Girlee wrote:
there is--there are clouds in the sky.
OK, so if a little water, dispersed as either clouds, or as vapor in a cloudless sky still counts as "water", then there is continuous "water" from the ocean, over the land, up into the stratosphere, because the amount of water vapor near the surface is usually more than in the upper atmosphere.
So, if we go by Girlee & Smidlee's approach that the "water above the firmament" refers to water in the atmosphere, then that directly contradicts Gen 1:6 (where God separates the water above from the water below), because if there is "water" existing from the ocean all the way up into the atmosphere, then the water was NEVER SEPARATED.
Obviously, the separation of the water making "dry" land appear shows that traces of water vapor, clouds, and such aren't what is meant as "water", or there would be no such thing as "dry land".
Since "water" clearly means "a volume of liquid water", and because, as Smidlee pointed out, rain makes it "obvious" to the ancient observer that water comes from above. This makes the "floodgates" and Job's storehouses of snow make perfect sense.
In response to the OP - wow, that does make sense! I never thought about the blue sky - having been told about the scattering of blue light since I was a child. But on thinking about it, I can see that without that knowledge, and especially if I had grown up seeing lakes, oceans, and land, it would be completely natural to see the sky as a clear, hard dome holding back water, which would be further confirmed (if that were even needed) by rain.
Of course the sun is inside that dome - it would look blurry otherwise, having to shine through the water first.
Of course the stars are inside that dome - we might not be able to see them at all otherwise.
Of course the moon is inside that dome - it would look blurry otherwise.
Of course the moon shines by it's own light - how could it get light from the sun when the sun is down, otherwise?
Of course an upheaval could make the little star globes fall to the ground - they are only attached up there anyway.
Of course the stars aren't that big, because they look tiny, and are inside the clear, hard dome, which we know can't be that far away or the rain would never get to us.
and so on.
Thanks, I never realized how obvious the blueness of the sky was as clear evidence of the water above the firmament to the ancient observer.
Papias
P. S.
Girlee wrote:
So, no, there are not two different creation stories, and one does not contradict the other.
So were humans made before or after plants? Before or after other (non-human) animals?
See? They contradict each other if read literally, just as they contradict the real world (The real world is part of God's revelation) if read literally, just as a lot of the song of solomon or Jesus metaphors contradict the real world if read literally. Those who cling to a literal reading are claiming that the Bible is a source of contradiction, and hurting Christianity.