Today I'm reading an article on John Sailhamer's view of creation —called "historic creationism" as opposed to the more familiar creationism. In his book, Genesis Unbound (1996, and out of print), he points out that the original Hebrew account describes creation in two separate bits: Genesis 1:1 as the creation of the cosmos over an indeterminate span of time and verses 2-31 describing the six days of preparing the land for man (Adam and Woman ) to occupy.* This invites us to view the creation of the universe in terms that don't require the contention between science and faith that is so familiar with creationism. In addition, it creates a framework that reveals some very interesting connections between the days of preparation (this is an interesting revelation: the days described in Gn 1:5, 1: 8, 1:11, etc., as the first day, the second day, etc., have typically been seen as days of creation rather than days of preparation; think about Jesus' statement, ...