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[–] 16924746? ago 

It also says that a day is as a thousand years to God. The Creation story is considered by many to be allegorical.

We know Adam was 6,000 years old because we are told the ages that various characters died as well as when they gave birth to their children. Tracing back we find that Adam was around about 6,000 years ago. That's where the idea that the Earth is 6,000 years old comes from.

This doesn't take into account the fact that there were humans around for Cain to be fearful of and to build civilisation for. It all makes sense if you understand that Adamites are white.

Then you also have the fact that Adam literally means 'red' or 'ruddy' in Hebrew. I know that we refer to ourselves as 'white', but we are more 'red' if we are honest with ourselves, and we certainly go very red in the sun, when we blush, when we are angry; in a way that no other race does. Noah is also described as red. Esau is also described as red. And the people living in the region of Palestine today are, as we call it, 'white'; though likely less so than they were when we take into account Arab and Turkic invasions. Again, Noah was said to be red; we are told his sons went to Greece (white), Persia/Babylon (white) and North Africa (Berbers/Egyptians = white).

It is not stated that Adam was the first man created. He was the first man created in God's image. Do you think blacks were made in God's image?

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[–] 16924747? ago 

It also says that a day is as a thousand years to God.

So 6000 years, this is literally not true.

The Creation story is considered by many to be allegorical.

So it's literally fake shit.

The word of God, allegory LOL

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[–] 16924749? ago 

Not really. The word for day, 'yom', can mean a specific of the day "at this yom the sun is high in the sky", it can mean 24 hours "there are seven yoms in a week" or it can mean an unspecific period of time "in my father's 'yom' they never would have allowed for this to happen".

It could mean 24 hours. It could mean something more. The Hebrew word for 'world/land/region' is similarly unspecific, which is why it is entirely possible that Noah's flood only hit the region of Mesopotamia, in which case it would have only destroyed Sumeria and not the entire planet.

The truth is we do not know for certain. But if you take these other interpretations, which are completely in line with the potential meanings of the translation; then it all seems to make a lot of sense and aligns with our secular historical sources.