Yes, thank you for the correction.You mean the use in verse 8, right?
Yes, thank you for the correction.You mean the use in verse 8, right?
According to scripture, that will eventually be the place called "earth" but Genesis 1 shows a distinct difference between "earth" and "heaven".It certainly makes sense that the place God planned to live with man would be one of His as abodes
It doesn't make sense to a modern person who is trying to interpret everything through modern knowledge.while it doesn't make sense that a separator of the ocean would be referring to the sky.
Nope, but Stripe seems to be forgetting that.Sorry, but you seem to be forgetting that Genesis wasn't written over a period of about 2200+ years, but within one lifetime, Moses', somewhere around the 1400s B.C,
Or the v8 instance meant "abode of God."
The only way the two of you would assume that the word "heaven" in Genesis 1:8 refers to "God's abode" is if you take the modern meanings and retrofit them into the verse instead of accepting what the words meant when written.The context of the word "Heaven" in Genesis 1 seems to refer to "God's abode" more than it does the sky.
Genesis 1:8 CJB 8 and God called the dome Sky. So there was evening, and there was morning, a second day. |
The way the word is used in Genesis 1 shows that the word "heaven" cannot possibly mean "God's abode" in the creation story.The fact that it means AT ALL "God's abode" means that you can't just dismiss it as a possible meaning for the verse in Genesis 1.
Actually, there is not more to it than just "the sky".There's more to it than just "the sky," GO.
Genesis 1:8 EXB 8 God ·named [called] the ·air [L firmament/dome/expanse] “·sky [heaven].” Evening passed, and morning came [1:5]. This was the second day. |
I thought it would be obvious.why did you bring up the color of the sky in the first place? Just wondering...
The Firmament of Genesis 1 is Solid but That’s Not the Point One of those issue concerns the second day of creation (Genesis 1:6-8), where God made the “expanse” or the “firmament.” The Hebrew word for this is raqia (pronounced ra-KEE-ah). Biblical scholars understand the raqia to be a solid dome-like structure. It separates the water into two parts, so that there is water above the raqia and water below it (v. 7). The waters above are kept at bay so the world can become inhabitable. On the third day (vv. 9-10), the water below the raqia is “gathered to one place” to form the sea and allow the dry land to appear. Ancient Israelites “saw” this barrier when they looked up. There were no telescopes, space exploration, or means of testing the atmosphere. They relied on what their senses told them. Even today, looking up at a clear sky in open country, the sky seems to “begin” at the horizons and reaches up far above. Ancient Israelites and others in that part of the world assumed the world was flat, and so it looked like the earth is covered by a dome, and the “blue sky” is the “water above” held back by the raqia. |
Yes, the source kgov is incorrect, or at least, misinformed.That's all well and good, but if the source is incorrect, then the article that quotes it as fact is also incorrect, or at least, misinformed.
* A Solid Dome Sky Belief Widespread Yet Not Intuitive: As Wikipedia reports, "The notion of the sky as a solid object (rather than just an atmospheric expanse) was widespread among both ancient civilizations and primitive cultures, including ancient Greece, Egypt, China, India, native Americans, Australian Aborigines, and also early Christians. It is probably a universal human trait to perceive the sky as a solid dome." Retrieved 8-27-11. However, with the many varied movements in the heavens of the Sun, Moon, planets, stars, comets, and meteorites, it's not intuitive that so much of the whole world would end up believing that the Earth had a solid-domed sky. Except, of course, if the ancients who populated the world after the global flood were misunderstanding the raqia of Day Two as referring to the heavens instead of to the crust of the earth.
[kgov.com/firmament]
I am relying on these verses to show how to interpret it.Which is why I'm not using JUST that verse. I'm also using these verses, along with others:
- "In the beginning God created... the earth. ...darkness was on the face of the deep. And the Spirit of God was hovering over the face of the waters." Gen. 1:1-2
- God "laid out the earth above the waters" Ps. 136:6
- "by the word of God the heavens were of old, and the earth standing out of water and in the water" 2 Pet. 3:5
- "Thus God made the firmament, and divided the waters which were under the firmament from the waters which were above the firmament." Gen. 1:7
- "The earth is the Lord’s... For He has founded it upon the seas, and established it upon the waters." Ps. 24:1-2
Genesis 1:5/8/10 5 And God called the light Day, and the darkness he called Night. And the evening and the morning were the first day. 8 And God called the firmament Heaven. And the evening and the morning were the second day. 10 And God called the dry land Earth; and the gathering together of the waters called he Seas: and God saw that it was good. |
Not quite, you are letting what you have been taught lead you into specific interpretations of scripture that you are using to form a conclusion, which is circular reasoning.I'm simply letting scripture be my foundation, and my conclusion is a result of that.
I never said that word, but a source I quoted inside a box used the word. :idunno:You said floodgates above, yet that word is not in the text, nor is the idea of floodgates being opened in the text; I was simply trying to correct that mistake.
According to scripture, that is the place called "earth".
It doesn't make sense to a modern person who is trying to interpret everything through modern knowledge.
But, Genesis was not written to an audience of 21st Century American Christians, it was written to a nation of middle easterners during the bronze age.
Nope, but Stripe seems to be forgetting that.
The only way the two of you would assume that the word "heaven" in Genesis 1:8 refers to "God's abode" is if you take the modern meanings and retrofit them into the verse instead of accepting what the words meant when written.
Genesis 1:8 CJB
8 and God called the dome Sky. So there was evening, and there was morning, a second day.
"The only way you would assume the word "heaven" in Genesis 1:8 refers only to the sky is if you only take the traditional meanings and apply them to the verse instead of accepting what the words meant when written and still mean.
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The way the word is used in Genesis 1 shows that the word "heaven" cannot possibly mean "God's abode" in the creation story.
I can't say whether the translators did their job perfectly, and that that's exactly what "Heaven" was referring to, but I'm certainly willing to give them the benefit of the doubt that it means "God's abode." And even if not that, one needs to remember that verse 8, and the rest of Genesis 1, for that matter, is describing the earth BEFORE the Fall of Man, not after, and that the earth would have been a place suitable for God, a paradise, if you will. Literally what we would imagine "Heaven on Earth" to be like. I'd also like to point out that before the Fall, God walked in the Garden with Adam and Eve, which means He was there in some way, more specifically than calling the universe God's abode, because God is omnipresent (and by this I don't mean the classical greek meaning of the word, but rather that God can be anywhere He wants to be, even in multiple places at once). |
Right back at you.Saying it doesn't make it so, GO.
You are willing to give the translators the benefit of the doubt by assuming that they are using a more modern meaning than the original meanings of the words?I even explained to you how it is:
I can't say whether the translators did their job perfectly, and that that's exactly what "Heaven" was referring to, but I'm certainly willing to give them the benefit of the doubt that it means "God's abode."
Genesis 1:20 20 And God said, Let the waters bring forth abundantly the moving creature that hath life, and fowl that may fly above the earth in the open firmament of heaven. |
It is not being a hypocrite when I stick to the meaning that God explicitly gave to the word.I hate to make this kind of comment, but you're being a hypocrite:
"The only way you would assume the word "heaven" in Genesis 1:8 refers only to the sky is if you only take the traditional meanings and apply them to the verse instead of accepting what the words meant when written and still mean.
Genesis 1:8
8 And God called the [surface that was pounded out] [Heaven]. ...
Genesis 1:8 NIV 8 God called the vault “sky.” And there was evening, and there was morning—the second day. |
The way the word is used in Genesis 1 shows that the word "heaven" cannot possibly mean "God's abode" in the creation story.
You think God lived in the sky before there was any sky?Not seeing it.
He created a firmament that separated water from water and called it Heaven.You think God lived in the sky before there was any sky?
Yes, God created the sky (heaven) by creating an expanse of air.He created a firmament that separated water from water and called it Heaven.
Yes, God created the sky (heaven)
by creating an expanse of air.
Since God did not live in the sky before He created the sky,
the word "heaven" cannot possibly mean "God's abode" in the creation story.
The word "heaven" only acquired the meaning "God's abode" after mankind started believing that God lived in the sky.
From gotquestions.org
The “firmament” (from the Latin firmamentum, meaning “sky” or “expanse”) is mentioned 17 times in the King James Version of the Bible and refers to the expanse of the heavens above the earth.
Nine of the occurrences of firmament are in the first chapter of the Bible as part of the creation account. Genesis 1:6-8 says, “And God said, Let there be a firmament in the midst of the waters, and let it divide the waters from the waters. And God made the firmament, and divided the waters which were under the firmament from the waters which were above the firmament: and it was so. And God called the firmament Heaven. And the evening and the morning were the second day.” The “firmament” is called “heaven”; i.e., it is what people see when they stand outside and look up. It is the space which includes the earth’s atmosphere and the celestial realm. In the firmament, we see the sun, moon, and stars; in modern translations the firmament is often called the “expanse” or the “sky.”
Genesis says that the firmament “separated the water under the expanse from the water above it” (Genesis 1:7). Originally, God created the earth with water “under” the sky (terrestrial and subterranean water) and water “above” the sky—possibly a “water canopy” which enwrapped the earth in a protective layer. Or, the waters above the firmament could simply be a reference to clouds.
We find firmament used again in Psalms: “The heavens declare the glory of God; and the firmament sheweth his handywork” (Psalm 19:1). Also, in Psalm 150:1, “Praise ye the LORD. . . . Praise him in the firmament of his power.”
Firmament is used in only two other books of the Bible: Ezekiel (five times) and Daniel (once). In Ezekiel, each occurrence takes place within a vision. For example, “Then I looked, and, behold, in the firmament that was above the head of the cherubims there appeared over them as it were a sapphire stone, as the appearance of the likeness of a throne” (Ezekiel 10:1).
Daniel 12:3 says, “And they that be wise shall shine as the brightness of the firmament; and they that turn many to righteousness as the stars for ever and ever.”
In short, the “firmament” is a vast expanse, specifically the atmosphere or sky. The word is found only in the King James Version and other older translations of the Bible.
Yes, God created the sky (heaven)
Using the correct synonyms for a word is not question begging.Question begging.
Synonyms for sky azure empyrean firmament heavens lid vault welkin celestial sphere the blue upper atmosphere vault of heaven wild blue yonder |
It does say that the birds fly above the earth in the firmament, which is the air above the earth.he created a firmament in the midst of the waters, dividing the waters above from the waters below.
It does not say "expanse of air."
Genesis 1:20 20 And God said, Let the waters bring forth abundantly the moving creature that hath life, and fowl that may fly above the earth in the open firmament of heaven. |
Genesis 1:20 EXB 20 Then God said, “Let the water ·be filled with living things [L swarm with living creatures], and let birds fly in the ·air [L firmament/dome/expanse] above the earth.” |
You seem to be taking a side comment (as if beaten out) from Brown-Driver-Briggs and using it for the primary definition.It says raqia, which means, in addition to the arch of the sky, "something pounded out," or, "an expanse."
רָקִיעַ noun masculine Genesis 1:6 extended surface, (solid) expanse (as if beaten out; compare Job 37:18); — absolute ׳ר Ezekiel 1:22 +, construct ׳רְ Genesis 1:14 +; — ᵐ5 στερέωμα, ᵑ9 firmamentum, compare Syriac below √above; — 1 (flat) expanse (as if of ice, compare כְּעֵין הַקֶּרַח), as base, support (WklAltor. Forsch. iv. 347) Ezekiel 1:22,23,25(gloss ? compare Co Toy), Ezekiel 1:26 (supporting ׳י's throne). Hence (CoEzekiel 1:22) 2 the vault of heaven, or 'firmament,' regarded by Hebrews as solid, and supporting 'waters' above it, Genesis 1:6,7 (3 t. in verse); Genesis 1:8 (called שָׁמַיַם; all P), Psalm 19:2 ("" הַשָּׁמַיַם), ׳זֹהַר הָר Daniel 12:3; also ׳ר הַשָּׁמִיִם Genesis 1:14,15,17, ׳הַשּׁ ׳עַלמְּֿנֵי ר Genesis 1:20 (all P). **רְקִיעַ עֻזּוֺ Psalm 150:1 (suffix reference to ׳י). |
Yes, God called the firmament "Sky", therefore the firmament is the sky.God then called that firmament Heaven.
You seem to be skipping some important verses.In fact, it's not until verse 14, on DAY 4, that God turns His attention towards, yup, "the firmament of the heavens."
Genesis 1:8-10 8 And God called the firmament Heaven. And the evening and the morning were the second day. 9 And God said, Let the waters under the heaven be gathered together unto one place, and let the dry land appear: and it was so. 10 And God called the dry land Earth; and the gathering together of the waters called he Seas: and God saw that it was good. |
The word "heaven" only acquired the meaning "God's abode" after mankind started believing that God lived in the sky.
God never lived in the sky, but mankind started believing that God lived in the sky fairly soon after Adam and Eve were banished from the Garden of Eden.And when did God start living in the sky? Before or after He lived on Earth with Adam and Eve?
It is only referring to what we see above the earth.When the Bible speaks of God "stretching out the heavens," does that mean space, the Earth's crust, or both?
The word "firmament" (dome, expanse, air) is explicitly stated to be equal to "heaven" (sky).If "firmament" ONLY meant the sky/space/heavens, then why did Moses, the first 5 times that he used the word in Genesis 1, NOT clarify it, then the remaining 4 times, use the clarifying phrase "of the heavens"?
There's no reason other than he's trying to distinguish the two grammatically.
Genesis 1:8 EXB 8 God ·named [called] the ·air [L firmament/dome/expanse] “·sky [heaven].” Evening passed, and morning came [1:5]. This was the second day. |
Using the correct synonyms for a word is not question begging.
Special pleading: argument in which the speaker deliberately ignores aspects that are unfavorable to their point of view |
Synonyms for sky
azure
empyrean
firmament
heavens
lid
vault
welkin
celestial sphere
the blue
upper atmosphere
vault of heaven
wild blue yonder
It does say that the birds fly above the earth in the firmament, which is the air above the earth.
Genesis 1:20
20 And God said, Let the waters bring forth abundantly the moving creature that hath life, and fowl that may fly above the earth in the open firmament of heaven.
Genesis 1:20 EXB
20 Then God said, “Let the water ·be filled with living things [L swarm with living creatures], and let birds fly in the ·air [L firmament/dome/expanse] above the earth.”
You seem to be taking a side comment (as if beaten out) from Brown-Driver-Briggs and using it for the primary definition.
You might as well concentrate on the other side comment (as if of ice) and start claiming that the firmament is made of ice.
רָקִיעַ noun masculine
Genesis 1:6 extended surface, (solid) expanse (as if beaten out; compare Job 37:18); — absolute ׳ר Ezekiel 1:22 +, construct ׳רְ Genesis 1:14 +; — ᵐ5 στερέωμα, ᵑ9 firmamentum, compare Syriac below √above; —
1 (flat) expanse (as if of ice, compare כְּעֵין הַקֶּרַח), as base, support (WklAltor. Forsch. iv. 347) Ezekiel 1:22,23,25(gloss ? compare Co Toy), Ezekiel 1:26 (supporting ׳י's throne). Hence (CoEzekiel 1:22)
2 the vault of heaven, or 'firmament,' regarded by Hebrews as solid, and supporting 'waters' above it, Genesis 1:6,7 (3 t. in verse); Genesis 1:8 (called שָׁמַיַם; all P), Psalm 19:2 ("" הַשָּׁמַיַם), ׳זֹהַר הָר Daniel 12:3; also ׳ר הַשָּׁמִיִם Genesis 1:14,15,17, ׳הַשּׁ ׳עַלמְּֿנֵי ר Genesis 1:20 (all P). **רְקִיעַ עֻזּוֺ Psalm 150:1 (suffix reference to ׳י).
Raqia is the noun from the verb raqa meaning being hammered or spread out, as in working metal into a thin sheet or plate. "They beat (raqa) the gold into thin sheets" (Exodus 39:3). "The goldsmith overspreads (raqa) it with gold" (Isaiah 40:19; i.e., gold-plated). |
Yes, God called the firmament "Sky", therefore the firmament is the sky.
You seem to be skipping some important verses.
Genesis 1:8-10
8 And God called the firmament Heaven. And the evening and the morning were the second day.
9 And God said, Let the waters under the heaven be gathered together unto one place, and let the dry land appear: and it was so.
10 And God called the dry land Earth; and the gathering together of the waters called he Seas: and God saw that it was good.
God said that the name of the firmament was "Sky" (שָׁמַיִם shamayim).
God said that the name of the dry land that was under
that same firmament (sky) was "Earth" (אֶרֶץ 'erets).
God said that the name of the waters that were under that same firmament (sky) was "Seas" (יָם yam).
Therefore: any attempt to change "Earth" to mean "firmament" (or vise versa) is fraudulent.
God never lived in the sky, but mankind started believing that God lived in the sky fairly soon after Adam and Eve were banished from the Garden of Eden.
The word "firmament" (dome, expanse, air) is explicitly stated to be equal to "heaven" (sky).
Genesis 1:8 EXB
8 God ·named [called] the ·air [L firmament/dome/expanse] “·sky [heaven].” Evening passed, and morning came [1:5]. This was the second day.
There is no reason to assume it means anything else in the Genesis account.
If "firmament" ONLY meant the sky/space/heavens, then why did Moses, the first 5 times that he used the word in Genesis 1, NOT clarify it, then the remaining 4 times, use the clarifying phrase "of the heavens"?
There's no reason other than he's trying to distinguish the two grammatically.
So, you are admitting that you are using special pleading to ignore the traditional meaning and impose a meaning that is in opposition to the plainly understood meaning of the verses?
Special pleading: argument in which the speaker deliberately ignores aspects that are unfavorable to their point of view
I am well aware that today, and traditionally, the word "heaven" means the sky.
So, you are admitting that you are using special pleading to ignore the traditional meaning and impose a meaning that is in opposition to the plainly understood meaning of the verses?
:rotfl:
The meaning of the words do not change because you don't understand the reason why Moses used them.However, the argument I am making is that there is a specific reason that moses used "firmament" without a clarifying phrase, and then suddenly starts using "of the heavens" after "firmament."
There is no reason to do this unless you are specifying that the word you are using is referring to something other than what you were initially referring to.
What it says is that the birds fly across the firmament of the heavens. Not just the firmament.
Genesis 1:20 CJB 20 God said, “Let the water swarm with swarms of living creatures, and let birds fly above the earth in the open dome of the sky.” |
Right back at you. :thumb:Even though it says it plainly, you still miss it.
Yes, God called the firmament "Sky", therefore the firmament is the sky.
Not at all.This is, again, special pleading.
Actually, it doesn't do a thing for lending credibility to your position, since your position is that the expanse is the earth and not the sky.I'm not. And the fact that it even mentions "as if beaten out" lends credibility to my position, no matter how much you want to ignore it.
It appears as if you believe that רָקִיעַ raqiya` (expanse) is formed from the word רָקַע raqa` (beaten).You missed it:
Raqia is the noun from the verb raqa meaning being hammered or spread out, as in working metal into a thin sheet or plate. "They beat (raqa) the gold into thin sheets" (Exodus 39:3). "The goldsmith overspreads (raqa) it with gold" (Isaiah 40:19; i.e., gold-plated).
kgov.com/firmament
You are ignoring that "heaven" and "sky" mean the same thing.You're ignoring the fact that the word used also means "heaven," and not just "sky."
All uses of רָקִיעַ raqiya` "firmament" in the Bible are referring to the same thing: the sky overhead.I'm trying to get you to see the difference between the two firmaments that are present in Genesis 1, because there are two of them:
Ezekiel 1:22 22 And the likeness of the firmament upon the heads of the living creature was as the colour of the terrible crystal, stretched forth over their heads above. |