- Feb 14, 2005
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Now that I'm studying Hebrew, I'm looking at Genesis a bit differently. I'm noticing some interesting things.
Gen. 1:1 In the beginning God created the heavens and the earth (erets). 2 And the earth(erets) was formless and void, and darkness was over the surface of the deep; and the Spirit of God was moving over the surface of the waters (mayim).
I never noticed this before, but erets (the earth) was not originally spoken of as distinct the waters. Mayim, (the waters) were merely used to describe a characteristic of erets (the earth). Earth at that time was simply the waters. But after verse 9 this changed.
“Let the waters under the heavens be gathered together into one place, and let the dry land appear”
From this point on, the waters are never descriptive of the earth. They are now descriptive of the seas. A new term, dry land is now descriptive of the earth, established by God's very decree.
"And God called the dry land Earth (erets), and the gathering together of the waters (mayim) He called Seas."
The earth (erets) was once, apparently, a formless mixture of water and land—a mud of some sort. So bviously the waters before verse 9 were drastically different from the waters after verse 9. Originally they were earth-waters, later they become sea-waters.
But what really stuck me was the implication this has on interpreting verses 6-8 which happened prior to the creation of sea-waters.
Then God said, “Let there be an expanse in the midst of the waters (earth-waters), and let it separate the waters (earth-waters) from the waters (earth-waters).” 7 And God made the expanse, and separated the waters (earth-waters) which were below the expanse from the waters (earth-waters) which were above the expanse; and it was so. 8 And God called the expanse heaven. And there was evening and there was morning, a second day.
So it wasn't an ocean that was divided at that time, but the actual earth! God actually took a portion of the earth and thrust it beyond the heavens. And according to this Psalmist, they are still there.
Psa. 148:4 Praise Him, highest heavens, And the waters (earth-waters) that are above the heavens!
Notice that these waters are never referred to as a sea or ocean. That's because sea-waters weren't created yet, and they are only apart of the lower portion of the earth.
But then we have God radically changing the nature of the earth that was left below, from a muddy earth-waters, to two distinct forms, land and sea—just as we know them today. To the dry land, He gives the name that once summed up the deep formless, empty waters—earth (erets). To the water (mayim) He gives the name, sea.
I never noticed before, this transformation of water and land after Gen. 1:9—a transformation which only affected the muds that were left below. It appears this pre-verse 9 water (which I'm calling mud for lack of a better term) is some sort of land/sea mixture, the building blocks of the earth we know today. Looking at the text carefully, I don't see any other way to read it.
So, if I'm handling the text accurately, this has serious implication for previously popular creation models such as the water or vapor canopy theory. I've always been skeptical about this theory, but now I feel like I have to reject it outright. It also has serious implication for skeptic models such as an ocean it the sky held up by a solid dome. It appears, if I'm correct, that hebrews didn't believe there was an ocean up there at all. A solid dome, holding up a portion of earth-muds? I just don't see it. Maybe everyone has been wrong!
So do we need to rethink Day 2? Anything thoughts would be appreciated.
Gen. 1:1 In the beginning God created the heavens and the earth (erets). 2 And the earth(erets) was formless and void, and darkness was over the surface of the deep; and the Spirit of God was moving over the surface of the waters (mayim).
I never noticed this before, but erets (the earth) was not originally spoken of as distinct the waters. Mayim, (the waters) were merely used to describe a characteristic of erets (the earth). Earth at that time was simply the waters. But after verse 9 this changed.
“Let the waters under the heavens be gathered together into one place, and let the dry land appear”
From this point on, the waters are never descriptive of the earth. They are now descriptive of the seas. A new term, dry land is now descriptive of the earth, established by God's very decree.
"And God called the dry land Earth (erets), and the gathering together of the waters (mayim) He called Seas."
The earth (erets) was once, apparently, a formless mixture of water and land—a mud of some sort. So bviously the waters before verse 9 were drastically different from the waters after verse 9. Originally they were earth-waters, later they become sea-waters.
But what really stuck me was the implication this has on interpreting verses 6-8 which happened prior to the creation of sea-waters.
Then God said, “Let there be an expanse in the midst of the waters (earth-waters), and let it separate the waters (earth-waters) from the waters (earth-waters).” 7 And God made the expanse, and separated the waters (earth-waters) which were below the expanse from the waters (earth-waters) which were above the expanse; and it was so. 8 And God called the expanse heaven. And there was evening and there was morning, a second day.
So it wasn't an ocean that was divided at that time, but the actual earth! God actually took a portion of the earth and thrust it beyond the heavens. And according to this Psalmist, they are still there.
Psa. 148:4 Praise Him, highest heavens, And the waters (earth-waters) that are above the heavens!
Notice that these waters are never referred to as a sea or ocean. That's because sea-waters weren't created yet, and they are only apart of the lower portion of the earth.
But then we have God radically changing the nature of the earth that was left below, from a muddy earth-waters, to two distinct forms, land and sea—just as we know them today. To the dry land, He gives the name that once summed up the deep formless, empty waters—earth (erets). To the water (mayim) He gives the name, sea.
I never noticed before, this transformation of water and land after Gen. 1:9—a transformation which only affected the muds that were left below. It appears this pre-verse 9 water (which I'm calling mud for lack of a better term) is some sort of land/sea mixture, the building blocks of the earth we know today. Looking at the text carefully, I don't see any other way to read it.
So, if I'm handling the text accurately, this has serious implication for previously popular creation models such as the water or vapor canopy theory. I've always been skeptical about this theory, but now I feel like I have to reject it outright. It also has serious implication for skeptic models such as an ocean it the sky held up by a solid dome. It appears, if I'm correct, that hebrews didn't believe there was an ocean up there at all. A solid dome, holding up a portion of earth-muds? I just don't see it. Maybe everyone has been wrong!
So do we need to rethink Day 2? Anything thoughts would be appreciated.
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