Matthew Maury, an American naval officer who sided with the South during the Civil War and then became the founder of the Confederate Navy read Psalm 8:8 The fowl of the air, and the fish of the sea, and whatsoever passeth through the paths of the seas, and started looking for these paths through the seas. As a result he sent out expeditions designed to find and map these paths. In the process he founded the science of oceanography, for which he wrote the first textbook.
I'm uncertain what this has to do with biblical cosmology/cosmogony.
Who said it did? It does however pertain to science.
Where? Job 38:6 mentions cornerstones and foundations, not sea springs.
Typo. Job 38:8 Or who shut up the sea with doors, when it brake forth, as if it had issued out of the womb? The Hebrews would have been familiar with land-based springs, but what made them see the seas in the same way?
For what it's worth, Job 38 also mentions the fact that the earth was formed like clay stamped under a seal. But you take that metaphorically, right?
Are you saying it is not a methaphor?
I love Ecclesiastes 1. It lends excellent biblical support for uniformitarianism.
How so?
(For what it's worth, the Bible also says that rainwaters are stored in the "storehouses" beyond the firmament, released upon the earth only once the "windows of the heavens" are opened.)
Metaphor.
The Bible implies numerous times that disease is a result of demonic infestation, rather than bacterial or viral in nature.
Are you saying it cannot be both? And Id like to see some examples.
Furthermore, not every disease is contagious. A disease like AIDS is, but one like arthritis or bipolar disorder is not.
But that's just it. The Bible isn't entirely accurate on scientific matters (for example, 1 Cor
15:40-41 states the sun is not a star).
The Greek word that is translated as sun in I Corinthians 15:41 is helios which means the sun and light. The Greek word translated as star is aster. Paul was simply using the terminology of his time.
Furthermore, the sun is a star only by virtue of how we today define the term star.
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