> The facts remain
It's the facts that are up for interpretation. When scientists observe what seems to be a hybrid star (
http://www.foxnews.com/science/2014/06/ ... ar-search/), they must interpret the facts to try to make sense out of it, and sometimes there are different interpretation of the facts.
I'm quite aware that just because something makes sense to me doesn't automatically grant it any merit, but neither is it automatically dismissible because it differs from the set of "facts" based on your understanding.
Fact #1: Genesis 1 is ancient, not modern, cosmology, and we must read it with "ancient" eyes.
Fact #2: Genesis 1 is not a modern scientific text, but is explaining God's relation to the cosmos. Deity pervaded the ancient world.
Fact #3: Danger lurks when we try to impose our own cultural ideas on the Genesis text.
Fact #4: ALL of the ancient cosmologies of the Near East show concern with the function of the cosmos in relation to order and chaos, not with the manufacture of material.
Fact #5: Nearly all of the creation accounts of the ancient world start their story with no operation system in place (Cf. Gn. 1.2).
In conclusion, analysts of the ancient Near Easter creation literature often observe that nothing material is actually made in these accounts. The creation of the material world was not their concern, but the ordering of it.
> You can't argue that the days represent different stages of evolution or whatever
I'm not, haven't, and won't. The days of creation indicate the seven days of temple dedication (cf. 1 Ki. 8.62-66). All ancient cultures had a 7-day dedication ceremony for their temples. The cosmos was created to be the Lord's temple (Isa. 66.1), and Gn. 1 is the account of the 7-day dedication ceremony where the Lord ordered it and came to take up residence ("rest") in it.
> Genesis is an ancient book of desert fairy tales, nothing more
Only if one's mind is closed. If you would like to open your mind to discuss these matters, I would be pleased to discuss them.