Well, here's your post that I quoted. It's not hard to figure out what I'm talking about.
You're claiming that Pre-Mils believe Creation was 6,000 years, not six 24 hour days. That's exactly what I stated Pre-Mils believe and how it supports their Millennial theory of the seventh thousand years they believe will come after Christ; referred to as the seventh day.
So you misinterpreted my post. I never said the 6 days were 6,000 years. I said creation is 6,000 years. We are currently to the best of human knowledge 22 years into the 7th millenia of creation. So just a little jumping to conclusions on your part.
If this had been 1022 I would have said 5,000 years of creation, and you may not have jumped to the full 5th day assumption.
Interesting that you must then assume 6,000 years of creation is somehow linked to the 6 days of creation. It is, if you think about Exodus 20 and the 4th Commandment. Adam's flesh would only have to work for 6,000 years, and then his labor on earth would be finished.
"Six days shalt thou labour, and do all thy work: But the seventh day is the sabbath of the Lord thy God: in it thou shalt not do any work, thou, nor thy son, nor thy daughter, thy manservant, nor thy maidservant, nor thy cattle, nor thy stranger that is within thy gates: For in six days the Lord made heaven and earth, the sea, and all that in them is, and rested the seventh day: wherefore the Lord blessed the sabbath day, and hallowed it."
Do you jump to the same conclusion about "Six days shalt thou labour" being equal to 6,000 years of Adam's punishment? Just think here. You think the Sabbath day of no labor is actually the "indefinite period" of the last 2,000 years of Adam's punishment of labor. Way to go, depriving God of His Sabbath, which is 1,000 years of sin free living, and forcing it into the here and now. I guess you have already lived out the Sabbath and were not patient enough to wait for God's timing.
I then said I met a person who claims 10,000 years of creation. How are there 10 days in the creation week?
I then said I think there are 8,000 years of current reality, in similar connotation. There is no 24 hour period found any where in the Hebrew text of Genesis 2. Seems many here want to add that point to Genesis 2, as well as, a false assumption of 2 Peter 3:8 as meaning a 24 hour time period. That is impossible in the Greek text of 2 Peter 3 as well. Day in the Greek is only the 12 hours of daylight in a literal interpretation. The "day" in that verse is a figurative amount of time contrasted with a literal time frame. The literal time is the 1,000 years. No one thinks 12 hours of daylight is equal to 1,000 years. We are even assuming here that 12 hours would be a standard day, as we are asleep part of the day. So how literal do you Amil want to take 2 Peter 3:8? Are we allowing for a reasonable figurative explanation contrasted with a literal 1,000 year time frame, or just wooden interpretations of unreasonable literal time statements?
You all certainly jump to conclusions and think time is meaningless to God. Great, now God created time without any meaningful reason given by God? Of course time is meaningful to God. God is indeed the One who created time and reality in the first place.
Congratulations you came up with a lame excuse accusing God falsely, just to avoid the significance of the verse to begin with. Peter even said don't be ignorant, and all you have to offer is an ignorant interpretation. 12 hours is not equal to 1,000. Even a 5 year old knows that. "Hemera" in the Greek: a day, the period from sunrise to sunset.
So back at you with Scripture instead of jumping up and down with false assumptions.