Let us start with this.
Did you actually read my last post?
Has anyone ever pointed out to you that God created man, but Jehovah God formed Adam?
Has anyone ever pointed out to you that God created the beast of the earth, but Jehovah God formed the animals of the field? Those animals were domestic.
Now, think on these these things without saying creating and forming are the same thing. Just ask yourself this: Could there have been a reason different words and meanings were used in the writting of Gen 1 vs Gen 2?
Read all of my posts rather than asking me to keep repeating myself.
I'll respond to each of those things, but take a look for an instant at the title of this thread and compare it to the words quoted from your last post. Does anything in the quoted post have anything to do with Einstein? Anything? So, if I'm supposed to get something out of your posts, wouldn't it help for them to stick with the topic, so you don't accuse
me (and others) of hijacking your threads to talk about something else?????
Personally, I like to talk about Einstein's theory of relativity--I learn something almost every time.
In order:
Did you actually read my last post?
I responded to your OP, so I'm not sure which "last post" you are talking about. I did read your OP.
Has anyone ever pointed out to you that God created man, but Jehovah God formed Adam?
I'll assume for the moment that you are not talking about 2 different gods, but that you are trying to draw a distinction between a general interaction with creation and a covenant interaction with God's chosen people, is that correct? (See, I did read your previous thread!
)
Has anyone ever pointed out to you that God created the beast of the earth, but Jehovah God formed the animals of the field? Those animals were domestic.
Again, I'll try not to focus on the idea that first comes to mind: that you seem to be talking about 2 different gods. I think you are saying that there were 2 creation events, one which was more general, and one that was for the people of God, right?
Now, think on these these things without saying creating and forming are the same thing. Just ask yourself this: Could there have been a reason different words and meanings were used in the writting of Gen 1 vs Gen 2?
:think::think::think: Ok, now I've thought about them. To answer your question, yes, there could have been a reason different words and meanings were used in the 2 passages. One is what I mentioned above--it could have been talking about 2 different gods, yes? Or, it could have been written by 2 different people (we talked about this in your other thread--don't you even read my posts? Please read all of my posts rather than asking me to keep repeating myself. Oh, wait, that's what you said to me, sorry I'm not very original.) Or, as you suggest, it could be talking about a different activity.
So, I'm willing to go down the road of that last option to see how it could play out.
First, even if it's 2 different activities, we still need to deal with Ex 20:11 that says God created both the heavens and the earth AND ALL THAT IS IN THEM in six days before He rested on the seventh day. This was being given to the children of Israel at Mt Sinai, so when it says "all that
is in them" it can't mean all that
was in them before some great catastrophe. The earth might have been destroyed and replenished several times, but according to It also seems like it doesn't make sense that God would refer to something that happened outside of His interaction with His chosen people to give them a covenantal connection to a special day set aside for them--the Sabbath--but that's not a show stopper.
Second, what does it mean to have Man created on day 6 and then have Adam created on some other day? For one thing, Adam's sin would not have the effect of causing all men to have to die, because some must have lived (and died, I expect) without any contact with Adam, if there was a separate creation. But by the first Adam came death, and sin, too (Rom 5:12. Therefore, just as through one man sin entered into the world, and death through sin, and so death spread to
all men because all sinned).
Third, the name "Adam" is taken from the word for dirt. So is the noun "man". The words (man and Adam) are very similar. I don't know Hebrew, but it seems to me that if both were so-called because God made them from dirt, then either God made 2 Adams or he only made one.
What do you think? I still haven't figured out how to get Einstein into this discussion--can you explain that connection?