Genesis 1:6

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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3 Responses to Genesis 1:6

  1. biblelucid says:

    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!

  2. Rick Beckman says:

    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.

  3. Pingback: Genesis 1:7-8 — Kingdom Geek

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