God called the Firmament Heaven 2.0
God called the Firmament Heaven 2.0
Thanks to the great TOL input, I can now post an edited version of my original article. There’s still time to make comments before I send this to Walt Brown. Changes include addition of Paul’s third heaven, the sentence on gravity, and a light rewrite. Also, thanks Frank E for your kind words; and Jefferson, I think most of your questions have been answered so far by others.
May God bless you all. -Bob
Heaven on Earth
God called the Firmament Heaven
By Pastor Bob Enyart
At Denver Bible Church, we teach Dr. Walt Brown’s
Hydroplate Theory as the best understanding of Noah’s Flood, geology and the relevant scriptures. On Day Two of creation, God formed the crust of the earth, the firmament, miles above a massive subterranean ocean. “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 global flood began when these “fountains of the great deep were broken up,” (Gen. 7:11). Dr. Brown’s book,
In the Beginninghttp://kgov.com/store/detail/literature/beginning.html, demonstrates powerfully that the world’s major geologic features flow logically from these initial conditions. But some creationists who disagree point out that, “God called the firmament
Heaven” (Gen. 1:8), claiming that this firmament must be either the atmosphere (Morris) or outer space (Humphreys).
However at DBC we show that, whether figurative or literal, the crust of the earth is the boundary between heaven and hell. Everything below the crust can be referred to as hell, the prison God had planned for any future unrepentant beings. “Hell
from beneath is excited about you, to meet you at your coming” (Isa. 14:9, etc.). Everything above the crust can be referred to as heaven. Hence dozens of verses indicate that heaven also refers to the earth’s atmosphere as in “rain from heaven;” the “dew of heaven;” “birds of heaven;” “dust from the heaven;” city walls “fortified up to heaven;” smoke rises “to the midst of heaven;” “the heavens are shut” in drought; “frost of heaven;” “clouds of heaven;” “snow from heaven;” “hail from heaven;” and the east winds “blow in the heavens.” Thus even after the Fall, from Genesis and Job, through the Gospels, Acts and Revelation, the Bible continued to refer to the atmosphere, one molecule above the ground, as heaven.
“God called the firmament Heaven,” because the earth’s crust formed the border between heaven and the future hell. The firmament divided the waters of the earth (Gen. 1:2, 6) which even reserved the floodwaters of judgment below ground. And after the Fall earth permanently lost its heavenly designation, for apparently God will never fully replicate the first earth. Only two detailed Bible passages report on events prior to the Fall, the Genesis creation account and Isaiah’s record of Lucifer’s fall, and both of these passages refer to earth as heaven. Isaiah 14:12 describes “Lucifer” as “fallen
from heaven,” yet Scripture places him
on earth at the moment of his fall. “You were
in Eden, the garden of God,” (Ezek. 28:13), and “you have said in your heart: ‘
I will ascend into heaven… I will ascend above the heights of
the clouds,’” (Isa. 14:13 14), “yet you shall be
brought down to Sheol, to the
lowest depths of the Pit,” (Isa. 14:15). Even though he was on earth, Lucifer fell “from heaven,” because prior to the Fall, the surface of the earth was part of heaven’s realm. Notice that just as gravity pulls our physical flesh down toward the center of the earth,
the Fall created
the world system which relentlessly pulls our spiritual
flesh, drawing us
down toward the
lowest depths until death, and then the believer’s released spirit soars upward to heaven, whereas the unbeliever’s unfettered spirit falls downward, the firmament no longer keeping him out of Hades, thus his soul plummets into hell. In the modern classic,
Soul of Science, (1994, p. 38), Pearcey and Thaxton describe the view of Christian “medieval cosmology,” that “at the very center of the universe was Hell, then the earth, then (moving outward from the center) the progressively nobler spheres of the heavens.” Christians continue to affirm this hierarchy quoting Paul who was “caught up to the
third heaven” (2 Cor 12:2), the first being the sky, the second is space, and the third God’s habitation. King David even seems to refer to the “earth” as “the foundations of heaven” (2 Sam. 22:8).
Moses used the word
firmament nine times in the creation story. He intentionally distinguished the last four occurrences from the first four, all of which pivot around the central instance where God called the earth’s firmament Heaven. Each of the four in the second grouping (vv. 14, 15, 17, 20) is qualified separately by an exceptional repetition. The prepositional phrase “of the heavens” makes a distinction between the first firmament of the earth, and the second “firmament
of the heavens,” so that the reader will not confuse this firmament of sky and space with the previous firmament of earth. Thus, readers alien to the notion of “heaven” on earth should nonetheless be able to separate the two firmaments, and understand God’s meaning. Now, millennia after the Fall, God’s own record of creation notwithstanding, sin has almost completely obscured the original perspective of the earth’s surface as “heaven.”
When man rebelled, earth became more like hell than heaven. So the Fall narrowed the spheres of heaven but only by a single molecule, which now begin at the atmosphere. Thus man’s habitation lost its heavenly designation. The Bible describes Hell as below, bounded by the firmament. However in the beginning “God called the firmament
Heaven” because that’s where He placed Adam and Eve, above ground on the surface, in the heavens, in fellowship with Him, not in any other realm but in His kingdom, in heaven on earth.
© 2005 Bob Enyart, KGOV.com