Gen­e­sis 1:6

by Rick Beckman on March 31, 02008

The Sea, the Clouds, and the Expanse

And God said, “Let there be an expanse in the midst of the waters, and let it sep­a­rate the waters from the waters.” Gen­e­sis 1:6, Eng­lish Stan­dard Version

If you’ll recall, we saw that in verse 2 the Spirit or God was mov­ing upon the waters which at that time existed as a “solid” mass, swirling about in the midst of space. In verse 3 we read that God cre­ated light; with light came heat, and what hap­pens to water when you heat it?

It evap­o­rates, and we read in verse 6 that this was all part of God’s plan, for He has decreed that there should be a fir­ma­ment or expanse between the waters below and the evap­o­rated waters above.

What is this expanse? It is the “First Heaven,” the atmos­phere of Earth. The cre­ation of this expanse is oft cited through­out the Scrip­tures, as it is the famous “stretch­ing out” of the sky as if it were a tent (Psalm 104:2; Isa­iah 40:22).

A tent may seem like a funny way to describe the sky, but is it all that far-​fetched? Tents pro­vide pro­tec­tion against the ele­ments, and is that all too dif­fer­ent from what the (for exam­ple) ozone layer does for us? God formed the cre­ation to work together in har­mony — remove the ozone layer, and the light would cook us!

Also, we shouldn’t think of sep­a­ra­tion as though the waters above are con­tained within one room, the waters below in another, with the expanse act­ing as a wall between them. Rather, the expanse keeps the waters sep­a­rated by con­tain­ing the waters which are above the earth; this water may be in feath­ery clouds miles above your home town, or they may be con­tained in fog rolling in off of a lake. In either instance, the waters are sep­a­rate; the expanse tire­lessly does the job which God had cre­ated it to do.

We Chris­tians would do well to live our lives with the dili­gence of the expanse. Wouldn’t it be grand if all of Chris­ten­dom would unceas­ingly work toward the growth of the King­dom of God? How dif­fer­ent would the world be!

And yet the expanse has it easy; it has no will, no atten­tion which could be pulled away from its task. We do. We can choose to dis­obey God — for many peo­ple in this world, that is all they will ever choose — or we can die to our­selves and embrace life in Jesus Christ. I’m still speak­ing pri­mar­ily to believ­ers here, and I just have to ask, are you per­form­ing God’s tasks, or are you distracted?

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{ 2 comments… read them below or add one }

biblelucid April 3, 2008 at 18:41

Thanks for your writing about the God’s creation.
I also wrote about Genesis1:1-8, and interpreted these verses by Hebrew.
Would you kindly visit my blog and give me a good advice about my interpretation?
I’ll welcome your good advice.
May our merciful God always stay with you!

Rick Beckman April 3, 2008 at 21:20

I took a look at some of what you had written, and it’s difficult to comment on. You take a lot of what is said in Genesis and make it symbolic for something else — for example, believing that the separation of light from darkness was the gathering together of our universe in preclusion of any other possible universes. Once you allow for such symbolic interpretation, it’s nearly impossible to say one interpretation is better than another.

The only advice I could possibly give that I feel would be of any benefit would be to trust that God meant what He said and said what He meant without the need for us to pin down various symbols.

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