Dr. Dan McClellan and I have a go on X.
At that point, one of his homies tagged in for him, but that fellow was Socratic and quit asking questions once he saw I was after something that Dan McCellan could not provide. An open mind on the "no inspiration" side to debate me on the inspiration side in order to see who had the better case for what the text was saying. From D.M.s answer it is obvious he is either unwilling or unable to engage on that basis because to him any idea about the text that has divine inspiration as a part of it must automatically be dismissed, regardless of textual evidence.
Mike at no point in chapter two after verse 6 are plants said to have been "created". In fact, they are not said to have been created in those verses either. It happens "offstage" of chapter two back in chapter one. Verses 4-6 are pointing back to chapter one and a time before they were brought forth by the land. This is because it was originally a tolodoth phrase about the Account of the Heavens and the Earth that was tweaked to do double duty to the recursive Account of Adam. So the formation of plants happened "off stage" in chapter one, but the part of chapter one that was later than the teaser in 2:4-6. Imagine tablets about the Rise and Fall of the Roman Empire followed by "The Life and Times of Julius Caesar". It makes sense for those accounts to go together. But if I had a teaser on the edge of the tablet about the first story it might say "Founded as a Republic, Rome began small, there was no Empire, no distant legions, and no Emperor to impose his will on the known world. After this, the first and perhaps greatest Emperor of them all took the throne." See what I did there? I took a trailer about the Rise and Fall of the Roman Empire that described things before it really got going as an empire, then used that to segway into another related tale that I wanted to add as a two-account anthology. At no time subsequent to that are plants "created" or even made for that matter. It only said the LORD God "caused them to grow". He could have done so by gardening. If you really want to know the rest, you have to see the text with fresh eyes. Animals generally were created before humanity, but a special human was also formed, and then special animals, ones that were helpers, were formed for just for him. There is no conflict between the two accounts once you see they are telling related but not the same stories.
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