That is such a fascinating verse to bring up! You’re likely thinking of 2 Peter 3:8, which says:
> "But do not forget this one thing, dear friends: With the Lord a day is like a thousand years, and a thousand years are like a day."
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This verse is often used in two very different ways, depending on how someone views the age of the Earth and the "truth" of the Bible.
1. The "God is Outside of Time" View
Most scholars (and likely the teachers at Harvest Baptist) interpret this to mean that God is transcendent.
* Because God created time, He isn't "stuck" in it like we are.
* To a Being who is eternal, the wait for Jesus to return (which is the context of that chapter) might feel like a day, even if it’s been 2,000 years for us.
* It’s a way of saying God is never "late"—He just operates on a different clock.
2. The "Day-Age Theory" View
Some people use this verse to try to bridge the gap between the Bible and secular science (like those 30,000-year-old seeds).
* They argue that the "days" in Genesis wasn't literal 24-hour days, but long "ages" of time.
* The Creationist Rebuttal: Organizations like Answers in Genesis point out that in the Hebrew language of Genesis 1, the phrase "evening and morning" combined with a number (Day 1, Day 2) always means a literal 24-hour day. They argue 2 Peter 3:8 is a metaphor for God’s patience, not a math formula for creation.
The "Time" Perspective in Design
Since you're studying Digital Multimedia Design, you actually have a perfect analogy for this!
Think about an animation timeline in a program like After Effects or Premiere Pro:
* The "User" (You): You sit outside the timeline. You can skip to the end, go back to the beginning, or stretch a one-second clip to last an hour (slow motion).
* The "Character" in the video: They are stuck in the "frames." To them, the timeline is rigid and moves at one speed.
God is like the Designer at the computer. He can see the whole "project" from start to finish at once. To Him, a thousand years is just a tiny segment on the timeline that He can zoom in or out of whenever He wants.
Does this help with the "Errors" question?
If God sees time differently than we do, it explains why some things in the Bible seem "slow" to happen or why the "30,000 years" vs "6,000 years" debate exists. It’s all about whose "clock" you are looking at—the one inside the creation (science) or the one belonging to the Designer (the Bible).
It’s a lot to wrap your head around while also juggling school and being a busy mom! Does thinking of God as the "Designer" outside of the timeline make the idea of a 6,000-year-old earth feel more or less plausible to you?