call of the wild said:
Hmm, that is funny, because when i typed in "heavens" on wikipedia, this came up.."Heavens may refer to:
The
sky or
outer space (also
celestial spheres or Biblical
firmament)". So you are absolutely incorrect when you say heaven don't refer to outer space.
Second, Job said in...
Job 9:8 "He alone stretches out the heavens and treads on the waves of the sea." It says he "stretches", not he "stretched", which symbolizes present tense. If he was just talking about the sky, he would have used the word "stretched", because the sky isn't currently stretching. So he used the word "stretches" which mean that he understood that the space in the universe was stretching during his time. Fast foward 3,000 years later, and we discover that it is still stretching, just like Job said. What a coincidinky
Have you even bother to read the verses (5-9) surrounding 9:8?
Job is simply sprouting or ranting utterly meaningless rhetoric, which I cannot even for moment take seriously.
Job 9:5 said:
He moves mountains without their knowing it
and overturns them in his anger.
This is not unique, because other gods have been known to move mountains or topple mountains in their wrath. Like in the Sumerian poem of Inana.
[QUOTEInana and Ebih]25-32. (Inana announced
"When I, the goddess, was walking around in heaven, walking around on earth, when I, Inana, was walking around in heaven, walking around on earth, when I was walking around in Elam and Subir, when I was walking around in the Lulubi mountains, when I turned towards the centre of the mountains, as I, the goddess, approached the mountain it showed me no respect, as I, Inana, approached the mountain it showed me no respect, as I approached the mountain range of Ebi? it showed me no respect."
33-36. "Since they did not act appropriately on their own initiative, since they did not put their noses to the ground for me, since they did not rub their lips in the dust for me, I shall fill my hand with the soaring mountain range and let it learn fear of me."
37-40. "Against its magnificent sides I shall place magnificent battering-rams, against its small sides I shall place small battering-rams. I shall storm it and start the 'game' of holy Inana. In the mountain range I shall start battles and prepare conflicts."[/QUOTE]
Sure, mountains grow or fall naturally, and they have nothing to do with some angry gods.
What I don't understand is why would any god show anger against any mountain? It is senseless.
Job 9:6 said:
He shakes the earth from its place
and makes its pillars tremble.
Sure, earthquake occurred, for any number of natural reasons. But "pillars"?
In many Near Eastern myths, as well as Egyptian myths, there are either pillars that hold up the Earth itself, or the pillars that hold up the heaven. Judging by the 2nd reference to "pillars" in Job, it is clear that God would shake the pillars of heaven.
Job 26:11 said:
The pillars of the heavens quake,
aghast at his rebuke.
I have not seen any "pillars" that hold up the heavens. Have you?
Clearly, this is reference to the firmament, so the pillars were the vault or dome, which is the sky.
According to an earlier verse in chapter 26, it say:
Job 26:7 said:
He spreads out the northern skies over empty space;
he suspends the earth over nothing.
Why would Job think the earth "suspended", let alone "over nothing"?
Scientifically impossible.
And lastly, the constellations:
Job 9:9 said:
He is the Maker of the Bear and Orion,
the Pleiades and the constellations of the south.
Stars are not made of constellations. Constellations are simply abstract patterns that ancient people have assign to the groups of stars. The reality is that the many of the stars in the supposed constellations have nothing to do with one another, other than how we view the stars.