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Are you child viewing time or a man, or from the way a person well along in years views it? To a child twelve months might seem to be a very long time, but to an elderly person the years just seem to fly by. How much differently, then, must the “Ancient of Days” view time from the way we mortals do! Obviously, when God in his Word speaks of a “day” or “days,” we should not conclude that he always means days of twenty-four hours.
In the account of creation we have “day” used to refer to three different periods of time. “Day” is used to refer to the daylight hours, as when we read: “God began calling the light Day, but the darkness he called Night.” It is used to refer to both day and night, as when we read: “There came to be evening and there came to be morning, a first day.” And “day” is also used to refer to the entire time period involved in creation of the heavens and the earth: “This is a history of the heavens and the earth in the time of their being created, in the day that God made earth and heaven.”—Gen. 1:5; 2:4.
Then again, on more than one occasion God used a day to represent a year. This he did in connection with the Israelites in the wilderness and with his prophet Ezekiel. His Word says: “A day for a year, a day for a year, you will answer for your errors.” “A day for a year, a day for a year, is what I have given you.” (Num. 14:34; Ezek. 4:6)
No not only one year, but even a thousand years are at times represented as one day in God’s Word. As the prophet Moses said “For a thousand years are in your eyes but as yesterday when it is past, and as a watch during the night.” The apostle Peter expresses it even stronger: “Let this one fact not be escaping your notice, beloved ones, that one day is with God as a thousand years and a thousand years as one day.”—Ps. 90:4; 2 Pet. 3:8.
So jackthehat 2000 years would be two days it clear that a “day” from God’s viewpoint is not necessarily limited to twenty-four hours.