Is the Biblical account of Creation self - consistent? Any acceptance of the Biblical account as being a true account of creation has to be accompanied by a harmonization of the scientific theories of evolution and the geological record. There are various ways of doing this. I should, by the way, state that I do not make any of the claims that the Scientific American article states, except for the fact that no one knows how life began.
So how does one harmonize the accounts? John F. McArthur of Grace Community Church calls the creation event a miracle. The creation of the heavens and the earth, in effect the universe and everything there is, and the creation of the earth, moon, animals, plants, and human beings takes place a week-long miracle. The creation story ends at Genesis chapter 2, but followed by a flood event which creationists interpret as a literal account. It is possible to harmonize the flood account as a local event, but it is not possible to find any corresponding body of evidence in the geological record, according to geologists. This must remain a mystery, at least from my point of view because I have no access to the geological record or any means of interpreting it in accordance with the story of a flood. There are flood myths that exist in communities worldwide, but that is all that the scientific community will admit.
The question is then, is there anything logically inconsistent in considering the creation account as a miracle, like the miracle of turning water to wine, or parting the red sea? Again, I make no other claims that Creationists make. Of course from the scientific point of view, taking the Biblical record or the any other accounts of creation as fact is problematic. There is nothing to prevent scientists from staying away from commenting on any religious accounts, no matter how well accepted by most of the world.
Any ideas on harmonization?