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Some Christians believe there’s a gap of time between Genesis 1:1 and 1:2. But the text doesn’t allow for a gap.
You see, verse two is a description of the state of the originally created earth. God created it without form and void, and then he shaped and filled it in six days.
In the original Hebrew, these verses read as if there’s continuing action. This happened, then this, then this. There’s no room for a gap of time!
The gap theory doesn’t come from a plain reading of the text but rather from an attempt to squeeze in millions of years. Instead of trying to add man’s ideas into the Bible, we need to trust God’s Word.
By Ken Ham and Mark Looy4.6
374374 ratings
Some Christians believe there’s a gap of time between Genesis 1:1 and 1:2. But the text doesn’t allow for a gap.
You see, verse two is a description of the state of the originally created earth. God created it without form and void, and then he shaped and filled it in six days.
In the original Hebrew, these verses read as if there’s continuing action. This happened, then this, then this. There’s no room for a gap of time!
The gap theory doesn’t come from a plain reading of the text but rather from an attempt to squeeze in millions of years. Instead of trying to add man’s ideas into the Bible, we need to trust God’s Word.

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