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Wednesday, May 6, 2026

The Sabbath Commandment: Why Exodus 20 Was Never About a Literal Creation Week

 

Introduction

Modern Young Earth Creationist (YEC) arguments often assert that God created the world in six literal days and rested on the seventh “to model the regular work week.” Calvin Smith and Ken Ham of Answers in Genesis, for example, have both repeat this claim almost verbatim on many occasions. (12Yet this logic is not an evangelical innovation. It is an inheritance from Adventist sabbatarian theology, particularly the writings of Ellen G. White and the apologetic scaffolding of George McCready Price.

Tracing this genealogy reveals that the “normal work week” argument was never intrinsic to Exodus 20 itself. Rather, the Sabbath commandment functioned as a covenantal sign between Yahweh and Israel, a theological marker of identity and loyalty, not a 1:1 memorialization of creation chronology.

Adventist Origins of the “Work Week” Argument

  • Ellen G. White explicitly tied six-day creation to Sabbath observance:

    “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. The Sabbath was instituted in Eden, and it is to be observed as God’s memorial of creation.” (Patriarchs and Prophets, ch. 2) (3)

    “Because He had rested upon the Sabbath, ‘God blessed the seventh day, and sanctified it’—set it apart to a holy use. He gave it to Adam as a day of rest. It was a memorial of the work of creation, and thus a sign of God’s power and His love.” (The Desire of Ages, ch. 29) (4)

  • George McCready Price reinforced this logic:

    “The week of seven days is not founded on astronomy, nor on anything in nature, but solely on the fact that God created the world in six days and rested on the seventh. The Sabbath is thus a perpetual reminder of this great fact.” (The New Geology, 1923) (5)

  • Early Adventist periodicals echoed the same: The Review and Herald (1854) described the Sabbath as “a safeguard against atheism and idolatry, a weekly memorial of the living God, who created all things in six days of time.” (6)

The logic connecting six-day creation, Sabbath observance, and the weekly cycle has remained structurally identical across three stages of argumentation. What changes is the object of defense:

  • Ellen G. White:

Six literal days → Sabbath → weekly cycle.

White claimed divine visions confirming that the weekly cycle itself demonstrated Sabbath worship as a universal commandment. For her, defending the Sabbath was inseparable from defending her prophetic authority and the Adventist practice of Saturday observance.

  • George McCready Price:

Six literal days → Sabbath → weekly cycle, defended with “science.”

Price sought to buttress White’s prophetic claims by providing a scientific rationale. His Flood Geology was not simply about origins; it was a way of defending White’s authority by showing that the weekly cycle and Sabbath observance had a rational, creation-based foundation.

  • Modern YEC Apologetics:

Six literal days → “historical basis for normal work week” → defense of biblical authority.

Contemporary YEC voices repeat White’s logic almost verbatim, but reframe the defense. Instead of protecting White’s prophetic claims, they argue that the weekly cycle is grounded in historical creation and must be defended to safeguard their understanding of the doctrine of biblical inerrancy.

Exodus 20 in Covenant Context

Exodus 20:8–11 commands:

“Remember the Sabbath day, to keep it holy. You are to labor six days and do all your work, but the seventh day is a Sabbath to the Lord your God…”

While the command references God’s creation activity, its function is covenantal. The Decalogue is not a cosmological treatise but a covenant charter. The Sabbath here is embedded in Israel’s covenant obligations, marking them as Yahweh’s people. The “six days” motif provides theological grounding, but the purpose is relational: Israel’s rhythm of work and rest mirrors Yahweh’s sovereignty and sets them apart from surrounding nations.

This covenantal context is later made explicit in Exodus 31:

“Tell the Israelites: You must observe my Sabbaths, for it is a sign between me and you throughout your generations, so that you will know that I am the Lord who consecrates you.” 

Exodus 31:13

“The Israelites must observe the Sabbath, celebrating it throughout their generations as a permanent covenant. It is a sign forever between me and the Israelites, for in six days the Lord made the heavens and the earth, but on the seventh day he rested and was refreshed.” 

Exodus 31:16–17

Exodus 20 and Exodus 31 together establish that the Sabbath is a covenant sign expressed through multiple sacred rhythms—weekly rest, festival assemblies, sabbatical years, and eventually Jubilee cycles. None of these patterns depend on a literal seven‑day creation chronology, and isolating Exodus 20:11 from this broader covenantal framework distorts its meaning. This covenantal symbolism was not unique to the Torah; it was carried forward in Israel’s prophetic tradition as well. The prophets understood the Sabbath in the same covenantal terms that Exodus lays out, and Ezekiel makes this especially clear.

Ezekiel’s Explicit Covenant Language

Ezekiel repeatedly clarifies that the Sabbaths—plural, encompassing weekly and festival observances—were covenant signs, not mere memorials of creation:

  • Ezekiel 20:12:

    “I gave them my Sabbaths to serve as a sign between me and them, so that they would know that I am the Lord who consecrates them.”

  • Ezekiel 20:20:

    “Keep my Sabbaths holy, and they will be a sign between me and you, so that you may know that I am the Lord your God.”

  • Ezekiel 20:24 underscores covenant violation in connection with Sabbath observance:

    “Because they had not obeyed my ordinances but had rejected my statutes and desecrated my Sabbaths, and their eyes were fixed on their fathers’ idols.”

Here, the Sabbaths are explicitly covenantal markers. They signify consecration, loyalty, and divine identity. The text makes no claim that Sabbaths are memorials of creation chronology. Instead, they are relational signs binding Israel to Yahweh.

Theological Implications

  1. Covenant Identity, Not Cosmology
    Exodus consistently situates the Sabbath within covenantal obligations. Ezekiel confirms that Sabbaths function as signs of consecration and divine lordship. The emphasis is relational, not chronological.

  2. Adventist Inheritance in YEC
    The modern “work week” apologetic is a direct inheritance from Adventist sabbatarian theology. Ellen White and Price framed Sabbath worship as dependent on six-day creation. Evangelicals later reframed this logic to defend “biblical authority” rather than White’s, but the apologetic framework derived from Price’s arguments remained unchanged.

  3. Misreading Exodus 20
    To insist that Exodus 20 teaches that God created over a span of six literal days and that this forms the basis for the seven-day calendar week is to impose Adventist sabbatarian logic onto the text. The biblical witness itself emphasizes covenantal symbolism, not cosmological literalism.

Conclusion

The Sabbath command in Exodus 20 was never intended as a 1:1 representation of creation chronology. It was always a covenantal sign, marking Israel’s consecration to Yahweh. Both Exodus 31 and Ezekiel 20 make this explicit: Sabbaths were signs of the covenant, not memorials to creation.

Thus, when modern YEC apologists argue that six-day creation is necessary to preserve the “normal work week,” they are echoing the teachings of Ellen G. White and George McCready Price. The methodology is Adventist, not Mosaic. Exodus and Ezekiel together reveal that the Sabbath’s true function was about covenantal identity, not origins.


Monday, May 4, 2026

Selective Literalism and Genesis 3: Did Snakes Lose Their Legs?

 




Introduction

In this sub‑series on selective literalism, I have been tracing a recurring pattern in Young Earth Creationist (YEC) interpretation: a hyper‑literal reading of certain phrases—often chosen because they appear to align with modern scientific or zoological claims—paired with a metaphorical or symbolic reading of adjacent phrases in the very same verse. Genesis 3 has proven to be fertile ground for this pattern. Claims about the “first death,” the absence of physical pain before the Fall, and the sudden appearance of thorns arise not from the text itself but from interpretive assumptions read into the narrative.

Genesis 3:14–15 is no exception. In fact, it may be one of the clearest examples of selective literalism in the entire chapter. YEC ministries such as Answers in Genesis (AiG) frequently assert that snakes lost their legs as a direct result of the curse on the serpent. Yet the same interpreters treat the second half of the very same sentence—“and dust you will eat all the days of your life”—as metaphorical, since snakes do not literally consume dust.

This article examines that inconsistency, evaluates the biblical language, and considers the theological implications of reading modern zoology and paleontology back into an ancient Near Eastern text.

What Genesis 3:14–15 Actually Says

The relevant passage reads:

“Because you have done this, you are cursed more than any livestock and more than any wild animal. You will move on your belly and eat dust all the days of your life.”
Genesis 3:14

Two immediate observations:

  1. The text never mentions legs.
    It does not say the serpent had legs, nor that God removed them.

  2. The curse is expressed in poetic, judgment‑formula language.
    The structure resembles other biblical curse oracles, especially those describing humiliation, defeat, and subjugation.

The YEC claim that snakes lost their legs is therefore not a textual statement but an interpretive inference—one that must be evaluated on its own merits.

The YEC Argument: A Case Study in Selective Literalism

AiG’s article “The Legless Snakes” (2011) illustrates the pattern well. (1) The argument proceeds as follows:

  • Genesis 3:14 says the serpent will “move on [its] belly.”

  • Therefore, the serpent must previously have had legs.

  • Therefore, snakes today are legless because of the Fall.

  • Fossils of snakes with vestigial limbs confirm this biblical teaching.

Yet the same article acknowledges:

  • Scripture “isn’t specific about the anatomy of the Eden serpent.”

  • We do not know whether the curse applied to all serpents or only the tempter.

  • Fossil snakes are from the Flood era, not Eden.

  • The serpent may not have walked in any meaningful sense.

In other words, the claim that “snakes lost their legs” is treated as a literal biblical teaching even though the text never states it, while the article simultaneously concedes that we know nothing about the serpent’s original anatomy.

This is selective literalism: reading one half of a sentence as a literal, zoological description while treating the other half as poetic metaphor.

“Dust You Will Eat”: A Biblical Idiom for Defeat, Not Diet

If “you will move on your belly” is taken as literal zoological transformation, consistency would require taking the next clause literally as well:

“…and eat dust all the days of your life.”

But snakes do not eat dust. YEC interpreters therefore treat this phrase metaphorically—usually as a symbol of humiliation.

And they are right to do so. Throughout Scripture, “eating dust” or “licking the dust” is a stock idiom for defeat, humiliation, or subjugation:

  • “They will lick dust like a snake.”Micah 7:17

  • “May desert tribes kneel before him and his enemies lick the dust.”Psalm 72:9

  • “They will bow down to you with their faces to the ground and lick the dust at your feet.”Isaiah 49:23

Likewise, “lying in the dust” or “being brought to the dust” is a common metaphor for humiliation or death:

  • “You will seek me, but I will be gone; you will look for me, but I will no longer exist.”Job 7:21

  • “You put me into the dust of death.”Psalm 22:15

Thus, the second half of Genesis 3:14 is clearly idiomatic. It describes the serpent’s humiliation, not its diet.

But if the second clause is metaphorical, why must the first clause be literal? The text gives no indication that the two clauses should be read differently. They function together as a poetic parallelism typical of Hebrew curse oracles.

The Eden Serpent: Not a Zoological Specimen

Another major issue with the YEC reading is that it assumes the serpent in Genesis 3 is a normal animal. But the narrative itself suggests otherwise.

  • The serpent speaks (Genesis 3:1–5).

  • It possesses moral agency.

  • It is held responsible for deception.

  • It is later identified with a supernatural adversary (Revelation 12:9; 20:2).

In a separate article I have argued that the “serpent” is best understood not as a zoological snake but as a rebellious divine being, likely a fallen שָׂרָף (seraph) or throne‑guardian (2). The Hebrew term נָחָשׁ (nachash) itself carries connotations of shining or serpentine imagery associated with heavenly beings (cf. Numbers 21:6; Isaiah 6:2, 6).

If the tempter is a supernatural being, then the curse is not about reptile anatomy but about cosmic humiliation—being cast down, stripped of status, and destined for ultimate defeat (cf. Isaiah 14:12–15; Ezekiel 28:12–17).

This reading aligns with the biblical idiom of “eating dust” and with the theological arc of Genesis 3:15, which speaks of enmity between the serpent and the woman’s offspring—a conflict that unfolds across Scripture, not in zoology.

The Broader Pattern: Reading Modern Science Into Genesis

The legless‑snake claim is not an isolated example. Genesis 3 is routinely mined for scientific claims that the text never makes:

  • No pain before the Fall (Genesis 3:16 does not say this).

  • No death before the Fall (the text never states universal animal immortality).

  • No thorns before the Fall (Genesis 3:18 does not say thorns were newly created).

  • A global change in animal behavior (never mentioned).

In each case, a modern scientific or biological assumption is projected onto the text, and then the text is read as though it were making that claim explicitly.

The legless‑snake argument follows the same pattern: modern zoology (snakes are legless) + modern paleontology (some ancient snakes had limbs) + a selective literal reading of one clause in Genesis 3:14 = a claim that the Bible teaches snakes lost their legs at the Fall.

But the text itself says none of this.

What the Curse Does Mean: Humiliation, Not Anatomy

When read in its ancient Near Eastern and biblical context, Genesis 3:14–15 communicates:

  • Humiliation (“on your belly,” “eat dust”).

  • Defeat (the serpent is cursed above all creatures).

  • Ongoing enmity between the serpent and humanity.

  • A future victory through the woman’s offspring (Genesis 3:15).

These themes are theological, not zoological. They concern the cosmic conflict between God, humanity, and the forces of evil—not the evolutionary or de‑evolutionary history of reptiles.

Conclusion: Let the Text Speak for Itself

The YEC claim that snakes lost their legs in Genesis 3 is not grounded in what the text actually says. It emerges from a pattern we have seen repeatedly in this series: reading modern scientific categories into an ancient narrative, then treating those imported ideas as though they were explicit biblical teaching. In this case, a single poetic clause—“on your belly you will go”—is elevated into a zoological statement about reptile anatomy, while the very next clause—“and dust you will eat”—is quietly treated as metaphor because it does not fit observable biology. The inconsistency is not in Scripture but in the interpretive method.

Genesis 3:14–15 is not attempting to explain the evolutionary or de‑evolutionary history of snakes. It is a curse oracle, rich in the imagery of humiliation, defeat, and cosmic conflict. Its focus is theological, not anatomical. When we allow the text to speak in its own literary and cultural voice, the serpent becomes what the narrative itself portrays: not a zoological specimen but a rebellious, supernatural adversary whose downfall is symbolized in the language of crawling and eating dust. The passage points forward to enmity, struggle, and ultimately victory—not to a moment in prehistory when reptiles supposedly lost their limbs.

As with other examples in this series, the deeper issue is not whether one affirms Scripture’s authority, but whether one allows Scripture to define its own categories. When modern expectations are imposed on the text, selective literalism becomes inevitable. But when the text is read on its own terms, its theological depth becomes clearer, and its message more compelling.


Saturday, May 2, 2026

Bones, Belief, and the Burden of Proof: A Response to the “No Biblical Bones” Rhetoric


Introduction

It’s a popular challenge across skeptical forums and social media feeds: “We have bones from creatures that lived millions of years ago, but not a single bone from any biblical character—how does that make sense?” At first blush, it feels like a clever indictment of the Bible’s historical reliability—succinct, striking, and seemingly logical.

But that’s exactly the problem. Like many rhetorical flourishes, its force depends more on rhetorical impact than historical substance. Beneath the clever phrasing lie several misconceptions about archaeology, historical methodology, and the nature of evidence itself.

It also reflects a basic misunderstanding of time itself. Dinosaurs lived for over 150 million years, giving their fossilized remains vastly more opportunities for preservation across countless geologic layers. In contrast, anatomically modern humans have existed for just a few hundred thousand years—a fraction of Earth’s history—and biblical figures lived only within the last few millennia. Even under ideal preservation conditions, the statistical odds of recovering any one individual’s remains are incredibly low. So, while the fossil record of prehistoric species may seem abundant by comparison, this abundance reflects sheer longevity and the very different scientific domains of paleontology and archaeology.

To unpack the flaws beneath this surface-level comparison, we need to begin with a closer look at what it assumes.

The Premise: A Misguided Standard of Proof

This argument implies that the absence of skeletal remains from biblical figures undermines the Bible’s historical reliability. This rests on a faulty assumption: that physical remains are the gold standard for confirming the existence of historical individuals. In reality, most figures from antiquity—biblical or otherwise—are not known to us through bones. We do not possess the remains of Socrates, Alexander the Great, Julius Caesar, or Confucius. Yet no serious historian doubts their existence.

The preservation of human remains is a rare archaeological occurrence, dependent on a host of factors: burial practices, climate, soil acidity, and historical disruptions such as war or looting. In the ancient Near East, secondary burial in ossuaries was common, and bones were often reinterred or lost over time. The expectation that we should have intact skeletons of biblical figures is not only unrealistic—it’s inconsistent with how we evaluate historical claims more broadly.

Historical Figures Without Bones

Consider a few examples:

  • Socrates (469–399 BCE): Known entirely through the writings of Plato and Xenophon. No grave, no bones.


  • Alexander the Great (356–323 BCE): His tomb was reportedly visited in antiquity, but its location is now lost. No remains have been recovered.


  • Pontius Pilate: We have no bones, but we do have the Pilate Stone, an inscription confirming his role as prefect of Judea.

These individuals are accepted as historical not because of skeletal remains, but because of textual and material corroboration—the same kinds of evidence we have for many biblical figures.

Material Evidence for Biblical Characters

Far from being devoid of archaeological support, the Bible is increasingly corroborated by material discoveries. Scholars like Lawrence Mykytiuk have identified over 50 individuals from the Hebrew Bible and 30 from the New Testament who are confirmed in the archaeological record. (1, 2) These include:

  • King David: The Tel Dan Stele (9th century BCE) refers to the “House of David,” offering strong evidence for his dynastic legacy.


  • Hezekiah: His name appears on the Siloam Tunnel Inscription and royal seals.


  • Isaiah the Prophet: A bulla (seal impression) discovered near the Temple Mount may reference “Isaiah the prophet,” though the identification is debated.


  • Caiaphas the High Priest: In 1990, archaeologists discovered an ornate ossuary inscribed “Joseph son of Caiaphas,” containing the bones of a 60-year-old man. This find is widely accepted as belonging to the high priest who presided over Jesus’ trial. (3)

Even non-Israelite rulers mentioned in Scripture have been confirmed:

  • Tiglath-Pileser III, Sargon II, and Sennacherib—Assyrian kings referenced in 2 Kings and Isaiah—are well-attested in inscriptions and reliefs.


  • Pharaoh Shishak (1 Kings 14:25–26) is identified with Sheshonq I, whose military campaign is recorded on the walls of the Karnak Temple in Egypt.

Textual Evidence as Historical Evidence

The “no bones” challenge also betrays a misunderstanding of how historians use textual sources. Ancient texts—whether biblical, classical, or Near Eastern—are primary evidence. The Bible is a collection of such texts, composed over centuries, reflecting historical memory, theological reflection, and cultural context.

To dismiss the Bible’s historical claims unless accompanied by bones is to apply a hyper-skeptical standard not used elsewhere. We do not require skeletal remains to accept the existence of Roman emperors or Babylonian kings when we have inscriptions, coins, and written records. The Bible, when read critically and contextually, deserves the same treatment.

Skeletal Remains: What We Do Have

While rare, some skeletal remains associated with biblical figures or early Christian saints do exist:

  • Caiaphas’s bones, as noted, are a prime example of a named biblical figure whose remains have likely been recovered.


  • Ossuaries of early Christians have been found in Jerusalem, some bearing names like “James, son of Joseph, brother of Jesus”—though the authenticity of this particular ossuary remains debated.


  • Relics of saints, while often disputed, cannot be dismissed wholesale. Some may indeed be authentic, and their veneration reflects early Christian memory and continuity.

Conclusion: A Misplaced Skepticism

The “no bones” argument’s rhetorical force depends on a false equivalence: that the presence of dinosaur bones and the absence of biblical bones should be equally weighted in evaluating historical claims. But dinosaurs are known through paleontology, a field concerned with prehistoric life, while biblical figures are evaluated through archaeology and historiography, disciplines that rely on texts, inscriptions, and artifacts—not just bones.

In short, we don’t need bones to know people existed. We need evidence—and the Bible, when approached with scholarly rigor, offers plenty of it.