This is debatable without additional context...the author describes the initial state of Creation and it forms a picture in the audience's mind which suggests we are hovering in a space outside of that initial state. Is this what you mean by the third heaven?
In KJV we have "And the Spirit of God moved upon the face of the waters" which could be interpreted as above or on top of the waters or it could be interpreted as within the plane of the surface of the waters. But for the sake of this thread and the OP I will grant you that there is an implied space outside of the waters.
Okay I will accept this.
This is where I get lost. I don't understand where you see the open firmament of heaven (open FOH) as different than the FOH. You may have a good reason for this but I don't see it. Is there a context that the author or his/her audience would have for making this assumption?
Okay I see what you are describing now. I'm still not seeing that as what is described in Genesis. I have to think that you and I and anyone who reads this description would bring with them some assumptions and apply the description to the assumptions. What is of most interest to me are what the assumptions of the author and his audience would be.
I see your reasoning. But I am not following your three heavens deduction. I know that in the history of cosmologies there were many ways of looking at the cosmos and some of them involved concentric spheres (where the planets would move for instance). These cosmologies gradually evolved into the modern scientific ones.
My reading has me imagining a sandwich with only three layers:
- Waters above
- Heaven-sky-atmosphere
- Waters below separated from dry land
This seems to me to be the view that brings with it the least amount of assumptions and is based on Genesis (KJV or other).
I would say that there is an implicit space around all of this where the author and the audience see the original state of things and see God as either attached to, very near to or within the outer surface of the original waters. But for two reasons I tend to discount this as part of the author's cosmology:
- I don't see any text referring again to this implied space outside of the waters (and the space within) in Genesis
- There is always this implied space whenever anyone tries to explain the origin of the Universe. This is like trying to talk about the moment before Time was created. There is this pesky "what was there before there was a before" or a pesky "where did the first where come into existence at" sort of thing that at some point an author has to just ignore.
So for the sake of this OP can you say more about how you see that there is a difference between the "open FOH" and the FOH?
Does the phrase firmament of heaven imply that there is a heaven and within that heaven there is a firmament?
I've looked at Wikipedia and apparently the Hebrew word which firmament is translated from indicates a shape that is the result of beating out something until it is flat such as how a dish might be formed from a small lump of soft metal.
Again I understand your image, and I see that it probably lines up with those other perspectives that have been drawn up by those wanting to understand and illustrate this scripture. But what does the text actually say? And what contemporaneous context should be considered that would indicate how the author understood this text?