No, but I am the last person to ask about how to poetically describe anything.
Deferring to the Bible as poetry. Ok. Are you aware that this poetry is still describing a sky of a solid nature?
Again, just because something is poetry, that doesn't change what it says:
Job 37:18 ESV
[18] Can you, like him, spread out the skies, hard as a cast metal mirror?
Amos 9:6 NASB1995
[6] The One who builds His upper chambers in the heavens And has founded His vaulted dome over the earth, He who calls for the waters of the sea And pours them out on the face of the earth, The Lord is His name.
Job 22:14 NRSV
[14] Thick clouds enwrap him, so that he does not see, and he walks on the dome of heaven.’
Exodus 24:10 ESV
[10] and they saw the God of Israel. There was under his feet as it were a pavement of sapphire stone, like the very heaven for clearness.
If I said that an object is "hard as a cast metal mirror", there are only so many ways to interpret that. If I said that, under my feet was a pavement of sapphire stone, again, there are only so many ways to interpret that.
It is fine to acknowledge these as poetry, but they still say what they say. This is similar to passages in the Bible about the earth resting on pillars. It's ok to call it poetry, but it still describes earth as though it were on pillars that hold it up.
Or, passages about our kidneys and intestines. It's ok to call it poetry, but it still says something that responsible readers of the Bible can't ignore.
It is clear from the Creation narrative and from other passages that there was a shell of water above the Earth as well as under the Earth in addition to the oceans and seas. Gen 7 and 8 tell us that these waters, above and below, were all released. There is nothing that says that these waters were replaced after the Flood, so what we have today is not what existed before the Flood. We have no frame of reference for understanding what it looked like, or how it worked when there was that shell of water around the Earth. But it is clear that it was there for the first 1658 years that the Earth existed.
No, it doesn't say that the waters were all released. In Genesis it says that the floodgates closed and the rains were restrained.
Genesis 7:11 NASB1995
[11] In the six hundredth year of Noah’s life, in the second month, on the seventeenth day of the month, on the same day all the fountains of the great deep burst open, and the floodgates of the sky were opened.
Genesis 8:2 NASB1995
[2] Also the fountains of the deep and the floodgates of the sky were closed, and the rain from the sky was restrained;
As noted above, the "waters above" are referenced later in scripture as well, as still being present. For example:
Psalm 148:4 NASB1995
Praise Him, highest heavens, And the waters that are above the heavens! Let them praise the name of Yahweh, because he commanded and they were created. And he put them in place FOREVER AND EVER, by a decree he gave that will not pass away.
No, I don't have a problem with what the Word of God says. I have a problem with people trying to take figurative language and portray it as literal, and then saying that this constitutes the actual thinking of the people in that time.
Says the person who believes in young earth creationism?
It's like the pot calling the kettle black.
Again, even if we acknowledge the poetic nature of this literature,
A. it still describes concepts of ancient Israelite cosmology, much like the poetic nature of the Bible's use of kidneys and intestines of ancient Israelite anatomy.
And B. Again, this is normal stuff. A solid sky, the waters above the solid sky. The earth over pillars, the underworld sheol. These are all common aspects of ancient cosmology observed both inside and outside of the Bible. The difference is, I don't treat it like science.
This is really what young earth creationism is when we actually begin studying scripture. People who claim to take the Bible literally, and not poetically or metaphorically. But then when we actually begin reading the Bible, all of a sudden, all they want to do is cry out "its poetry!" "Its metaphor!"
Ok fine. If that's how you want to treat the Bible, then stop reading the Bible like a science textbook, and start practicing what you preach.
Everyone wants to act like they read the Bible "literally", but then as soon as we start reading the Bible, all of a sudden, everyone backs down. But I bet as soon as someone starts talking about geology, all of a sudden those same YECs will switch back into their "literal" mode and act like they arent internally contradicting themselves.