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The gap theory has big problems!
Quick-read this article:
The gap theory is a compromise proposed by Christians who want to
keep the Bible but who think evolution has shown it to be wrong.
The theory teaches that there was a huge time-gap between the first
two verses of Genesis. Christians have largely abandoned the gap
theory as more and more evidence mounts that the Bible is
scientifically trustworthy.
The gap theory is not as popular among Christians as it used to
be. And this is just as well, because it doesn't harmonize well
with either the Bible or science. That is why no Christian
geologist could accept it, and neither can most theologians.
The gap theory is the idea that between the first two verses of
the Bible (Genesis 1:1 and Genesis 1:2) there was a great gap in
time. The theory goes roughly like this:
- God created the universe billions of years ago.
- Then the geological ages proposed by evolutionists took place
over billions of years of earth's history.
- Life-forms arose during that time that are now preserved in the
fossil record, and these fossils allegedly verify that the
geological ages took place.
- At the end of the geological ages, Satan rebelled in Heaven and
many angels followed him.
- God then cast Satan down to earth, the earth underwent a huge
disaster or cataclysm, and it was left without form and void, with
darkness on the face of the deep (as described in Genesis
1:2).
- God then re-created the earth in the six literal days of
creation described in the first chapter of Genesis.
Attempt to beat evolutionists
Perhaps we should not be too hard on those Christians who
revived the gap theory in the late 1800s. This was a time when
Charles Darwin's ideas and the theory of evolution were wrongly
starting to be promoted as fact. Many Christians were looking for a
way to explain how the Bible could be true in the face of what they
thought were facts casting doubt on the Bible's
trustworthiness.
The Bible, Irish Archbishop James Ussher worked out a couple of
centuries earlier, at face value indicates that the earth is only
thousands, not billions, of years old.
The gap theory seemed to provide an answer. Billions of years
could be dumped in a “gap” that was thought may exist
between Genesis 1:1 and 1:2. The idea gained support from Thomas
Chalmers, George H. Pember, and later from C. I. Scofield, whose
generally superb Scofield Reference Bible became sadly
tarnished when its notes included support for this flawed
theory.
Problems with the gap theory
The modern creationist movement, particularly in such scholarly
groups as the Institute for Creation Research, Answers in Genesis,
and many others, have shown not only that the gap theory is
unnecessary (because the Bible's young-earth position is supported
without compromise by thousands of highly qualified scientists),
but that it is simply wrong.
Here are just a few of the problems with the gap theory:
- The idea that the geological ages took place between Genesis
1:1 and 1:2 is plainly refuted in God's Ten Commandments, in which
God said, “In six days the Lord made heaven and earth, the
sea, and all that in them is” (Exodus 20:11). God was telling
people that the pattern He set at creation, of six days work
followed by a day of rest, was to be the pattern for mankind's
working week.
Note that this verse in
Exodus covers both Genesis 1:1 and 1:2. In six days God made
“heaven and earth” (Genesis 1:1), and “the sea,
and all that in them is” (Genesis 1:2 onward). There is no
room for a gap, because this statement in Exodus covers both
Genesis 1:1 and the verses after it … all in the six
days!
- The Bible says there was no sin or death until humans caused
them to come into the world. But the gap theory would have billions
of years of suffering and death, represented by the fossils and
rock layers in the earth's crust, which are supposed to identify
the geological ages.
The gap theory proposes that
at the end of the geological ages Satan sinned, was cast down to
earth, and there was a great cataclysm. So the geological ages with
countless deaths recorded in them would have occurred before either
Satan or humans sinned, which is the opposite of what the Bible
says.
- The whole concept of the geological ages is based on the
evolutionary assumption that things have continued the same in the
past as in the present. Therefore there is no room in the
geological ages system for the cataclysm interrupting the processes
that gap theorists need. This is why no geologist would accept the
gap theory.
The gap theory is an unfortunate compromise position taken by
those who either don't understand the implications of the theory or
don't love Scripture enough to take the Bible on what it clearly
says. The gap theory is unscientific, unscriptural, and absolutely
unnecessary.
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