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Saturday, April 4, 2026

Selective Literalism and the Flood: How Young Earth Theology Reinterprets Genesis 7:11

 





Introduction: Picking and Choosing in the Floodwaters of Interpretation

Few theological frameworks advocate for biblical literalism as strongly as Young Earth theology. Its proponents insist that Scripture must be read plainly and without compromise. Yet, when scientific realities make such interpretations untenable, a subtle but strategic game of hermeneutical hopscotch emerges—selective literalism deployed to validate predetermined conclusions.

A striking example of this occurs in Genesis 7:11:

“In the six hundredth year of Noah’s life, in the second month, on the seventeenth day of the month, all the sources of the vast watery depths burst open, the floodgates of the sky were opened.”

Young Earth readings treat the first half of this verse as scientifically literal, using it to justify models of catastrophic flood geology and plate tectonics. However, the second half—“the floodgates of the sky were opened”—is quietly reinterpreted as metaphor, sidestepping its connection to ancient Near Eastern (ANE) cosmology. (1)

This inconsistent hermeneutic reveals three fundamental contradictions in Young Earth interpretation:

  1. Scientific Inconsistency – Science is embraced when it supports Young Earth claims but rejected when it contradicts a strictly literal reading.

  1. Rejection of ANE Context – ANE hermeneutics are dismissed when they conflict with Young Earth interpretations.

  1. Selective Concordism – Scripture is filtered through modern scientific assumptions rather than read in its original linguistic and cultural context.

What is Concordism?

To fully understand the Young Earth interpretive inconsistencies, it is important to define concordism. Concordism is the attempt to align biblical descriptions with modern scientific discoveries, often at the expense of the original historical and literary context.

Young Earth theology often rejects scientific input in interpreting Scripture—except when it can be used to validate their predetermined conclusions. This selective use of science exposes deep inconsistencies in the way Young Earth advocates approach biblical interpretation.

As Dr. John Walton states:

“If we want to reach an understanding about how we should go about reading a particular passage in the Bible, we have to understand how we should go about reading the Bible more generally. In particular, we want to have a way to approach the biblical text that we are comfortable applying to any part of it, as opposed to selectively choosing an approach based on whether it produces the conclusions that we want.” (The Lost World of the Israelite Conquest, p.4)

By applying selective literalism only when convenient, Young Earth theology constructs a self-contradictory interpretative framework—one that cannot be sustained under scholarly scrutiny.

Selective Literalism and the Tactical Use of Science

A defining contradiction of Young Earth theology is its shifting relationship with science. When empirical data seems to affirm its claims, science is embraced as proof. However, when findings contradict a literal reading of Scripture, science is dismissed as secular bias.

Genesis 7:11 exposes this tension. The phrase “all the sources of the vast watery depths burst open” is treated literally, supporting catastrophic plate tectonics and hydroplate models. Since these concepts align with Young Earth geological interpretations, science is welcomed as affirmation.

However, the next phrase—“the floodgates of the sky were opened”—presents a problem. Ancient Israelites, like their Mesopotamian neighbors, understood the sky as a solid dome holding back cosmic waters. Accepting this as literal would require embracing an outdated cosmology incompatible with modern physics. Young Earth proponents redefine the phrase as metaphor, claiming it represents rainfall rather than a cosmic water barrier.

Thus, when science appears supportive, Young Earth readings insist on literalism. When science contradicts their expectations, interpretation shifts to metaphor, revealing a clear double standard. (A similar pattern appears in Genesis 3:14, where Young Earth proponents take "You will move on your belly" as implying that snakes once had legs but disregard "eat dust all the days of your life," since snakes do not actually consume dust. This selective application of literalism reinforces the broader inconsistency in interpretation.) Furthermore, this interpretation reads far more into the text than what is actually stated, assuming scientific details that are not explicitly mentioned. This undermines the YEC premise of taking Scripture at its plain meaning, demonstrating that interpretive expansion occurs when it supports their conclusions or scientific hypotheses.

Dismissing Ancient Near Eastern Hermeneutics When Inconvenient

Young Earth theology professes a commitment to biblical context, yet it consistently resists engagement with ancient Near Eastern thought when it challenges modern interpretations. This resistance to ANE literary and cosmological frameworks leads to misreadings that obscure the original meaning of Scripture.

For example, the concept of the sky as a solid dome—well-attested in ANE texts—appears throughout Scripture, such as in Genesis 1:6:

“Then God said, ‘Let there be an expanse between the waters, separating water from water.’”

The Hebrew word rāqîaʿ(רָקִיעַ), translated as “expanse,” was understood in ANE cosmology as a firm structure holding back cosmic waters. Likewise, Job 37:18 describes the sky’s solidity:

“Can you help God spread out the skies as hard as a cast metal mirror?”

The work of scholars such as Michael S. Heiser (The Unseen Realm) and Richard J. Clifford (The Cosmic Mountain in the Ancient Near East) confirm that biblical descriptions of the cosmos align with ANE thought rather than modern science.

Another prime example of this rejection comes from Answers in Genesis (AiG), which explicitly dismisses ANE hermeneutics in favor of what it calls the “plain meaning” of Scripture. In their article “Reading Genesis: ANE Hermeneutic vs. Plain Meaning, AiG argues that scholars like John Walton distort the biblical text by incorporating ANE cultural insights. (2) AiG insists that Genesis 1–11 should be read as a straightforward historical account, rather than as a text shaped by the literary and cosmological conventions of the ancient world.

This rejection of ANE hermeneutics is problematic for several reasons:

  1. The Bible Was Written in an ANE Context – The biblical authors lived in the Ancient Near East, and their writings reflect the cosmological, linguistic, and literary conventions of their time. Disregarding this context diminishes the depth of the text, forcing modern assumptions— “man's ideas—onto Scripture from an external perspective, a practice explicitly condemned by AiG. (3, 4)

  1. ANE Thought Helps Clarify Difficult Passages – Many biblical descriptions, such as the firmament (rāqîaʿ) in Genesis 1:6 or the floodgates of heaven in Genesis 7:11, make far more sense when understood within an ANE worldview. Scholars such as Michael S. Heiser (The Unseen Realm) and Richard J. Clifford (The Cosmic Mountain in the Ancient Near East) demonstrate that biblical cosmology aligns with ANE thought rather than modern scientific models.

  1. Selective Use of ANE Context – While AiG openly rejects ANE hermeneutics, it paradoxically embraces ANE insights when they support Young Earth claims. For example, AiG frequently references ANE flood narratives (such as the Epic of Gilgamesh) to argue for a global flood, yet it dismisses ANE hermeneutics when they contradict its interpretative framework.

By rejecting ANE hermeneutics outright, AiG isolates Genesis from its historical and literary context, treating it as a modern scientific document rather than an ANE theological narrative. This approach distorts the meaning of Scripture, forcing it into post-Enlightenment categories rather than allowing it to speak within its original worldview.

Theological Implications of a Broken Hermeneutic

Beyond the inconsistencies in Young Earth interpretation, the theological consequences are substantial. If Young Earth theology engages in selective hermeneutics, it undermines the claim that its interpretive model is objectively superior to others.

  • Selective Interpretation Undermines Biblical Authority – Young Earth proponents acknowledge the existence of literary genres and metaphors in Scripture. However, they often assume that such literary conventions should be immediately obvious to modern readers, dismissing interpretative nuance unless metaphor is explicitly stated (e.g., the parables of Jesus) or inferred based on genre (e.g., Psalms, Proverbs, Ecclesiastes, Song of Songs). Yet, if literalism is abandoned whenever inconvenient—even mid-sentence, as seen in Genesis 7:11—how can Young Earth theology consistently uphold its claim that Scripture must be read literally?

  • Weakening Apologetics Through Inconsistency – Critics of Young Earth theology argue that its hermeneutical inconsistencies weaken its apologetic credibility. If Young Earth readings apply literalism selectively, shifting between hyper-literal interpretations and metaphor whenever necessary, they risk undermining their own argument against competing theological perspectives.

  • Furthermore, Young Earth proponents often criticize other interpretive approaches—such as those embracing theistic evolution or Old Earth creationism—for allowing scientific findings to inform biblical interpretation. However, as seen in Genesis 7:11, Young Earth theology does the same when faced with an untenable literal reading. This double standard weakens its ability to defend a cohesive, biblically faithful worldview against skeptics or alternative Christian perspectives.
  • Reshaping Scripture to Fit Modern Assumptions – By filtering biblical interpretation through modern scientific presuppositions, Young Earth readings often reshape the text rather than honor its original intent. Instead of interpreting Scripture on its own terms, Young Earth theology frequently retrofits ancient descriptions into post-Enlightenment scientific categories, forcing harmony between biblical cosmology and modern physics. This concordist approach risks distorting the literary, theological, and historical integrity of the biblical text. Passages that clearly reflect ancient Near Eastern thought are redefined or ignored, not because of textual evidence, but because they do not fit modern scientific expectations. In doing so, Young Earth readings fail to represent the worldview of the biblical authors, privileging Western, post-Enlightenment perspectives over the historical-grammatical method they claim to uphold.

A consistent hermeneutic must apply the same interpretive standards across Scripture, rather than shifting between literalism and metaphor when convenient. Accurate interpretation requires understanding the full context—not only the meaning of the words or the passages before and after a verse, but also the literary genre, linguistic and literary conventions within the cultural setting, and the historical framework of the passage.

Conclusion: A Broken Hermeneutic on Unsteady Foundations

The flood account in Genesis 7:11 exposes the interpretative instability of Young Earth theology. By treating the first half of the verse as literal and the second half as metaphor, Young Earth readings reveal a pattern of selective interpretation, shifting between strict literalism and figurative reinterpretation as needed.

As Walton states, a coherent hermeneutic must be applied consistently across Scripture. Yet Young Earth theology employs an inconsistent approach, adjusting its interpretive methods to fit predetermined conclusions rather than historical context.

Faithful biblical interpretation requires recognizing the historical setting, honoring the literary intent, and resisting the impulse to reshape Scripture into modern scientific categories. Until Young Earth theology abandons its hermeneutical hopscotch and applies a stable interpretive framework, its theological foundation—much like the floodwaters it selectively interprets—will remain unstable.


Wednesday, April 1, 2026

When “History” Doesn’t Mean History: How Young Earth Creationism Quietly Redefines a Core Term





Introduction

Every so often, a debate turns not on evidence or argument but on a single word — a word so familiar that no one thinks to examine it. In discussions about origins, that word is history. When groups like Answers in Genesis (AiG) confidently assert that “The Bible is the true history of the world,” most readers assume they mean “history” in the ordinary sense: the record of human events, the ancient Near Eastern world, archaeology, and the lived experience of real people in real places.

But that assumption is premature.

Within Young Earth Creationist (YEC) circles, history is a technical term with a specialized meaning that differs sharply from how historians, theologians, and the general public use it. This difference is rarely acknowledged, yet it shapes the entire conversation. Outsiders hear a familiar word and assume shared meaning; insiders hear a doctrinal claim about the physical origins of the universe. Once this shift is recognized, the rhetorical structure of modern YEC teaching becomes far easier to understand.

Two Different Meanings of “History”

To understand the disconnect, we must begin by naming the two competing definitions.

In mainstream usage, history refers to the study of human societies over time. It involves written sources, archaeological evidence, cultural memory, and the interpretation of human actions in their social and political contexts. History is fundamentally about people — their decisions, their conflicts, their institutions, their stories. It is the domain of civilizations, empires, migrations, and cultural developments.

And crucially, it is geographically bounded by the peoples who left records. The Bible itself reflects this: its narrative world is centered in the Mediterranean and Mesopotamian regions, focusing on Israel, Judah, Egypt, Assyria, Babylon, Persia, and their neighbors. It does not attempt to describe the histories of China, the Indus Valley, the Americas, sub‑Saharan Africa, or any number of civilizations flourishing beyond the biblical horizon.

This is why, when AiG or other YEC voices assert that “the Bible is the true history of the world,” they are not referring to a comprehensive historical record of global civilizations — a claim easily refuted by the Bible’s own narrow geographical and cultural scope. Instead, they are using the word history in a very different sense, one that has little to do with human civilizations at all.

Within YEC discourse, history is expanded far beyond human events. It becomes a catch‑all term for the entire physical past of the universe — essentially natural history reframed as historical narrative. Thus, when YEC organizations like AiG describe the Bible as “the history book of the universe,” they are effectively shoehorning cosmology, geology, paleontology, anthropology, and human history into a single narrative derived from a literal reading of Genesis — particularly chapters 1-11. In this framework, the “major events of history” are not the rise and fall of empires or the development of ancient cultures but Creation, the Fall, the Flood, and the dispersion at Babel.

This is not a minor semantic difference. It is a complete redefinition of the term, one that quietly shifts the conversation every time the word history appears.

AiG’s Own Writings Reveal the Redefinition

AiG does not hide what they mean by “history.” In fact, they state it openly — just not in a way most readers recognize as a redefinition.

In the introduction to its Bible History section, AiG writes:

“The Bible is the history book of the universe. It provides an accurate account of historical events that serve as a foundation and a framework for understanding, dating, and interpreting secular history and historical science.” (1)

This is not a description of human history. It is a cosmological claim.

AiG reinforces this point elsewhere by insisting that the Bible provides the only reliable account of the world’s past because God is the sole eyewitness to creation. In the article entitled Creation, AiG states:

Biblical creation upholds the Bible as God’s eyewitness account of actual creation events since God was the only one there to observe what happened at the very beginning.(2)

Here, the underlying premise is that “biblical history” does not simply mean the historical world of Israel or the ancient Near East. It means AiG’s reconstruction of Earth’s physical past — including the age of the earth, the formation of geological strata, and the origin of all life — based on their interpretation of Genesis.

The point becomes even clearer in AiG’s Seven C’s of History, which lists Creation, Corruption, Catastrophe (the Flood), and Confusion (Babel) as the foundational events of world history. (3)

Finally, AiG’s well‑known distinction between “observational science” and “historical science” reframes geology, paleontology, and cosmology as competing narratives about the past rather than empirical fields with their own methods and evidentiary standards. (4) The Bible, in this model, becomes the authoritative source for “historical science,” and scientific conclusions that conflict with a literal reading of Genesis are dismissed as alternative histories — or more accurately, mythologies of an “anti-God religion rather than as empirical findings. (5, 6)

Taken together, these statements reveal a consistent pattern: AiG uses history to mean something far broader — and far more scientifically loaded — than the ordinary meaning of the term.

What This Redefinition Accomplishes

This shift is not merely semantic. It serves several strategic purposes.

First, it elevates AiG’s interpretation of Genesis to the level of objective fact. If Genesis is “history,” then disagreeing with AiG’s reading is framed as denying history itself. Furthermore, since AiG teaches that the creation account in Genesis is a historical narrative dictated by God Himself — the sole eyewitness to the events — questioning their claims becomes synonymous with questioning God. (7) This reframes the debate from “Is AiG’s interpretation correct?” to “Do you believe God or not?” — a powerful rhetorical move.

Second, it recasts scientific disciplines as rival stories rather than as evidence‑based inquiries. Evolution becomes “a false history,” radiometric dating becomes “a different history,” and geology becomes “an alternative history invented by atheists.” (8, 9) By redefining mainstream science as “a-historical” and their own position as “the true history of the world,” AiG can dismiss both scientific and historical evidence without ever engaging it on scientific or historical terms.

Third, it bypasses the actual discipline of history. If “history” is defined as “what (we say) Genesis says,” then ancient Near Eastern context, genre analysis, archaeology, and textual criticism and biblical scholarship become irrelevant — or even threatening.

Finally, and most importantly for public discourse, it creates an insider vocabulary that outsiders do not recognize. To the average person, history means human events recorded in time. To the YEC insider, history means the entire physical past of the universe as reconstructed from a YEC interpretation of Genesis. Two people can use the same word and yet be speaking entirely different conceptual languages.

Conclusion: Recovering Clarity in a Confused Conversation

Recognizing this redefinition does not diminish Scripture. It simply clarifies the terms of the conversation. The Bible is rich, profound, and historically significant. But calling it “the history book of the universe” is not a return to biblical faithfulness; it is a modern rhetorical strategy that collapses categories the biblical authors never used, never imagined, and had quite literally never heard of — categories that belong to modern scientific discourse, not the ancient world.


And this matters. When “history” is redefined to mean “the entire physical past of the universe,” AiG’s interpretation of Genesis becomes indistinguishable from objective fact. Disagreement is framed not as a question of interpretation but as a denial of history itself — or even a rejection of God as the supposed “sole eyewitness.” At the same time, scientific disciplines are recast as competing stories rather than evidence‑based inquiries, and the tools of actual historical study — ancient Near Eastern context, genre analysis, archaeology, textual criticism — are sidelined as irrelevant or threatening.

The result is a conversation misaligned from the start. Two sides use the same word, history, to describe fundamentally different things. No amount of data, exegesis, or goodwill can bridge that gap until the linguistic shift is acknowledged.

Recovering the ordinary meaning of history is not a threat to biblical interpretation. It is an act of intellectual honesty — one that allows Christians to read the Bible on its own terms, within its own world, without forcing it to function as a modern scientific chronicle. And it allows public conversations about origins to proceed with clarity rather than confusion.

If we want genuine dialogue — between Christians and non-Christians, between science and faith, or between different interpretive traditions — we must begin by using words in their ordinary sense. Only then can we move beyond talking past one another and toward a more faithful, thoughtful, and historically grounded engagement with both Scripture and the world it describes.