That's not quote accurate.
The Hebrew/Aramaic word "day" - ywm - is very similar to English in that it has a figurative and a literal meaning. In the case of scripture, using it literally in the creation packages is a misreading, as the literary form is not a literal one, and it's used figuratively. The entirety of the early Genesis account is in a poetic literary mode that doesn't really exist in English; and to take it literally expresses a profound ignorance of the nature of the language and literature. This is something that was understood by many early scholars; but is consistently ignored by the anti-intellectual fundamentalist YECs.
Not a fundamentalist or even a believer in the delusional guy who wondered in the desert without food and water for days who called himself the Son of G-d, however, I do believe in G-d and that we (in spite of the scribbling in texts called either scripture or the bible) do not know what his/her day is now or was then or the role the hand of G-d had in our or the Earth's design. The body of humans and wild life are too functionally perfect to happen by chance. none of us KNOW now and perhaps never will, but it is my opinion only.
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