I think that the Bible is divinely inspired. But, over the hundreds of years the Bible as been around, it has been changed and edited by humans. It is filled with human error and additions that come from the countless editions that have arisen since its conception. I don't understand how you're that confused about what I was saying.
Then it's not divinely inspired. Perhaps you're saying it once was and is no more? I don't understand how
you're confused here. Is the bible as we know it today divinely inspired or not? Is it trustworthy or not? You seem very clearly to be saying it is not divinely inspired nor trustworthy.
You can't have it both ways. If it is the divinely inspired word of God then your attempts to reconcile it with science (or anything else) make no sense. You should be reconciling science and everything else with
it instead, if anything at all.
If it is
not the word of God...then your attempts to reconcile it with science
still don't make any sense. Why bother?
As I've said, if you accept the bible as the word of God then it simply trumps science. What science says about the age of the earth is notable, certainly, but still suspect when it so clearly is contradicted by the plain language of scripture. Comparing the two the best you can do is make a reasonable supposition that perhaps the "days" in the Genesis account might mean something other than the standard "day". But I would think you'd expect science to have established the age of the earth beyond any argument at all before you feel compelled to bend scripture to fit it.
I'm not understanding your need to have the bible be the divinely inspired, trustworthy word of God
and simultaneously so filled with human error that it must be bent to fit what science tells us. Science that, if you'll recall the very nature of science, is likely to change completely what it tells us at any time.