Groaning a bit, now. This is not where I wanted to focus my attention, as I've said. Right now, innocent people are being falsely accused and condemned, like in the Inquisition, and no one seems to be taking it to heart.
..if what he meant to say "On day four God caused the thick clouds to pass away" then we certainly have things like "thick cloud lifted" etc in Hebrew being used by Moses in other places.
You assume it would have said that. Or it could have said:
Gen. 1:2 And the earth was without form, and void; and darkness [was] upon the face of the deep. And the Spirit of God moved upon the face of the waters.We're not talking about a cloud but a mass that would have separated this planet from the rest of the Universe, and preserved the water content on this planet. And I didn't make this idea up. I heard it from YEC, God fearing, 6 day Creation scientists.
But let's consider the alternatives. Here are 2 things:
1. If you say the sky was crystal clear and if there where stars, they would have appeared, then you say that all the Universe was created the 4th day. For most of the stars we see are really galaxies. Some are actually suns, like the sun we have.
So whatever suns the other worlds orbit around, must be so far away, you wouldn't see them from this earth, even with no atmosphere at all, as if from the moon, with no sunlight or anything at all to interfere with your view.
But in the astronomy lessons I've seen, by Creationist scientists, shows the spectrum of the stars as mostly red, indicating they are moving away from us. This would lead us to believe the center of the Universe is near us, assuming the Universe would expand from it's center.
Then EGW says Christ will come from the belt of Orion. She doesn't seem to suggest they would have to travel from beyond any visible galaxy. It seems to suggest the current throne of God is somewhere near by.
Either God has been creating worlds near-by His throne, and the far off galaxies we see are like a wilderness, or He has moved His throne to be near this world, and those worlds would would be so far away, it's unimaginable.
Then if these galaxies where created on the 4th day, then none of them would be inhabited. Why so much wilderness? That's just alot. Seems like a waste.
2. Also you would be saying the 4th day is different from the other days. In all the other days, God doesn't create any matter, but we only see a manipulation of matter. The dirt and water where already here. The dividing of the waters to create the atmosphere. The dry land appearing. The earth bringing forth the plants. The beasts and man where formed from the dirt. Man was formed from the dirt. In none of these things, did God create matter from nothing.
Except in the 4th day, where God creates all the galaxies in the Universe, the sun, moon, and planets... from nothing. That's alot of matter. Billions of times more matter than was manipulated here on this earth.
If I where stuck defending this theory, I would try and suggest there was a dark cloud, that had as much matter as the sun, and the whole solar system, like a great cloud of matter in space. Then God created the Sun, moon, and planets from this matter. I think there are such giant dark clouds of matter in space. And as far as we know, there could be a planet in there with water on it. But then I guess it would freeze without a thick atmosphere.
That would account for why you couldn't see the stars from space, from the surface of this planet with no atmosphere. You don't have to say God made the stars the 4th day. It just says "he made the stars also", not indicating when they where made.
Actually, the phrase "he made" was added, so "the stars also" would mean the stars would rule together with the moon:
Gen. 1:21 ...and the lesser light to rule the night: [he made] the stars also.Not that any of this is impossible. But I'm not convinced that it's the most likely thing, or makes the most sense, or that it's what the Bible plainly teaches.
What if..... when Moses was out there watching sheep for Jethro he asked God about how things began and God showed Moses a video. Perhaps Moses wrote about it the way it appeared to him. From his perspective if the clouds did not clear until the fourth day that would be what he would write.
By the way if the moon was to rule the night why does it not remain "full" all the time? Could it be that it was that way originally?
mel
Exactly. It's all about perspective. The perspective we get is the surface of the waters, where the Spirit of God is.
And from our perspective, the Sun, Moon, and stars are in the sky, the firmament, which is where the clouds are.