“Let There Be Light,” On October 22, 4004 b.c.
The Book of
Genesis begins “In the beginning God created the heavens and the earth.” Genesis
1:1. At some time thereafter “Then God
said, “’Let there be light;’ and there was light.” Genesis 1:3. Then “God divided the light from the darkness,
… called the light Day, and the darkness he called Night. And the evening and
the morning were the first day.” Genesis 1:4 - :5.
According
to calculations made by James Ussher, Archbishop of Armagh, as set forth in The
Annals of the World Deduced from the Origin of Time and continued to the
beginning of the Emperor Vespasian’s Reign (it goes on from there), that first moment of creation took place at
the onset of evening (6 p.m.) proceeding October 23, 4004 b.c. These calculations were made by working
backwards from the birth of Jesus in 4 b.c. (Ussher accounted for Dionysius’
error in calculating the year of Jesus’ birth) based upon the ages of the
Patriarchs and the Kings of Israel as set forth in the Old Testament.
By Ussher’s calculations, October 23
would have been a Sunday, the first day of the seven day week described in
Genesis that would conclude on Saturday, the Sabbath day of rest.
Ussher’s dating of the Exodus from Egypt
to 1491 b.c. comports with the modern scholarship of its dating (to the extent
it took place as a historic event) to a so called “early Exodus.”
Ussher’s chronology achieved its fame by
being incorporated into numerous Bibles, they sometimes listing its dates in
marginal notes. Numerous similar
chronologies, including one by Isaac Newton and another by the Venerable Bede,
failed to be so referenced and faded into obscurity. Bede placed creation in
3952 b.c., but he made no effort to determine the precise day and time.
Of course it is all malarkey; the age of
the Earth is measured in billions, not thousands, of years. In addition, and just to be snarky, if
Creation took place at 6 p.m., was that Eastern Standard Time?
October 22 is also the anniversary of the
“Great Disappointment,” the failure of the Second Coming predicted for 1844 by
William Miller and certain of his disciples based upon their interpretation of
Biblical texts. When October 23, 1844
dawned the fallacy of their prediction was laid bare.
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