Derf,
You probably need to go back and read all my posts. In summary, God created man in the sixth day, then he promply told them to go into all the earth and replenish it. Because of the language used it implies more than one. "let us make man in our image and let them" but even if there were just a male and a female, God still told them to go into all the earth.
In Gen 2 LORD God formed a man from the ground (he took something he had already created and formed it into a man). Then he took a rib from Adam and formed a female, Eve. He did not tell them to go into all the earth, but he placed them in a garden east of Eden.
Two different stories and two different people, one of creation the other of a covenant.
As for the time frame, day in Hebrew can be any length. Here is example:
Gen 2:4 These are the generations of the heavens and of the earth when they were created, in the day that the LORD God made the earth and the heavens,
Generations of heaven and earth in the day -- that God made the earth and heavens.
Hi Iama,
I think I caught all that from your posts. But I'm having trouble figuring out how it would work. The "these are the generations" header in Gen 2:4 does seem to distinguish a separate account, but unless Adam is not from the race of man (in Gen 1), i.e., he's a separate creation, I don't see how it can be a separate
activity.
If he IS of the race of man, then you have to allegorize Adam's creation from the mud of the ground to show how he really
wasn't formed from the mud of the ground, but was descended from another man. Or, alternatively, you have to assume that there were a number of men and women that were formed the same way as Adam, but were somewhere else, and therefore Adam's sin doesn't affect them--they had their own mandate from God as well as a different locale, with little or no access to the two trees. Adam was neither their father nor leader, so his sin doesn't affect them, except perhaps as it did the rest of creation--they weren't born guilty of sin, and neither would their children be.
The different length "day" is very interesting, but the "days" of creation were marked by an evening and morning progression that's pretty hard to dismiss without saying there were really a bunch of evenings and mornings. Again, you'd have to allegorize the "days" of creation into something that doesn't look like "days", be it years, decades, millennia, etc. But the Gen 1 account is pretty descriptive of what a "day" looks like, and pretty specific about how many of those it took to create.
Allegorizing might be ok at times, but you go very far in it, and you can make the passage say whatever you want it to say, and therefore it means little or nothing.
In fact, if you and I sit down with the text and allegorize without talking to each other, I would expect we would end up with completely different scenarios. And I can't imagine that helping to eliminate confusion, as you said you want to do.
Let me address the covenant thing a bit. I'm open to this idea--seems rather reasonable, in fact, as long as it isn't used to somehow contradict the previous account. The LORD God made and named Adam and gave him a place to live. But He didn't restrict his travel until after his sin--and then the restriction kept him outside of the "nice" place God had made for him.
I don't see anything in the Eden experience that suggests God's mandate to replenish the earth is somehow restricted to the Garden or that Adam doesn't have that mandate, but instead He gives them a good example of what it should look like to exercise dominion over the rest of the world--tending and improving things as they multiply and spread out.
What do you think?