Not when none exists, none was mentioned in scripture before that, and the phrasing fits a different theory better than it fits the idea of a canopy.
You don't know that none existed. The bible doesn't rule it out, in fact it might be mentioning it when it talks about the windows of heaven. We just don't know.
It doesn't mention it in scripture before because it wasn't important enough to mention. It didn't contribute to the flood enough to mention. And it didn't matter to scripture what the mix of gases were before and after the flood, either. The canopy is almost on the same level of importance as the mix of gases in the air. The only difference is the tiny sliver of a possible mention as "the windows of heaven" when it comes to a canopy.
And to further the point, the bible doesn't mention anything about the mix of gases before the flood or how they were different from today. But it is reasonable to agree the gas mix was different because evidence outside the bible shows it's true and
it is still consistent with scripture. Come to think of it, the mix of gases is a
parallel example of both the importance of, and consistency with, the bible.
If you support the HPT, then why do you still cling to a canopy?
I don't cling to it. You two are the ones fighting here. I guess this is the point of continuing this particular discussion (besides for my own benefit of studying the idea of the canopy - you are definitely making me think); To let you two vent about a minor point that we have little information on. Wisdom would say your response should be: "since it doesn't change the overall theory, and since the bible didn't find it important enough to hardly even mention it if at all, I guess we'll see who's right either in this world if the data becomes available or in the next if anyone still cares enough to ask in the next life."
Again, I don't have an emotional attachment to the idea. Not the way you two have and emotional reaction in opposing it. I simply think we have some anomalies that a canopy might help explain and the bible says "windows of heaven". If it turns out that I'm wrong it will be on the level of being wrong about remembering what I had for breakfast.
Yes, that's my point. The firmament of the heavens has no water above it.
Then your point isn't a response my mine. God doesn't mention making an atmosphere at all! He seems to assume it in Gen1:9 when He explicitly creates the seas and dry land. But that's exactly where the canopy was made I'd guess, simply as a part of the atmosphere at the wasn't important enough to explicitly mention the creation of.
I guess this is a real sticking point with you, that if there was a canopy the creation of it *had* to be explicitly mentioned in Gen 1. But it was just as important as mentioning the explicit creation of the rest of the atmosphere, meaning not important enough.
Genesis 1:6-19.
On day 2 God created a firmament in the midst of the waters, dividing waters above from waters below, called it Heaven, then on day 3 He finished what he started on day 2, moving that "Heaven" so that dry land appeared and seas formed, Earth and Seas respectively. Then on day 4, He puts the stars in the sky ("firmament of the heavens") and makes the sun and moon. There is NO WATER made or moved on day 4, and ALL of the water talked about on days 2 and 3 was on the earth, either above or below the "Heaven"-named crust.
Scripture NEVER mentions, during the creation week or elsewhere, any water in the sky. It's ALL on the earth.
Sigh. I really blew here and a little farther down. I meant to say Gen 1:6-10. I realize it was very confusing to type "Gen 6-10" referencing chapters. I'm sorry.
That being said, let me restate, only correctly, that I'm not ignoring Gen 1:6-10. Gen 1:6-10 does not reference a canopy in any way.
Your confirmation bias is due to the fact that you start with the a priori belief that there's a canopy, and then see "windows of heaven," and think, "hey, that must be referring to the canopy," except that it's tied to the fountains of the great deep, the great deep being the waters below the crust of the earth, yet there is NO, repeat NO mention of a canopy ANYWHERE in the passage, or anywhere else in scripture.
No, I start with the evidence of anomalies and realize that a single solution answers all of them. As Bob Enyart said, a single solution that answers disparate questions gives credence to that solution.
And you are wrong about claiming I have ever said "windows of heaven"
must be a canopy. I'm pretty sure you won't find it since I'm fairly certain I'm careful to say might or maybe or could. Or I might not have added the indefinite qualifier if I thought it was clear in context.
So either show that I claimed "
must" or retract the statement.
Secondly, if there was a canopy it has no connection with the great deep.
Thirdly, there is NO, repeat
NO mention of the explicit creation of the atmosphere ANYWHERE in the passage, or anywhere else in scripture. Get that? It's a parallel topic.
You're ignoring Genesis 1, among others.
Sadly, answered above. Again, I apologize.
A canopy that has water as a part of its makeup (or all its makeup?) would act like a greenhouse. I don't know how the heat was mitigated, but I'm not ignoring the problem.
Yes I have. Except for my typo, you haven't point out anything I've ignored.
Answered a bit farther down.
Maybe I'm getting my threads mixed up, but earlier there was discussion about different theories and whether they'll be disproven eventually.
Must have been a different thread.
Dr Brown being wrong on other small side issues means we can still support the theory even if there are errors in it as long as they don't affect the overall theory.
I'm not going to comment on speculation like this. There's no point.
It's not speculation. Dr. Brown said, as Bob Enyart claims as a first hand witness, that if there was oil and/or coal under the tundra that part of the theory was incorrect.
It's OK. Dr. Brown is a big boy and he can handle corrections when new data comes in. It doesn't affect the overall theory.
I'm trying to find the show where it was talked about...
Link it when you find it.
The HPT and any canopy theory are incompatible.
Now that's just lashing out. There is no reason they cannot be compatible, unless you are thinking I'm talking about VCT.
And if you understand I'm not talking about VCT, can you please mention the incompatibility? It's not in Gen 1 since the canopy isn't even mentioned there (unless it is part of the assumed atmosphere in Gen 1:9).
You said you reject it as a major source of water, not that you reject it entirely.
So which is it?
What? There is no "which is it?" for claims that are not exclusive. I reject it as a main source of flood water but not as something that existed and affected the pre flood world when it was there.
Genesis 1, for starters.
And all the verses in the Google Sheets link I posted earlier.
The verses in the spreadsheet address VCT.
Sorry, that's not how it works.
I was half quoting scripture. You're reading canopy into the text where there is none.
See the difference?
Eisegesis is a terrible way to read the Bible.
I'm not reading the figure any differently than you are. You are reading heavy rains after water was flung into the air into it, and you might be right. But it's a figure of speech which are by necessity somewhat vague.
No, you're not.
If you were, you'd quickly realize that there's no support for a canopy.
Yes I am. "Windows of heaven" is in scripture.
Again, reading a canopy into the text is not the proper way to read scripture.
Again, all the water mentioned so far in Genesis by chapter 7 is on the earth, not in the sky. Thus, it makes perfect sense for the "windows of heaven" to be, as we agree, a figure of speech for a heavy downpour. The problem is that you're inserting "canopy" into the equation where there is no room for it.
Technically, there was water vapor in the air when it was created. 100% dry air is not good.
But of course, God is not so pedantic as to mention the water in the air, including the canopy if there was one.
... as a major source of water during the flood. You never said you rejected the rest of the theory.
For clarity's sake, would you please state your position in clear terms?
There are anomalies that could possibly be answered, at least in part, by the existence of a canopy. It doesn't exist today because the windows of heaven came down when they were opened.
Do I also need to mention that HPT is a solid theory? That having a canopy (not as a major contributor to the flood - VCT) does not affect HPT in the slightest?
If you believed that, then I'm not seeing how you can fit a canopy into the scriptures where there is no possibility for one, based on the fact that the firmament of day 2 is the crust.
I don't understand what you aren't seeing. The firmament on day 2 is the crust and there is no mention of a canopy (barring assuming it is there with the sky in Gen 1:9 along with the atmosphere) in Gen 1.
You're betting it involves a canopy?
Yes. Call it a bet with little consequence like when I bet on which team will win a game. I base my bet on who I think is the better team, but I've been right and wrong. I couldn't tell you a single game I ever bet on because the consequence of winning or losing the bet was so small it wasn't worth remembering.
If you fully admit that the windows of heaven could be a heavy downpour from the water released by the fountains, with no canopy, and there's no further support for a canopy elsewhere in scripture, then why do you still cling to the belief?
I think it is one solution that solves disparate problems.
So it's really not "clinging" to the belief since that evokes the picture of holding on to something against grave consequences. It's more a hunch that I think would be cute if I'm right about than an idea I'm clinging to for dear life.
If your best (and arguably ONLY) evidence for a belief can be interpreted in a different way that fits better to other things you believe, why hold onto that belief at all?
Depends on what those other things are that I believe. Sometimes when all the data is not clear we'll hold on to an idea even if it has problems until things get more clear.
rsr.org/hpt Bible Material Uniquely Supporting Various Flood Models (See note #1) Apparently Uniquely Supportive of: Hydroplate Theory,Vapor Canopy Theory,Catastrophic Plate Tectonics No "It was good" on Day 2 (because raqia was unfinished; see note #2),✔ The dry land finished the crust process ... docs.google.com
That doesn't mention any scripture that excludes a canopy. It certainly excludes VCT but I hope you are clear about that by now.
Higher air pressure might help, at least in part, to answer how they grew to those sizes.
Please explain what you think the anomaly is.
Certainly there seems to have been a great deal more CO2 in the pre flood atmosphere based on the volume of plant material that needed it to grow. A mix of gases that includes a lot more CO2 might benefit from higher air pressure when it comes to breathing.
Please explain what you think the anomaly is.
Radio carbon dates of pre flood material is consistently 10's of thousands of years. The ratio of C12 to C14 could either be affected by what was just mentioned, and the production of C14 might be lower if the canopy affected protons going through it.
Why?
Why do you think Noah's lifespan would have been immediately affected? He had lived much of his life before radiation existed on the earth. Same with his sons and his wife and their wives. We DO see a general shortening of lifespans from Noah to Moses.
Didn't you read that section? Dr Brown says radiation affected life spans of everyone even if their genetics were pre flood. The evidence provided was Shem dying less than the average lifespan. But Noah lived the average lifespan and he was after the flood, prompting Dr Brown to say that Noah had matured more, had less life to get over with, and so was not affected by the post flood causes of lower lifespan. Noah doesn't get affected at all in 350 years but 100 year old mature Shem ages out losing 1/3 of his lifespan? That's weak... needs more data. And we don't know that Shem died of old age, shortened by the affects of the flood because we don't know what killed him. And we don't know about Ham and Japheth. If they died at average pre flood ages it would be evidence against that idea, or if they even died of old age or not.
Not knowing about Ham and Japheth means Dr Brown is going off a single data point with little data. There is certainly room for alternate ideas on the long lifespans of pre flood peoples, and a canopy might be part of the answer to that question.
Still trying to insert a canopy where there is none.
There would have been MORE water in the sky after the flood than before, not less.
We know this because the Bible states very clearly that before the flood there was no rain, only after it, and that the water came up from the ground to water the earth, not from above it.
I don't see how this relates to the statement I made.
We haven't even gotten around to discussing the physical evidence yet. We're still discussing scripture, last I checked.
If you think there's physical evidence for a canopy, by all means, present it!
I have been presenting physical evidence all along. It's intrinsic to presenting anomalies.
Your understanding of what I said is backwards.
A canopy would trap solar energy underneath it, causing temperatures to rise AND higher pressures as a result of those temperatures, and there would be no easy way to relieve that pressure, nor to disperse the heat, as water, especially pure water, is an excellent insulator for heat. And since there is no way to dissipate the heat, the earth would only keep getting hotter and hotter under the canopy, eventually boiling all life.
Your explanation here is really confusing to say the least. But it doesn't matter since I acknowledge there is a heat problem with a canopy.
It's called hyperbole, Yorzhik.
I know. But it means that the canopy is as consistent with the whole bible as HPT.
Then quote all the verses that support it, please. Because so far you've given a single verse that could just as easily NOT refer to a canopy.
I guess saying the windows of heaven stopped in Gen 8:2 that's another verse. But it seems to me to be a single pair and not 2 separate references.
But, yeah, that's all the verses. Why do you think there should be more?
The fact that there is water below the crust of the earth, which lends credit to what the Bible says, which is that the firmament had water below and above it, the water above it then being called Seas, yet provide no mention of a canopy.
I asked for geological evidence against a canopy, not VCT, which is what you provided.
That doesn't saying anything for or against a canopy.
How about all the flood (or similar) stories in cultures throughout the world that never mention a canopy of any sort.
They don't say anything for or against a canopy.
We can safely discard the idea, because it's not supported by scripture, nor the evidence.
It's not ruled out in scripture, it might even be mentioned in scripture. And the evidence is somewhat lacking to make a firm decision on whether it existed or not.
Yes, it is.
If the firmament of day 2 is the crust, then any idea of a canopy based on the water being above the "firmament" goes out the window (no pun intended).
I'm only answering this to confirm again that I don't support VCT.
Yet you still cling to an obsolete idea.
I don't cling nor is the idea obsolete. VCT is obsolete but a canopy still has a slim chance of having existed.
===================
Yorzhik, would you mind presenting your best evidence for a canopy from scripture?
Make the argument, because I'm finding that I'm having to try to make your argument for you, and I don't want to do that.
When this was asked for before, I answered directly and ended with "That's it". Saying "That's it" meant what I presented was all I had and there was essentially nothing more.
Here it is again: There are anomalies that might be answered, at least in part, by the existence of a canopy. The bible says there were "windows in heaven" that were opened and rain came down. That's it.