Thank you, JD, for further clarifying your position.
To answer JD’s Questions from Round 3:
Q: By what textual or canonical principle do you decide which parts of Genesis 1–11 are historical and which are non-chronological literary-theological framing? You affirm Adam, Eve, the Fall, and the Flood as literal, but read Genesis 1’s creation week as non-chronological. What controls that distinction?
A: As I explained in Round 2, the distinction between Genesis 1 and 2 is based on the Hebrew grammar and internal textual markers. The first natural break in the literary structure of Genesis occurs at 2:4, signaling that we are now in a separate literary unit. The grammar, vocabulary, syntax and structure from then on is markedly different from what we see in Genesis 1:1-2:3. This is not an arbitrary distinction. It is what the text itself indicates. And, crucially, I am not turning to later references to answer genre questions. Any person can quote a passage of Scripture. A quote alone does not establish the genre of the passage being cited. You must go to the context of the original passage to understand its genre.
Q: What do the genealogies in Genesis 5 and 11 contribute to your model? Do they provide a real historical bridge from Adam to Noah to Abraham, or are they primarily theological structuring devices? If they are historical, how much chronological elasticity can they bear?
A: In all honesty, the Genesis 5 and 11 genealogies contribute far less to my model than the YEC model. As I will discuss more in the following argument, I do believe they form a real historical bridge from Adam to Noah to Abraham, but that this bridge does not require them to be understood in a strictly literalistic way. The question isn’t “how much chronological elasticity can they bear” so much as it is “do they bear the theological weight the YEC reading places on its chronology?”
Q: In Romans 5 and 1 Corinthians 15, what exactly does Adam’s sin introduce? If animal death, predation, disease, extinction, and natural disaster all predate Adam, is Paul’s death-through-sin language limited to human death, spiritual death, covenantal death, or something else?
A: I will be exploring these passages more thoroughly in Round 5. But to put it simply, Paul’s death-through-sin language is unequivocally limited to human death—spiritual and physical. Therefore I would agree that Adam’s sin introduced spiritual death—that is sin and alienation from God and each other—culminating in physical death for mankind, not a cosmic “death-curse” on all creation.
JD’s Round 3 post can be read here.
Round 3: Scripture, Chronology, and Biblical Theology:
How should Genesis 1-11 function within the broader canon of Scripture?
My argument is that just as Genesis 1 functions as a theological prologue to the narrative proper, so Genesis 1–11 functions as a prologue to the main storyline. Everything in these opening chapters leads toward the real narrative focus: the call of Abraham, the lives of the patriarchs, and the emergence of Israel as a people. Even within JD’s YEC framework, Genesis 1–11 is theologically rich yet chronologically compressed compared to the rest of the book. According to the YEC reading, roughly 1,656 years are condensed into the first eleven chapters—most of which are devoted to the Flood narrative and the genealogies in Genesis 5 and 11. By contrast, the remaining thirty‑nine chapters describe in detail the lives of Abraham, Isaac, Jacob, and Jacob’s sons, spanning only about 360 years. The narrative emphasis of Genesis falls overwhelmingly on what comes after chapter 11, which is the opposite of how modern debates about Genesis typically frame the book. Thus, Genesis 1–11 should be understood on those terms. Both JD and I (and indeed, every Christian) agree that the theological bedrock of Genesis 1–11 is the essential issue, not its chronology. And in both our views, that theology is consistent, despite our differences in how we arrive at our conclusions.
If Genesis 1–11 is not primarily concerned with chronology, then the genealogies—which are often treated as the backbone of biblical chronology—must be examined on their own literary and theological terms. The real questions are 1) whether the theological bedrock of Genesis 1–11 requires the long lifespans in Genesis 5 and 11 to be literal, biographical reportage and 2) if the Flood narrative requires a global cataclysm in order to be historically true. I would argue the answer to both is no.
On the Genealogies of Genesis
In my view, Genesis 1–11 contains “historical touch points,” but these are secondary to the theological and literary aims of the text. In the previous round, I discussed the significance of numerology in ancient Near Eastern literature—particularly the numbers 2, 3, 5, and 7 and their multiples—and how these numbers are woven into the structure of Genesis 1. This pattern continues into the genealogy of Genesis 5. The lifespans and begetting ages of all but one individual are numbers divisible by 5 or ending in 2 or 7. The lone exception is Methuselah with his 969 years, which can still be broken down into symbolic factors of 7 and 5 (if you subtract 14—the sacred number 7 twice over—his age becomes 955). Whether or not one accepts specific reconstructions, the numerical patterning itself points to deliberate stylization rather than random historical reporting of the sort we see in the historical records of the kings of Judah and Israel.
Genesis 11, by contrast, does not follow the same neat scheme. Its lifespans end in a wider variety of digits, and the textual traditions (MT, LXX, SP, DSS) diverge significantly—often adjusting the numbers to ensure that no patriarch outlives the Flood or to maintain symbolic symmetry. This fluidity demonstrates that ancient scribes saw these numbers as flexible, reinforcing the point that they were primarily meant to convey theological meaning rather than provide rigid chronological data.
The structure of the generations reinforces this. In most English Bibles—based on the Masoretic tradition—Genesis presents ten generations from Adam to Noah and ten more from Noah to Abraham. This symmetrical “ten and ten” pattern is widely recognized as a classic ancient Near Eastern literary device, signaling order, completeness, and theological intentionality. The Septuagint preserves an even more elaborate structure of twenty‑one names—ten before Noah, Noah himself, and ten after him. This is the genealogy Luke uses in Luke 3:23–38, strongly suggesting that the LXX tradition was the one circulating in the Second Temple period and considered authoritative by early Christians. Both traditions preserve symbolic structuring. The LXX’s twenty‑one generations form a multiple of 3 and 7; the MT’s two groups of ten form multiples of 2 and 5. In other words, both genealogical traditions reflect ancient literary conventions, simply in different ways.
This genealogical shaping is also consistent with the deliberate structuring in Matthew 1:1–17, where generations are arranged into three symbolic sets of fourteen rather than recorded in strict historical sequence. Matthew omits several kings found in the Old Testament to achieve his 14–14–14 pattern. Likewise, 1 Chronicles 7:23–27 skips approximately seven generations between Ephraim and Joshua. Ruth 4:18-22 also likely removes multiple generations to create a neat sequence of ten names (just like we see in Genesis 5 and 11). And Ezra 7:1–5 omits six generations between Azariah and Meraioth compared to 1 Chronicles 6:3-14. The irony is that many Christians accept these stylistic choices as culturally normal and theologically meaningful everywhere else in Scripture. Yet when it comes to Genesis chronology, some become resistant to the idea that similar conventions might also be at work. The cause of this internal resistance deserves careful consideration on the part of the interpreter. Why accept non-literal stylistic choices in other genealogies without question while treating the Genesis genealogies as non-negotiable chronological timestamps for settling scientific disputes about origins?
Beyond the intentional structuring and numerological significance in Genesis 5 and 11, internal inconsistencies arise if the lifespans are understood literally. The miraculous nature of Isaac’s birth depends on Abraham and Sarah’s advanced age. Genesis 17:17 and 18:11-12 both emphasize Abraham and Sarah were well advanced in years, underscoring the improbability of natural conception. But if Genesis 11’s genealogies are read literally, Abraham’s father Terah must have sired children at 130. While Jacob fathered multiple children between 84 and 105 years of age. If men were regularly fathering children in their 100s, why was Isaac’s birth considered miraculous? The emphasis on Abraham and Sarah’s old age only makes sense in a cultural context where 100 years would have been perceived as beyond typical childbearing years.
Another inconsistency emerges in Genesis 25:8, which describes Abraham dying “at a good old age.” Yet if we accept the genealogies as chronological, Abraham’s father Terah lived to 205—outliving his son by 30 years. Even more striking, Abraham’s ancestor Eber also outlived him by an additional 30 years. Likewise Shem, Noah’s son, also lived into Abraham’s lifetime. This pattern continues with Isaac. In Genesis 27, Isaac believes himself to be dying at 137 years old, yet Genesis 35 states that he lived to 180—surviving his deathbed by another 43 years and outliving Abraham by five.
Taken together, using Scripture to interpret Scripture, the textual and historical evidence suggests that the Genesis genealogies were not intended as precise chronological records. Instead, they adhere to structural patterns that point to symbolic meaning rather than literal historical accuracy. Furthermore, any attempt to use these genealogies to support a young-earth chronology inadvertently ends up destroying the very chronology such a reading attempts to protect.
Therefore, I firmly believe that the genealogies of Genesis should not be used to calculate either a recent creation or to defend the premise that millions of years passed between generations. In the ancient world, the names of the individuals themselves—and the honor associated with them, along with one’s relationship to them—were far more important than how long ago those people lived or how long they lived. This is why later biblical authors, and even Jesus himself, can reference these figures with full theological and historical authority without implying anything about the age of the earth. Canonical usage does not override cultural context and internal genre markers, which is precisely why later authors can use earlier narratives typologically without offering commentary on their original literary form. The point is that the people lived, the events happened, and the theological truths their lives communicate matter for us—not how many years ago they lived.
It is important to note here that JD has conceded that he agrees with the fact that Genesis 1-11 is not “a science textbook” and that the genealogies themselves are not written in the style of modern historiography and are instead “ancient, theological, selective, and highly structured.” He also stated that this does not make these passages non-historical. I agree—these are the very categories my entire argument is built upon.
On the Flood Narrative
JD and I also agree that the Flood was a historic event and is treated as such throughout Scripture. Where we disagree is on its scope. JD’s YEC position assumes a global, cataclysmic event—and indeed requires it in order to explain the geological evidence for an ancient earth and the fossil record. However, I would suggest that the text of Genesis 6–9 does not require a global reading, and that such concepts were foreign to the worldview of the original audience.
As with Genesis 1, we must first ask: what kind of text are we reading? Genesis 6–9 is historical narrative, but it is also the first judgment oracle in Scripture. In hermeneutics, the “principle of first mention” means that when a theme appears for the first time in Scripture, that initial appearance often establishes the basic contours for how that theme will function throughout the canon. If Genesis 6 contains the first judgment oracle, then later judgment oracles should help us understand how its language works. And they do.
Judgment oracles in Scripture frequently employ hyperbole and totalizing language of destruction to convey the severity of what is to come. This hyperbolic, cosmic, creation‑reversal language appears in judgment passages describing events that unquestionably happened in history—yet the language itself was never meant to be taken literally. Zephaniah 1:2-3 declares that God will “sweep away man and beast… the birds of the heavens and the fish of the sea… I will cut off mankind from the face of the earth,” yet Babylon’s invasion did not literally kill all humans, animals, birds, or fish. Isaiah 13:10 announces that when Babylon falls “the sun will be dark at its rising,” yet no astronomical event accompanied Babylon’s defeat. Jeremiah 4:23 describes Judah’s land returning to “formless and void,” echoing Genesis 1:2, yet people continued living there. Micah 1:3-4 proclaims that mountains will melt and valleys split, but no such geological events occurred during the Assyrian invasion. Jeremiah 34:22 declares that the cities of Judah would become “a desolation without inhabitant,” even though cities like Lachish, Mizpah And even Jerusalem itself survived and remained inhabited. These examples are not exceptions—they are the norm. Hyperbolic, cosmic, totalizing language is the standard rhetorical form of biblical judgment oracles. The Flood oracle is no different in its vocabulary and style. In fact, it sets the Biblical standard.
In his linguistic analysis of Genesis 6-8, the late Dr. Michael Heiser noted that key terms such as “all” (kōl, כֹל), “earth” (’ereṣ, אֶרֶץ) and “mountain” (har, הַר) do not always indicate exhaustive totality. (1) For example, Genesis 41:57 says, “all the earth came to Egypt,” which clearly does not mean every human being on the planet. And Isaiah 14:7 states, “The whole earth is at rest,” but this refers to a specific region experiencing peace. The term ’ereṣ, therefore, can—and often does—refer to a specific land or region rather than the entire globe. Likewise, the word har can signify smaller hills rather than massive peaks. Biblical phrases like “all flesh” (kōl bāśār, כֹּל בָּשָׂ) and “the whole heavens” do not necessarily indicate universal scope.
Crucially, this perspective is not unique to the Old Testament. Luke 2:1 states that “a decree went out from Caesar Augustus that the whole world should be registered,” yet this clearly refers to the Roman sphere of authority. Ancient rulers, both biblical and extrabiblical, frequently spoke of themselves as “kings of the world,” even though neighboring monarchs made the same claim. Such language reflects an ancient conception in which “earth” or “world” meant one’s own realm or the familiar expanse of the known world, not the globe in its entirety.
When all the evidence is taken together, the linguistic, literary, and canonical context strongly suggests that the Flood narrative employs the same hyperbolic, totalizing language characteristic of biblical judgment oracles, and therefore does not require a global, planet‑wide catastrophe to be historically true or theologically significant.
To summarize, I agree with JD that the Flood was a divine judgment upon human violence and wickedness and that it sets a biblical precedent for future judgment. Even though we disagree on the scope of that judgment, neither of us denies its historicity nor its theological weight.
I also agree with him when he says that “biblical genealogies can be selective. They may contain gaps. They may emphasize covenantal descent rather than exhaustive biological listing. But selectivity does not make them non-historical, and possible gaps do not create room for millions or billions of years.”
The issue is that those are my interpretive categories, not his. I don’t believe that the genealogies in Genesis 5 and 11 are meant to be used to answer questions about the age of the cosmos at all. That is not the intent of the author. So, not only can they not be used to argue for “millions or billions of years,” they also can not be used to argue for a young earth. In both cases one is comparing apples to oranges and forcing the text to settle scientific disputes that never even entered into the author’s mind. What these passages can establish is that the line of Christ traces back to Adam through significant individuals in Israel's history. That is what the Bible teaches. And that is the “genealogical spine” of the Biblical narrative. On this JD and I fully agree.
My questions for JD
1) JD, you stated that you are “not claiming that every form of biological recycling, plant consumption, microbial activity, cellular turnover, or lower-creature consumption must be treated as ‘death before sin’ in the same theological sense.” I would like to ask what you mean when you say that “lower-creature consumption must not be treated as ‘death before sin.’” Are you saying that animals and human beings could have been killing and consuming certain animals prior to the fall and that this is not the same sort of death that was introduced by Adam’s sin?
2) Since you have conceded that the Genesis genealogies as well as Genesis 1 are written in an ancient, highly stylized, often symbolic form, do you also concede that these passages can be treated as historically accurate while simultaneously recognizing that this literary and historic context does not provide enough evidential grounds to reconstruct a chronology or scientifically accurate picture of natural history? In other words, given that you have argued within my own categories, what is the theological necessity of your position over mine given that we are essentally in agreement?
3) Since you have also stated that you are not arguing that the Bible is a “science textbook” what are your reasons for embracing a Creation Science hermeneutic regarding early Genesis? If the Bible isn’t teaching science, then why attempt to interpret it through a modern, scientific worldview that seeks to harmonize it with present scientific knowledge rather than an ancient Near Eastern one?
That final question is directly relevant to the topic of the next round in this debate: How should Christians use scientific evidence when reconstructing unobserved origins? So, with that I will return the floor to JD for his statements on nature, science and historic reconstruction.


