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GUEST ARTICLE
Is the Bible Creation Account a Myth?
 A student in my Bible class says he believes that the Genesis
account of the creation may be a myth, or at least just symbolism.
How do I respond to him?
There are several lines of evidence which may be employed
to show that the Genesis record of the creation is not a
myth, nor is it symbolic.
First, though, we must emphasize that in
approaching this matter one must recognize that the student
will have to possess
sufficiently developed study skills to be able to evaluate
evidence. Many of our nation’s youngsters today readily
believe anything they hear—whether at school or via
television. Frequently they array this sort of public propaganda
against the Bible school teacher, whom they feel is a nice
person and well-meaning, but not nearly as informed as the “experts.” We
must train them to think, to analyze, to logically scrutinize,
and then to draw sound conclusions.
Consider, then, the following:
The language in the opening portion of Genesis
is in the same literary style as the balance of the book.
It is historical
prose. For example, it considers Adam and Eve to be actual
people—just as Abraham and Sarah were. Eden was as
real as Ur of the Chaldees. There is no change in style as
the narrative progresses. One must have a valid reason, therefore,
for dismissing Genesis 1 as myth. A mere assertion by some
TV personality will not accomplish that.
There is a vast contrast in the dignity and
tone of Genesis 1 and the creation myths that are common
to the ancient world.
For example, the Babylonian creation account (Enuma elish)
is fraught with ridiculous absurdities that are lightyears
removed from the stately manner of the Genesis account. In
that story, Enuma elish has two “gods” at war;
one kills the other and cuts her body into two pieces. From
one of these the earth is fashioned, and from the other the
heavens are formed.
Dr. George Barton, who served as professor
of Semitic languages at the University of Pennsylvania,
has written: “[T]here
is no better measure of the inspiration of the Biblical account
[of creation] than to put it side by side with the Babylonian
[record of creation]” (1946, 297-298).
There is no basis for suggesting that Genesis
1 is symbolic. Some liberal critics have argued that the “days” of
the creation week are mere figures of speech, representing
millions of years. Others contend that the “days” are
simply poetic devices that outline the author’s main
theological points. These baseless theories clearly contradict
Exodus 20:11, which views the creation days in the same literal
sense as the Sabbath. The only rationale for this novel interpretative
approach is an attempt to harmonize Genesis with the chronology
required by the evolutionary scheme of history—which
is without scientific substance.
Though penned many centuries ago, the Mosaic
narrative is still brilliantly relevant. There is not a
factual scientific
error to be found within it. In fact, famed archaeologist
W. F. Albright once said that “modern scientific cosmogonies
show such a disconcerting tendency to be short-lived that
it may be seriously doubted whether science has yet caught
up with the Biblical story” (1948, 135).
Jesus Christ accepted the literal historicity
of the Genesis account. He affirmed that the first human
beings: (a) were
made by God; (b) were made male and female; and, (c) had
a history extending back to the “beginning of the creation” (Matthew
19:4; Mark 10:6).
The only response to this is to charge that
Jesus was either ignorant or dishonest relative to these
facts. In either
case, Christ would be indicted as an impostor—because
he claimed to have been at the creation (John 8:58) and the
New Testament attributes to him the role of Creator (John
1:1; Hebrews 1:2).
Even skeptics are loath to so castigate Jesus.
Steve Allen said that Christ approached “the ideal of perfection
more closely than anyone else who has ever lived” (1990,
229), and atheist Charles Templeton described the Lord as “the
greatest human being who has ever lived . . . a moral genius” (Strobel
2000, 21). One cannot consistently characterize Jesus Christ
in this fashion and ignore what he said about the creation
account.
The conclusion, therefore, must be this: Genesis 1 is not
myth; it is not symbolic or poetic; it is straight-forward,
literal history. That is the fact of the situation.
--Wayne Jackson
Sources/Footnotes
Albright, W. F. 1948. The Old Testament and Archaeology.
H. C. Alleman and Elmer Flack, eds. Philadelphia, PA: Muhlenberg
Press.
Allen, Steve. 1990. Steve Allen on the Bible,
Religion, & Morality.
Buffalo, NY: Prometheus.
Barton, George. 1946. Archaeology and the Bible. Philadelphia,
PA: American Sunday School Union.
Strobel, Lee. 2000. The Case for Christ. Grand Rapids, MI:
Zondervan.
http://www.christiancourier.com/articles/
326-is-the-bible-creation-account-a-myth
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