No one is saying otherwise, the issue is some people are claiming Genesis is science.
Would that be those who claim the moon is literally not a light? Saying the moon is not a light is solely a scientific interpretation. If the passage is figurative, can one even use a scientific interpretation to call it wrong?
The phases only make it obvious to you because of what you already know about the Sun and Moon. As best as I can determine it was Anaxagoras who first reasoned that the Moon reflects the Sun's light, in ~450 BC.
The Hebrew text including the Genesis account was being translated into Greek from the 3rd century to the 1st century BC. If one is scholarly enough to translate from one language to another, would it not also be important to satisfy the Greek intellect on the specific aspects of the way the moon was viewed at the time? From all the evidence in this thread there are some who literally cannot view any mention of the moon as a light as being figurative. My own son being one of those humans who stand by their strict definition of the light that comes from the moon. I am still leaning toward the possibility that humans will allow any excuse to claim the Bible is wrong.
I represent those who take the Bible as humans recording literal events that they experienced. It was never mentioned that any one before Moses actually wrote down what they experienced. The Egyptians kept records. Moses was allegedly raised and educated as an Egyptian prince, and would have understood the importance of keeping concise and informative records. I doubt that he purposely wrote in a manner that was false in his day. I am not sure where modern scholars get their proof that Genesis had multiple authors, unless they can prove there never was a Moses. Even Jesus, the early Christians, the Jews, and even the early Muslims were all taught and accepted that Moses was a historical figure.
Someone would have had to make up after the fact, that there was a Moses, and no other authors before him. They would have to do this along side the fact that the Hebrew scribes took great measures, even starting over and over again, if there was just one mistake in copying and handing down the writings of this Moses, generation after generation, keeping the lie alive that there was no Moses.
If there was no Moses, then there would have to be a hidden person around the same time, who was capable of keeping humans, generation after generation, to perpetuate the lie. Which is more believable? An actual person, or the ability to keep a conspiracy going for thousands of years?
It could not be the dedication of one's copying the text. The process is still going on today as a rite of passage. How could a conspiracy generate such a compelling force in humans today after most of the world has left the Bible behind and turned to science? The Second Temple was built in 535 BC. That is an accepted historical fact. Why is it not called the First Temple? Modern scholars claim that it was during the time of the Second Temple that the Jews came up with their hoax of history.
The claim is based on the lack of physical evidence, and an exhaustive critical view of the Bible. I understand the lack of physical evidence. If one's sole evidence is the Bible itself, is that not as much as any one has who accepts the Bible as a record of literal events? One person uses the way the Bible reads to prove it is wrong. Another person reads and accepts it as written. Have there been changes in copying the text? Yes, we have thousands of examples around, but we also have an accepted text. We also have many different English versions, because different groups want a Bible that "fits" their viewpoints. We also have a version that does not very from the original Hebrew. Even the Greek translation from the time of the Second Temple seems to verify that there was a Greek translation preserved along with the Hebrew by a different group of humans with no ties to the Hebrew traditions other than the fact they held the Old Testament as a sacred writing.