"There are three things to consider when answering the starlight question:
1. Scientists cannot measure distances beyond 100 light years accurately.
First, no one can measure star distance accurately. The furthest accurate distance man can measure is 20 light years (some textbooks say up to 100), not several billion light years.
2. No one knows what light is or that it always travels the same speed throughout all time, space and matter.
Second, the speed of light may not be a constant. It does vary in different media (hence the rainbow effect of light going through a prism) and may also vary in different places in space.
3. The Creation was finished or mature when God made it. Adam was full-grown, the trees had fruit on them, the starlight was visible, etc." AmazingDiscoveries
And God saw the light, that it was good:
1. Scientists cannot measure distances beyond 100 light years accurately.
First, no one can measure star distance accurately. The furthest accurate distance man can measure is 20 light years (some textbooks say up to 100), not several billion light years.
2. No one knows what light is or that it always travels the same speed throughout all time, space and matter.
Second, the speed of light may not be a constant. It does vary in different media (hence the rainbow effect of light going through a prism) and may also vary in different places in space.
3. The Creation was finished or mature when God made it. Adam was full-grown, the trees had fruit on them, the starlight was visible, etc." AmazingDiscoveries
And God saw the light, that it was good:
and God divided the light from the darkness.
Genesis 1:4