After some searching I think the most logical answer to the apparent different ordering of events between Gen 1 and Gen 2 is below. It is an excerpt from “The Creation Answers Book” by Creation Ministries International (2006), pg. 42.
Begin quote
Chapter 2 in not another creation account: there is no mention of the creation of the earth, sun, moon, stars, seas, land, sky, sea creatures, creeping things etc.
Some cite an apparent difference in order of creation between chapters one and two, claiming a problem with the plants and herbs in Genesis 2:5 and the trees in Genesis 2:9, which in some English translations seem as though they came into being after Adam, supposedly contradicting the order in Genesis 1 (plants on Day 3, people on Day 6).
But Genesis 2 focuses on issues of direct importance to Adam and Eve and the garden, not creation in general. Notice that the plants and herbs are described as ‘of the field’ in chapter 2 (compare 1:12) and they needed a man to tend them (2:5). These are clearly cultivated plants, not plants in general. Also, the trees (2:9) are only the trees planted in the garden, not trees in general. These events relate to God creating the garden, not creation in general.
The mention of the forming of the ‘beasts of the field’ and ‘birds of the air’ in Genesis 2:19, before the creation of Eve, is also supposedly a problem.
The supposed contradictions fall away when we realise that Hebrew has no specific verb form to indicate the pluperfect (’had formed’, ‘having formed’). A number of Hebrew scholars and commentators, such as Keil & Delitzsch and Leupold, have recognised that the context of Genesis Two suggests the pluperfect tense for these events-they are being recounted for the purpose of Chapter 2. For example: ‘Now the Lord God had formed out of the ground all the beasts of the field...’ (2:19, NIV). Such a translation, which is valid, removes any hint of contradiction.
There is no need to conclude that Genesis 2 contradicts Genesis 1 and so this is not a valid argument against taking Genesis 1 as straightforward history.
Genesis chapter 2 is not a different account of creation-it is a more detailed account of the sixth day of creation.
End quote
Some people on this forum referred to some of the points above however I guess it didn’t really click until I read that Gen 2 is a more detailed account rather than a separate account.
Dannii Willis wrote:
...there is room within the God-breathed view of scripture for any errors. Though there can and have been transmission errors…
I definitely agree that the word of God is infallible and inerrant and holds authority. Keeping in mind the Scriptures are written by man upon inspiration/instruction from God. The aim of the Scriptures is a replication of the word of God. While the original Scriptures are infallible and may have been inerrant, what we read as the Scriptures today are transmitted throughout the ages and translated through languages. There can be transmission errors and in the past this has been very minor, to the effect of missing a comma for instance, which does not impact the message put forward in the Scriptures.
So while the word of God is perfect I don’t always agree the Scriptures are perfect if they are transmitted or translated incorrectly. However I have not encountered any instance where a very minor error impacts the message.
So what I meant to say is that I believe the word of God is infallible and inerrant, while the Scriptures are infallible and not inerrant.