believes the Bible is the inspired
word of God, there is textual evidence that argues against accepting a view
that the days of creation were anything other than what we now know as
twenty-four hour days. One of the most commonly cited pieces of evidence comes
in God’s command to Israel regarding the Sabbath. He declared, “Six days you
shall labor and do all your work, but the seventh day is the Sabbath of the Lord your God. In it you shall do no
work…” (Exod. 20:9-10, NKJV). The periods of time God in this passage calls
“days,” are exactly the same periods of time we still know as
“days”—twenty-four hour days. They are determined by the time it takes for the
earth to rotate on its axis. In the very next verse God continues, “For in
six days the Lord made the
heavens and the earth, the sea, and all that is in them, and rested the seventh
day. Therefore the Lord blessed
the Sabbath day and hallowed it” (Exod. 20:11). In this comparison, both
the six-day work-week and the Sabbath day are equated with what God did in
creation. If day seven (or days one through six) were a million years each, the
comparison would be invalid, and God’s command would be meaningless.

A
second piece of textual evidence (in my opinion) is even more compelling. I
call it the Timepiece Argument. Think for a moment about man-made
devices that keep time. At some point in the past some human being made the
very first device for keeping time. Probably it was a sundial or something like
it. This was modified over time into the more complicated clocks and watches
that we have today. However, what was actually accomplished in the first
invention of such a device? Did it determine time? No. It was simply a device
that measured time as it was already passing. In other words, if it broke up a
day into twenty-four segments, it merely monitored how long it already took for
a day to pass.
In
Genesis 1:14 when God created the heavenly bodies, it was declared, “Then
God said, ‘Let there be lights in the firmament of the heavens to divide the
day from the night; and let them be for signs and seasons, and for days and
years.’” Now, prior to this there had already been three periods of time
that God called “days,” but now these bodies are placed in the firmament to “be
for signs and seasons, and for DAYS and years” (Emphasis mine). Now what did
that mean? Were those bodies now going to determine these periods of time? No,
they were placed in the heavens as a timepiece, to measure time in relation to
what had already been happening. Just as the first timepiece only measured what
was already going on, in God’s wording the heavenly bodies became a measurement
of what had already been going on.
How
can we be sure of this? Well, on day four when God said this, He described the
function that these bodies would serve. Now, what if day four was 1,000,000
years? It would not be an accurate measure “for signs and seasons for days and
years” on day eight, nine, ten, and so on, unless starting on day eight a “day”
was also 1,000,000 years. In other words, based on God's declaration in Genesis
1:14, He Himself defined a period of time measurement that only has meaning in
the present in relation to what it was monitoring in the past. To say that day one,
two, three (or even day four) was different from what heavenly bodies now
indicate about time would essentially say that our timepiece ran slower on days
one through four than it does now. There is no biblical (or physical) reason to
accept such a conclusion.