Where Did a Young-earth Worldview Come From?
by Bodie Hodge on May 30, 2007
Simply put, it came from the Bible. Of course, the Bible doesn’t
say explicitly anywhere, “The earth is 6,000 years old.” Good thing it doesn’t;
otherwise it would be out of date the following year. But we wouldn’t expect an
all-knowing God to make that kind of a mistake.
God gave us something better. In essence, He gave us a “birth
certificate.” For example, using a personal birth certificate, a person can
calculate how old he is at any point. It is similar with the earth. Genesis 1
says that the earth was created on the first day of creation (Genesis 1:1–5). From there, we can begin to calculate the age of the
earth.
Let’s do a rough calculation to show how this works. The age of
the earth can be estimated by taking the first five days of creation (from
earth’s creation to Adam), then following the genealogies from Adam to Abraham
in Genesis 5 and 11, then adding in the time from Abraham to today.
Adam was created on day 6, so there were five days before him.
If we add up the dates from Adam to Abraham, we get about 2,000 years, using
the Masoretic Hebrew text of Genesis 5 and 11.3 Whether Christian or secular, most scholars would agree
that Abraham lived about 2,000 B.C. (4,000 years ago).
So a simple calculation is:
5 days
+ ~2,000 years
+ ~4,000 years
+ ~2,000 years
+ ~4,000 years
~6,000 years