The Story of Patriarchs and Prophets
by Ellen G. White
Chapter 9: The Literal Week
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Like the Sabbath, the week originated at creation, and it has
been preserved and brought down to us through Bible
history. God Himself measured off the first week as a sample for
successive weeks to the close of time. Like every other, it consisted
of seven literal days. Six days were employed in the work of
creation; upon the seventh, God rested, and He then blessed this
day and set it apart as a day of rest for man.
In the law given from Sinai, God recognized the week, and
the facts upon which it is based. After giving the command,
"Remember the Sabbath day, to keep it holy," and specifying what
shall be done on the six days, and what shall not be done on the
seventh, He states the reason for thus observing the week, by
pointing back to His own example: "For in six days the Lord
made heaven and earth, the sea, and all that in them is, and rested
the seventh day: wherefore the Lord blessed the Sabbath day, and
hallowed it." Exodus 20:8-11. This reason appears beautiful and
forcible when we understand the days of creation to be literal.
The first six days of each week are given to man for labor, because
God employed the same period of the first week in the work of
creation. On the seventh day man is to refrain from labor, in
commemoration of the Creator's rest.
But the assumption that the events of the first week required
thousands upon thousands of years, strikes directly at the foundation
of the fourth commandment. It represents the Creator as
commanding men to observe the week of literal days in
commemoration of vast, indefinite periods. This is unlike His method
of dealing with His creatures. It makes indefinite and obscure
that which He has made very plain. It is infidelity in its most
insidious and hence most dangerous form; its real character is so
disguised that it is held and taught by many who profess to believe
the Bible. [p. 112]
"By the word of the Lord were the heavens made; and all the
host of them by the breath of His mouth." "For He spake, and it
was done; He commanded, and it stood fast." Psalm 33:6, 9. The
Bible recognizes no long ages in which the earth was slowly
evolved from chaos. Of each successive day of creation, the
sacred record declares that it consisted of the evening and the
morning, like all other days that have followed. At the close of
each day is given the result of the Creator's work. The statement
is made at the close of the first week's record, "These are the
generations of the heavens and of the earth when they were
created." Genesis 2:4. But this does not convey the idea that the
days of creation were other than literal days. Each day was called
a generation, because that in it God generated, or produced, some
new portion of His work.
Geologists claim to find evidence from the earth itself that it
is very much older than the Mosaic record teaches. Bones of men
and animals, as well as instruments of warfare, petrified trees,
etcetera, much larger than any that now exist, or that have existed
for thousands of years, have been discovered, and from this it is
inferred that the earth was populated long before the time brought
to view in the record of creation, and by a race of beings vastly
superior in size to any men now living. Such reasoning has led
many professed Bible believers to adopt the position that the days
of creation were vast, indefinite periods.
But apart from Bible history, geology can prove nothing.
Those who reason so confidently upon its discoveries have no
adequate conception of the size of men, animals, and trees before
the Flood, or of the great changes which then took place. Relics
found in the earth do give evidence of conditions differing in
many respects from the present, but the time when these conditions
existed can be learned only from the Inspired Record. In
the history of the Flood, inspiration has explained that which
geology alone could never fathom. In the days of Noah, men,
animals, and trees, many times larger than now exist, were buried,
and thus preserved as an evidence to later generations that the
antediluvians perished by a flood. God designed that the discovery
of these things should establish faith in inspired history; but
men, with their vain reasoning, fall into the same error as did
the people before the Flood—the things which God gave them as
a benefit, they turn into a curse by making a wrong use of them. [p. 113]
It is one of Satan's devices to lead the people to accept the
fables of infidelity; for he can thus obscure the law of God, in
itself very plain, and embolden men to rebel against the divine
government. His efforts are especially directed against the fourth
commandment, because it so clearly points to the living God, the
Maker of the heavens and the earth.
There is a constant effort made to explain the work of creation
as the result of natural causes; and human reasoning is accepted
even by professed Christians, in opposition to plain Scripture facts.
There are many who oppose the investigation of the prophecies,
especially those of Daniel and the Revelation, declaring them to be
so obscure that we cannot understand them; yet these very persons
eagerly receive the suppositions of geologists, in contradiction
of the Mosaic record. But if that which God has revealed is so
difficult to understand, how inconsistent it is to accept mere
suppositions in regard to that which He has not revealed!
"The secret things belong unto the Lord our God: but those
things which are revealed belong unto us and to our children
forever." Deuteronomy 29:29. Just how God accomplished the
work of creation He has never revealed to men; human science
cannot search out the secrets of the Most High. His creative
power is as incomprehensible as His existence.
God has permitted a flood of light to be poured upon the
world in both science and art; but when professedly scientific
men treat upon these subjects from a merely human point of
view, they will assuredly come to wrong conclusions. It may be
innocent to speculate beyond what God's word has revealed, if
our theories do not contradict facts found in the Scriptures; but
those who leave the word of God, and seek to account for His
created works upon scientific principles, are drifting without
chart or compass upon an unknown ocean. The greatest minds,
if not guided by the word of God in their research, become
bewildered in their attempts to trace the relations of science and
revelation. Because the Creator and His works are so far beyond
their comprehension that they are unable to explain them by
natural laws, they regard Bible history as unreliable. Those who
doubt the reliability of the records of the Old and New
Testaments, will be led to go a step further, and doubt the existence
of God; and then, having lost their anchor, they are left to beat
about upon the rocks of infidelity. [p. 114]
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