According to
the book of Genesis the earth was in the begging a formless void and it was
created by God in this way, and that formless void is expressed in the Bible
through the formula “Tohu vav bohu”. Why would God have created the earth as a
formless void first instead of an organised planet ready to receive life? At
first glance it doesn’t make any sense. I try to answer this question using the
established solutions in the religious literature.
What meaning
can the affirmation that planet Earth was without form when it was created by
God have? Was it not spherical? Was it like a pile of cosmic material thrown
randomly into space and looking like an asteroid but with the difference that it
was submerged under water? Did God in the beginning create a pile of matter in
the middle of water? It is what the Bible says about the initial creation of the
earth. In cosmos, all planets and stars are naturally organised into spherical
bodies. Before reaching a mature stage, in the solar system, planets were
rotating piles of gases which cooled and solidified. Nevertheless, being in the
stage of floating gases, the earth couldn’t have been submerged in liquid water
because in those conditions the rotating gases which later generated the planets
of the solar system, couldn’t have taken the form of spherical celestial bodies.
Was the earth
a kind of strange asteroid in the middle of a primeval ocean or was it a
spherical planet from the beginning of its creation by God? From the way in
which the book of Genesis describes the creation of the earth, under the
primeval sea, the planet couldn’t have followed the usual course to become a
spherical celestial body being shapeless and submerged in water.
Why are the
planets spherical? The following text explains why celestial bodies having a
certain dimension become spherical:
“One of the
effects of mass is that it attracts other mass. When you have millions, and even
trillions of tonnes of mass, the effect of the gravity really builds up. All of
the mass pulls on all the other mass, and it tries to create the most efficient
shape… a sphere. For smaller objects, like asteroids, the force of gravity
trying to pull the object into a sphere isn’t enough to overcome the strength of
the rock keeping it in shape. But once you get above a certain mass and size,
the strength of the object can’t stop the force of gravity from pulling it into
a sphere. Objects larger than about 1,000 km in size are able to pull themselves
into a sphere.”
[1]
The
earth couldn’t have first been a pile of matter similar to an asteroid, and from
this matter became a spherical planet, because an asteroid is much smaller than
a planet and asteroids don’t become planets. The quantity of matter formed by
dust and gases had to be of sufficient dimension from the beginning so as to
constitute the future planet. In its solid form planet Earth was never a
formless void in the sense of a shapeless pile of matter as the book of Genesis
says.
Why would God
have created a heap of formless matter as a planet, such as the book of Genesis
says that He did? Planets are big enough to determine by gravity their spherical
shape. Under the action of gravity such a big quantity of matter, as was that of
the earth, would have been made into a sphere even if at the beginning it was
only a formless pile of gas.
If God created in the beginning a pile of gas and dust and this is the meaning
of the expression “formless void” used by the book of Genesis, this gathering of
matter couldn’t have evolved into a spherical planet because that compound would
have been under the waters of the primeval sea, according to the Bible. A
rotating pile of gas under water doesn’t make sense. Whoever says that science
and religion don’t diverge about the creation of the earth is wrong, they are
very far from one another. Only on the third day did the dry land appear from
under the waters of the primeval sea in the book of Genesis.
“9 And God
said, ‘Let the waters under the sky be gathered together into one place, and let
the dry land appear.’ And it was so. 10 God called the dry land Earth, and the
waters that were gathered together he called Seas. And God saw that it was
good.” (Genesis 1; 9-10 NRSV)
In the Bible
the initial heap of cosmic matter was covered by the waters of the primeval sea
and the book of Genesis doesn’t say when and how it became a spherical planet.
How could the earth have transformed itself from a heap of matter into a
spherical planet under water? The alleged phenomenon would have needed to happen
before the separation of the waters and the creation of plants. If that was
correct it would mean that in the first two days of creation when the earth was
still under water it would have been transformed from a pile of matter in a
spherical planet. This is very unlikely, it is an absurd scenario imposed by the
narratives from the book of Genesis.
When someone
thinks of the earth at the beginning of its existence, in the biblical
perspective, he or she must not think to a sphere but to a heap of matter,
regardless of how deformed, covered by water. Why would God have created all
other planets and stars spherical and only created the earth formless at the
beginning? On the fourth day of creation the sun, moon and stars would have been
created as functional spherical celestial bodies, if not they couldn’t have
given light which was the purpose of their creation. If the creation of sun,
moon and stars had begun and ended in that day there wasn’t enough time for
their evolution from piles of gases to solid celestial bodies. This again is a
contradiction between science and the book of Genesis, the former postulating a
long process in the formation of the stars and planets but the latter proposing
that they were created from the beginning in the form that they are today. We
can find at this point a discrepancy in the stories of creation from the Bible
which say that the earth wasn’t created from the beginning as a spherical planet
as it is in our time but a shapeless pile of matter unlike the sun, moon, stars
and all other planets in our solar system. Why would the earth have been created
as a less complete celestial body in comparison with other planets if from the
beginning it was destined by God for a higher mission? It is what the Bible says
but it doesn’t make sense.
When speaking
about evolution one shouldn’t think only to the biological evolution which
allowed the human species to emerge from less evolved biological beings, because
evolution is a general concept which speaks about phenomena within the
perspective of their dynamic in time. Time is of the essence for evolution.
Things didn’t come to be what they are at once from a process of divine
creation, but they evolved from less developed to more sophisticated beings.
The stars and
planets followed the same rule. They didn’t come to be what they are in a
so-called ready-to-go manner from one day to another but they followed many
stages before being what they are at the present time. This ready-made manner of
creation is contrary to the way in which the study of cosmos shows us that the
universe works.
Evolution
cannot be negated as a process and is visible all around us. Even an individual
human being evolves in his or her lifetime from a baby to an adult and finally
rolls downward toward physical decay. Stars also continue to evolve all the time
from piles of gases to celestial bodies and after a long period of time they
die. This evolution is real and visible, it isn’t a trick of the sciences in
order to trap faithful people and the solution isn’t to be blind to it and to
deny the evidence. Today, different stages of the formation of stars can be
observed in the sky, starting with piles of gases on their way to becoming stars
and ending with stars which have exploded, changing dramatically their form.
In another
interpretation, the place occupied by the earth would have appeared to be a
formless void because it would have been covered by water, and the water would
have been like a universal formless void. In other words, the primeval sea would
have had no boundaries and would have covered everything, and for this reason
the earth also would have looked like a formless void. Everything was a formless
void, a sea without a form or without a defined contour covering everything,
earth, and the place for the sky.
If we want to
get an image of what the Bible says about the beginning of creation, that
picture is totally confused and the only point of reference is a mythological
one which is contained by the alleged presence of the primeval sea at the time.
That primeval
sea is a common element for Jewish mythology and for other mythologies of other
nations in that epoch. It means that God would have created the life on Earth
fighting against the authority of a mythological personage symbolised by the
primeval sea, the latter being the symbol of evil in many cultures.
Tohu va bohu
shouldn’t be seen as referring exclusively to the physical form but also to the
function of the earth at that stage. Being formless or shapeless, the earth
would have also been empty, unpopulated. There are two elements in the
expression tohu va bohu, used by the book of Genesis in order to emphasise the
degree of the decay in which the earth would have been at that time.
There is also the opinion that by formless it should be understood that the
earth was insufficiently organised to be a suitable environment for life. This
of course cannot change the clear reference to the lack of physical shape of the
earth at that date of creation..[2]
This is
another way of avoiding what the Bible says. The spherical form isn’t sufficient
for the existence of life; consequently, the two conditions mustn’t be
confounded. All planets are spherical; they aren’t formless but nevertheless
many are insufficiently organised to be a suitable environment for life. One
condition refers to the physical form and the other to other necessary
conditions for the existence of life.
The word
“tohu” refers firstly and fore mostly to the physical shape and not to the
deficient functions of a certain planetary environment, and recognises that the
first condition for matter to be able to host more evolved life is to be
organised as a spherical planet. “Bohu” would refer mainly to the functional
characteristics such as emptiness or desolation.
The origins of the Jewish people are in Mesopotamia and Abraham came from Ur, a
city situated on the banks of Euphrates. For this reason, one shouldn’t be
amazed by the closest relations between Mesopotamian culture and Jewish culture,
including their mythologies. The words “tohu” and “bohu” are not Hebrew but most
likely they are Sumerian words. In the Sumerian language nouns commonly end in
-u but in the Hebrew language -u is a verb ending.
Tohu and bohu are nouns, not verbs, therefore their origin is rather Sumerian,
showing the influence of that mythology on the book of Genesis.[3]
“The Gap
Theory”, suggests the angels were created “in the beginning” (Genesis 1:1),
rather than during or after the creation week, and that Satan and his demonic
followers had fell prior to Genesis 1:2. Chalmers grounds this theory in the
reinterpretation of words used in Genesis 1:2, and their relationship with other
passages of scripture.” In this understanding, Genesis 1:2 could, or should
read: “But the earth became or “had become” without form and void.” The
expression “without form and void” has been translated from the Hebrew phrase
“tohu vav bohu.” The words tohu and bohu are also found in Isaiah 34; 11, but
they are interpreted in the sense of confusion (tohu) and emptiness (bohu). Thus
“tohu” can also mean “confused”, and “bohu” can mean “empty”. “Confused” and
“without form” share in common a lack of order, in a place where there should be
order. Perhaps, then, the text could be read as follows; “But the earth wasin
disarray, andempty.”[4]
Jeremiah
4:23-26 also uses the phrase “tohu va bohu”. This is the biblical text:
23 I looked on
the earth, and lo, it was waste and void; and to the heavens, and they had no
light. 24 I looked on the mountains, and lo, they were quaking, and all the
hills moved to and fro. 25 I looked, and lo, there was no one at all, and all
the birds of the air had fled. 26 I looked, and lo, the fruitful land was a
desert, and all its cities were laid in ruins before the LORD, before his fierce
anger. (Jeremiah 4; 23-26 NRSV)
What is
interesting, though, is that it refers to cities, and what’s more it seems that
these cities had received judgment from The Lord – “all the cities thereof were
broken down (in disarray) at the presence of the Lord, and by his fierce anger”.
In the eyes of
those who spiritualise the expression “tohu va bohu”, perhaps these cities
represented the homes of the angels who had fallen. The word “choshek” has been
interpreted, in most translations of the Bible, as “darkness”, and when we read
it we assume this is a natural darkness (i.e. before the creation of natural
light), but the word “choshek” is also used in Exodus 10:21 to describe the
darkness The Lord brought upon Egypt, which was so dark it could be felt. Thus,
again, in this kind of spiritualised interpretation, Genesis 1:2 could be read:
“Butthe earth was in disarray, and empty; and spiritual darkness was upon the
face of the demonic realm.”[5]
Allegedly,
according to the Gap Theory, Satan brought in disarray a previous order of the
earth, about which we know nothing. God came on the first day of creation and
started to restore it. If the darkness brought by Satan was physical and not
only spiritual it means that there had already been a physical light on Earth
previous to that darkness, and before the creation of the light on the first
day, according to the book of Genesis chapter 1.
The Gap Theory
implies that before darkness was light on Earth, but the book of Genesis doesn’t
say that and doesn’t allow us to infer that. In order for Satan to bring
disorder a previous order had to exist, but that order necessarily entails the
existence of physical light.
Spiritually
speaking, light means order and darkness means decay. At the same time, a
physical light, not only a spiritual one, was needed for the existence of a
previous order. Such a light would have been created by God and would have been
mentioned by the Bible.
Spiritual
light and material light are two very different things and they mustn’t be
confounded. If physical darkness and disorder came together, nothing like that
is actually said by the Bible. But what is darkness? It is the absence of light,
no more and no less. Satan couldn’t have annihilated the alleged physical light
which God would have created in the beginning before the first day of creation.
Spiritual darkness can be generated by the absence of God but physical darkness
must be related to a physical light.
In the process
of biblical creation, the sun wasn’t in place until the fourth day according to
the book of Genesis and a previous order, presumed by the Gap Theory, had to be
realised in a physical darkness or under a provisional light. Another
provisional light without sun would have been needed; one that would have been
switched off by Satan, but such a hypothesis looks very improbable. Two
provisional lights, one before the earth, would have been brought to chaos by
Satan, and the other one from the first day of creation until the fourth day
when the sun would have been created is an absurd theory. Nevertheless, a
physical light created by God couldn’t have been switched off by Satan, but He
didn’t create such provisional lights.
As a matter of fact, the order in the creation couldn’t have been completed
before the sixth day. The creation couldn’t have been finalised at the beginning
of it and the order couldn’t have been fully in place from the beginning. What
order would have been brought in disarray by Satan? It would have been only a
partial, incomplete order and without human beings who were created on the sixth
day of creation.
The Gap Theory
is in contradiction with the creation in six days. In the economy of the Bible,
the state of “tohu va bohu” was God’s creation, and not Satan’s creation. Satan
couldn’t have destroyed something which the Bible doesn’t allow us to presume
would have existed, an order before the first day of creation.
The
representatives of a spiritual interpretation of the expression “tohu va bohu”
maintain that:
“It is clear,
then, that the angels were created before ‘the beginning’, and that Genesis 1 is
not a history of the origins of the entire cosmos, but just of our world – the
‘physical realm.’ If Satan and his followers have rebelled against The Lord,
then they have sinned. They can no longer be in his presence and thus they have
‘fallen from the sky like lightning.’ Where did they land when they fell? The
Lord cast Satan and his followers into a hell from which he withdrew his
presence. The earth was in disarray, and empty; and spiritual darkness was upon
the face of the [demonic realm] The Lord created Earth and withdrew his presence
from it, but then upon this he created the Earth we know, as is described in
Days one to six. Thus Satan and his followers live in the deep, the abyss, the
demonic realm, ‘underneath’ the good but fallen creation we inhabit.”[6]
The Bible
doesn’t contain any information about what happened in the “heavens” in the
beginning and how and why Satan succeeded in upsetting God, and why he was cast
out from heaven. At the same time, we really don’t know, from the narrative of
creation, exactly in what moment Satan was thrown out from the sky. Was it
before or after the creation of light? Satan fell from the sky like lightning so
he probably fell after the creation of light because it is improbable that he
had been the first light of the creation. That would set Satan’s fall after the
creation of light in the first day and not before it.
“18 He said to
them, ‘I watched Satan fall from heaven like a flash of lightning.” (Luke 10; 18
NRSV)
I don’t find
merits in the theory by which the expression “tohu va bohu” would mean a void
and an emptiness brought to the earth by the evil angels. The Gap Theory must
completely disregard the text from Exodus 20; 11 in order to become sustainable.
At the same time, this theory doesn’t have enough support in other biblical
texts.
The narratives
from the book of Genesis tried to describe literally the origins of the universe
and there isn’t anything which must be read beyond the written text.
All creation
including the creation of heavens was made in six days, according to the Bible.
For this reason, it is difficult to maintain that anything at all was created
before the six-day period of time.
“For in six
days the Lord made heaven and earth, the sea, and all that is in them, but
rested the seventh day; therefore the Lord blessed the sabbath day and
consecrated it.” (Exodus 20; 11 NRSV)
“It is vital
to believe in six literal days for many reasons. The foremost reason is that
allowing these days to be long periods of time undermines the foundations of the
message of the Cross.”[7]
Ken Ham also
argues that the second part of the text contained by 2 Peter 3; 8 cancel the
first part and the provision that for God one day is like one thousand years is
annihilated by the assertion that one thousand years are also like a day..[8]
“8 But do not
ignore this one fact, beloved, that with the Lord one day is like a thousand
years, and a thousand years are like one day.” (2 Peter 3; 8 NRSV)
How
can one know if the seven days are to be considered literally or not? One
argument is about the regular successions of evenings and of the mornings. As
long as we don’t have another option for the interpretation of the words
“morning” and “evening” we cannot give but a literal interpretation of the days
of creation. Another argument is based on the meaning of the Hebrew word used
for “day” in Genesis chapter 1 which is “;yom”. The meaning of the words, in the
Bible depends on the context in which they are used. Every time the word “yom”
is used with a number or with the phrase “evening and morning”, everywhere in
the Old Testament, it always means an ordinary day. In Genesis chapter 1, for
each of the six days of creation, the Hebrew word “yom” is used with a number
and also with the phrase, “evening and morning”. The most reasonable conclusion
is to say that “yom” in Genesis chapter 1 means ordinary days.
________________________________________________________________________
[1] www.universetoday.com/26782/why-is-the-earth-round/
[2] www.wordexplain.com/Word_Study_tohu_wa_bohu.html
[3] www.shirhadash-ma.org/.../2007-10_breishit_DavidGoodson.pdf
[4] www.plaintruth.com/the.../the-earth-became-formless-and-void
[5] www.plaintruth.com/the.../the-earth-became-formless-and-void
[6] www.plaintruth.com/the.../the-earth-became-formless-and-void
[7] https://answersingenesis.org/.../the-necessity-for-believing-in-six-literal-d...
[8] https://answersingenesis.org/.../the-necessity-for-believing-in-six-literal-d...
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