The Flat Earth Bible
© 1987, 1995 by
Robert J. Schadewald
https://www.lhup.edu/~dsimanek/febible.htm
Reprinted from The
Bulletin of the Tychonian Society #44 (July 1987)
When I first became
interested in the flat-earthers in the early 1970s, I was surprised
to learn that flat-earthism in the English-speaking world is and
always has been entirely based upon the Bible. I have since assembled
and read an extensive collection of flat-earth literature. The
Biblical arguments for flat-earthism that follow come mainly from my
reading of flat-earth literature, augmented by my own reading of the
Bible.
Except among Biblical
inerrantists, it is generally agreed that the Bible describes an
immovable earth. At the 1984 National Bible-Science Conference in
Cleveland, geocentrist James N. Hanson told me there are hundreds of
scriptures that suggest the earth is immovable. I suspect some must
be a bit vague, but here are a few obvious texts:
1 Chronicles 16:30: “He
has fixed the earth firm, immovable.”
Psalm 93:1: “Thou
hast fixed the earth immovable and firm ...”
Psalm 96:10: “He has
fixed the earth firm, immovable ...”
Psalm 104:5: “Thou
didst fix the earth on its foundation so that it never can be
shaken.”
Isaiah 45:18: “...who
made the earth and fashioned it, and himself fixed it fast...”
Suffice to say that the
earth envisioned by flat-earthers is as immovable as any geocentrist
could desire. Most (perhaps all) scriptures commonly cited by
geocentrists have also been cited by flat-earthers. The flat-earth
view is geocentricity with further restrictions.
Like geocentrists,
flat-earth advocates often give long lists of texts. Samuel Birley
Rowbotham, founder of the modern flat-earth movement, cited 76
scriptures in the last chapter of his monumental second edition of
Earth not a Globe. Apostle Anton Darms, assistant to the Reverend
Wilbur Glenn Voliva, America's best known flat-earther, compiled 50
questions about the creation and the shape of the earth, bolstering
his answers with up to 20 scriptures each. Rather than presenting an
exhaustive compendium of flat-earth scriptures, I focus on those
which seem to me the strongest. I also comment on some attempts to
find the earth's sphericity in the Bible.
Scriptural quotes,
unless otherwise noted, are from the New English Bible. Hebrew and
Greek translations are from Strong's Exhaustive Concordance of the
Bible. The Biblical cosmology is never explicitly stated, so it must
be pieced together from scattered passages. The Bible is a composite
work, so there is no a priori reason why the cosmology assumed by its
various writers should be relatively consistent, but it is. The Bible
is, from Genesis to Revelation, a flat-earth book.
This is hardly
surprising. As neighbors, the ancient Hebrews had the Egyptians to
the southwest and the Babylonians to the northeast. Both
civilizations had flat-earth cosmologies. The Biblical cosmology
closely parallels the Sumero-Babylonian cosmology, and it may also
draw upon Egyptian cosmology.
The Babylonian universe
was shaped like a modern domed stadium. The Babylonians considered
the earth essentially flat, with a continental mass surrounded by
ocean. The vault of the sky was a physical object resting upon the
ocean's waters (and perhaps also upon pillars). Sweet (salt-free)
waters below the Earth sometimes manifest themselves as springs. The
Egyptian universe was also enclosed, but it was rectangular instead
of round. Indeed, it was shaped much like an old-fashioned steamer
trunk. (The Egyptians pictured the goddess Nut stretched across the
sky as the enclosing dome.) What was the Hebrew view of the universe?
The Order of
Creation
The Genesis creation
story provides the first key to the Hebrew cosmology. The order of
creation makes no sense from a conventional perspective but is
perfectly logical from a flat-earth viewpoint. The earth was created
on the first day, and it was “without form and void (Genesis 1:2).”
On the second day, a vault the “firmament” of the King James
version was created to divide the waters, some being above and some
below the vault. Only on the fourth day were the sun, moon, and stars
created, and they were placed “in” (not “above”) the vault.
The Vault of Heaven
The vault of heaven is
a crucial concept. The word “firmament” appears in the King James
version of the Old Testament 17 times, and in each case it is
translated from the Hebrew word raqiya, which meant the visible vault
of the sky. The word raqiya comes from riqqua, meaning “beaten
out.” In ancient times, brass objects were either cast in the form
required or beaten into shape on an anvil. A good craftsman could
beat a lump of cast brass into a thin bowl. Thus, Elihu asks Job,
“Can you beat out [raqa] the vault of the skies, as he does, hard
as a mirror of cast metal (Job 37:18)?”
Elihu's question shows
that the Hebrews considered the vault of heaven a solid, physical
object. Such a large dome would be a tremendous feat of engineering.
The Hebrews (and supposedly Yahweh Himself) considered it exactly
that, and this point is hammered home by five scriptures:
Job 9:8, “...who by
himself spread out the heavens [shamayim]...”
Psalm 19:1, “The
heavens [shamayim] tell out the glory of God, the vault of heaven
[raqiya] reveals his handiwork.”
Psalm 102:25, “...the
heavens [shamayim] were thy handiwork.”
Isaiah 45:12, “I,
with my own hands, stretched out the heavens [shamayim] and caused
all their host to shine...”
Isaiah 48:13, “...with
my right hand I formed the expanse of the sky [shamayim]...”
If these verses are
about a mere illusion of a vault, they are surely much ado about
nothing. Shamayim comes from shameh, a root meaning to be lofty. It
literally means the sky. Other passages complete the picture of the
sky as a lofty, physical dome. God “sits throned on the vaulted
roof of earth [chuwg], whose inhabitants are like grasshoppers. He
stretches out the skies [shamayim] like a curtain, he spreads them
out like a tent to live in...[Isaiah 40:22].” Chuwg literally means
“circle” or “encompassed.” By extension, it can mean
roundness, as in a rounded dome or vault. Job 22:14 says God “walks
to and fro on the vault of heaven [chuwg].” In both verses, the use
of chuwg implies a physical object, on which one can sit and walk.
Likewise, the context in both cases requires elevation. In Isaiah,
the elevation causes the people below to look small as grasshoppers.
In Job, God's eyes must penetrate the clouds to view the doings of
humans below. Elevation is also implied by Job 22:12: “Surely God
is at the zenith of the heavens [shamayim] and looks down on all the
stars, high as they are.”
This picture of the
cosmos is reinforced by Ezekiel's vision. The Hebrew word raqiya
appears five times in Ezekiel, four times in Ezekiel 1:22-26 and once
in Ezekiel 10:1. In each case the context requires a literal vault or
dome. The vault appears above the “living creatures” and glitters
“like a sheet of ice.” Above the vault is a throne of sapphire
(or lapis lazuli). Seated on the throne is “a form in human
likeness,” which is radiant and “like the appearance of the glory
of the Lord.” In short, Ezekiel saw a vision of God sitting throned
on the vault of heaven, as described in Isaiah 40:22.
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