You are shifting the goal posts with your customary limited-point-of-view trope. The issue is not creaturely finitude. Of course our knowledge is limited and perspectival. The issue is whether, under meticulous divine sovereignty, God has embedded within creation a detailed record of events that never occurred—like a supernova two million years ago in a universe that is only 6,000 years old. That isn’t an issue of human limitations, where we misinterpret what is true. It is an issue of veracity, where nature presents something as true when actually it’s not.
I'm proposing God embedding (if that's what he does) within creation that detail because (in your scenario) the supernova actually happened two million years ago (if the science is correct in its calculations) according to one perspective, and that, in keeping with true physics. As far as I in my admitted ignorance can tell, relativity allows for that.
If a universe that is 6,000 years old contains light from a supernova that never exploded, if ice cores register volcanic eruptions that never happened, or if tree rings encode drought cycles that never occurred, then the created order is testifying to a counterfactual past. God embedded those sulfate aerosols within the ice at creation; they were not deposited by a volcanic eruption. This isn’t the created order merely exceeding our interpretive capacity; it positively testifies to a fictional past, an entirely different ballgame from creaturely finitude.
I'm not saying it never exploded. Now, if by my introducing this notion of mine, I'm moving the goalposts, or maybe taking away from a two-sided debate, my bad. I'm not arguing for either of the two sides. I don't see why it has to be either one as opposed to the other. They may not be mutually exclusive, except "in the same way".
The theological tension arises because general revelation is real revelation. Psalm 19 and Romans 1 do not describe nature as a divine stage set with false props. They describe it as truth-bearing. Reformed theology has historically affirmed that the works of God and the Word of God are mutually coherent because both are self-disclosures of the same truthful God. To posit a systematically false historical signal in creation fractures that coherence.
I'm not proposing a systematically false historical signal. I'm proposing our ignorance.
And I am a presuppositionalist, so for me the issue cuts even deeper. The very possibility of science depends on the trustworthiness of God’s covenantal faithfulness (e.g., Jer 33:25-26). If God can embed coherent and empirically accessible falsehoods into the fabric of creation, then empirical reasoning is undercut at its root—for the reliability of induction presupposes that God is not capricious or misleading in his works. Divine sovereignty is never abstracted from divine character; God, as God, cannot deny himself (2 Tim 2:13). Sovereignty doesn’t license non-veridical self-disclosure; otherwise, the preconditions of intelligibility collapse, including the theological claims being advanced.
To this point, it seems to me that you are taking me wrong. You are running along the lines of, "It either did, or it didn't, actually happen". I'm saying it did, but that we don't see from both perspectives. While I grant there are a lot of incongruities I can't resolve, (eg, were there, or were there not people before Adam, not his progeny), I don't think the first few days of Genesis 1 have to be 24 hr days, and I don't think they have to not be actually millions of years, in God's work upon them. I'm just saying there is an awful lot we don't know, and an awful lot we don't have to know, and that whatever the truth is, I'm pretty sure it's going to make us all look like fools for our presumptuous declarations.
Your claim that God could intend that humans “not understand for the whole of this temporal order” really intensifies the difficulty. Concealment is one thing. But if God intentionally structured the cosmos so that all rational investigation would converge on a detailed history that never happened, that is well beyond concealment. Undetectable, universal, counterfactual encoding is indistinguishable from deception for any rational creature. The created order functions as false testimony, and the moral category does not disappear simply by invoking transcendence. God may withhold information, or give people over to their own suppression of truth, or permit interpretive error. But none of these entail God positively structuring creation to represent as historical fact events that never occurred.
God intentionally blinds the blind to spiritual truth. Why should he not do the same with physical truth? Is it any less spiritual, in the end, than what we call spiritual? It is all supernatural, whether according to the usual way that word is used or not.
If we say, "Wow", when we finally understand, why should we necessarily say, "Well, we were on the right track."
Those who wish to maintain the “apparent age” model must answer a precise question: Is the created evidence veridical with respect to real historical events, or does it systematically represent events that never occurred? Those who choose the latter owe an account of how that doesn’t conflict with divine truthfulness.
Still with the "only two POV's are possible".
Invoking “human POV” does not resolve that tension. It only sidesteps it.
I agree it doesn't deal with it; it claims that there may be no such tension.
Post script: We should distinguish three positions clearly. One may affirm created maturity, like Adam being created ex nihilo as an adult. That is a tenable position and consistent with Scripture. It doesn’t imply a fictional history, like Adam being created as an adult but also with a healed fracture in his arm. One may also argue that all the available evidence reflects real events but are presently misinterpreted; for example, we are wrong about the speed of light. However, the view under discussion is that the world encodes specific historical signals of events that, in reality, never took place. My critique addresses that third claim.
The third claim is not mine. I'm saying the universe may be old, whether our calculations are correct or not, and much of it may have happened even before Genesis 1, though my favorite notion has God creating particles before Genesis 1, and organizing them on the first day (or even before, depending on where the first day starts). I really have no problem (admittedly, again, in my ignorance) with it being millions of years from one perspective --perhaps one position or from one motion in the universe-- and another --perhaps our current perspective. If time is indeed relative, is it only sorta relative? My usual mantra applies: What does God see?
I'm sorry if it is off topic for me to present an undefined third view (not the third you showed) but I don't see that either of the two usual views need be the way of things. They are only OUR look at reality. If God does something we don't understand --even if we don't understand from now till the resurrection-- does that make it any less real or true? Who are we to demand God live up to our physical axioms? He owes us nothing.
General revelation, while I agree it is true, I don't agree need be understood by us in more than a utilitarian way. God is easily that much beyond us.