The Astronomy of the Bible
The Astronomy of the BiblePREFACEBOOK I THE HEAVENLY BODIESCHAPTER ICHAPTER IICHAPTER IIICHAPTER IVCHAPTER VCHAPTER VICHAPTER VIICHAPTER VIIICHAPTER IXCHAPTER XCHAPTER XICHAPTER XIIBOOK II THE CONSTELLATIONSCHAPTER ICHAPTER IICHAPTER IIICHAPTER IVCHAPTER VCHAPTER VICHAPTER VIICHAPTER VIIICHAPTER IX BOOK III TIMES AND SEASONSCHAPTER ICHAPTER IICHAPTER IIICHAPTER IVCHAPTER VCHAPTER VIBOOK IV THREE ASTRONOMICAL MARVELSCHAPTER ICHAPTER IICHAPTER IIICopyright
The Astronomy of the Bible
E. Walter Maunder
PREFACE
Why should an astronomer write a commentary on the
Bible?Because commentators as a rule are not astronomers, and
therefore either pass over the astronomical allusions of Scripture
in silence, or else annotate them in a way which, from a scientific
point of view, leaves much to be desired.Astronomical allusions in the Bible, direct and indirect, are
not few in number, and, in order to bring out their full
significance, need to be treated astronomically. Astronomy further
gives us the power of placing ourselves to some degree in the
position of the patriarchs and prophets of old. We know that the
same sun and moon, stars and planets, shine upon us as shone upon
Abraham and Moses, David and Isaiah. We can, if we will, see the
unchanging heavens with their eyes, and understand their attitude
towards them.It is worth while for us so to do. For the immense advances
in science, made since the Canon of Holy Scripture was closed, and
especially during the last three hundred years, may enable us to
realize the significance of a most remarkable fact. Even in those
early ages, when to all the nations surrounding Israel the heavenly
bodies were objects for divination or idolatry, the attitude of the
sacred writers toward them was perfect in its sanity and
truth.Astronomy has a yet further part to play in Biblical study.
The dating of the several books of the Bible, and the relation of
certain heathen mythologies to the Scripture narratives of the
world's earliest ages, have received much attention of late years.
Literary analysis has thrown much light on these subjects, but
hitherto any evidence that astronomy could give has been almost
wholly neglected; although, from the nature of the case, such
evidence, so far as it is available, must be most decisive and
exact.I have endeavoured, in the present book, to make an
astronomical commentary on the Bible, in a manner that shall be
both clear and interesting to the general reader, dispensing as far
as possible with astronomical technicalities, since the principles
concerned are, for the most part, quite simple. I trust, also, that
I have taken the first step in a new inquiry which promises to give
results of no small importance.E. WALTER MAUNDER.
BOOK I THE HEAVENLY BODIES
CHAPTER I
THE HEBREW AND ASTRONOMYModern astronomy began a little more than three centuries ago
with the invention of the telescope and Galileo's application of it
to the study of the heavenly bodies. This new instrument at once
revealed to him the mountains on the moon, the satellites of
Jupiter, and the spots on the sun, and brought the celestial bodies
under observation in a way that no one had dreamed of before. In
our view to-day, the planets of the solar system are worlds; we can
examine their surfaces and judge wherein they resemble or differ
from our earth. To the ancients they were but points of light; to
us they are vast bodies that we have been able to measure and to
weigh. The telescope has enabled us also to penetrate deep into
outer space; we have learnt of other systems besides that of our
own sun and its dependents, many of them far more complex; clusters
and clouds of stars have been revealed to us, and mysterious
nebulæ, which suggest by their forms that they are systems of suns
in the making. More lately the invention of the spectroscope has
informed us of the very elements which go to the composition of
these numberless stars, and we can distinguish those which are in a
similar condition to our sun from those differing from him. And
photography has recorded for us objects too faint for mere sight to
detect, even when aided by the most powerful telescope; too
detailed and intricate for the most skilful hand to
depict.Galileo's friend and contemporary, Kepler, laid the
foundations of another department of modern astronomy at about the
same time. He studied the apparent movements of the planets until
they yielded him their secret so far that he was able to express
them in three simple laws, laws which, two generations later, Sir
Isaac Newton demonstrated to be the outcome of one grand and simple
law of universal range, the law of gravitation. Upon this law the
marvellous mathematical conquests of astronomy have been
based.All these wonderful results have been attained by the free
exercise of men's mental abilities, and it cannot be imagined that
God would have intervened to hamper their growth in intellectual
power by revealing to men facts and methods which it was within
their own ability to discover for themselves. Men's mental powers
have developed by their exercise; they would have been stunted had
men been led to look to revelation rather than to diligent effort
for the satisfaction of their curiosity. We therefore do not find
any reference in the Bible to that which modern astronomy has
taught us. Yet it may be noted that some expressions, appropriate
at any time, have become much more appropriate, much more forcible,
in the light of our present-day knowledge.The age of astronomy which preceded the Modern, and may be
called the Classical age, was almost as sharply defined in its
beginning as its successor. It lasted about two thousand years, and
began with the investigations into the movements of the planets
made by some of the early Greek mathematicians. Classical, like
Modern astronomy, had its two sides,--the instrumental and the
mathematical. On the instrumental side was the invention of
graduated instruments for the determination of the positions of the
heavenly bodies; on the mathematical, the development of geometry
and trigonometry for the interpretation of those positions when
thus determined. Amongst the great names of this period are those
of Eudoxus of Knidus (B.C. 408-355), and Hipparchus of Bithynia,
who lived rather more than two centuries later. Under its first
leaders astronomy in the Classical age began to advance rapidly,
but it soon experienced a deadly blight. Men were not content to
observe the heavenly bodies for what they were; they endeavoured to
make them the sources of divination. The great school of Alexandria
(founded about 300 B.C.), the headquarters of astronomy, became
invaded by the spirit of astrology, the bastard science which has
always tried--parasite-like--to suck its life from astronomy. Thus
from the days of Claudius Ptolemy to the end of the Middle Ages the
growth of astronomy was arrested, and it bore but little
fruit.It will be noticed that the Classical age did not commence
until about the time of the completion of the last books of the Old
Testament; so we do not find any reference in Holy Scripture to the
astronomical achievements of that period, amongst which the first
attempts to explain the apparent motions of sun, moon, stars, and
planets were the most considerable.We have a complete history of astronomy in the Modern and
Classical periods, but there was an earlier astronomy, not
inconsiderable in amount, of which no history is preserved. For
when Eudoxus commenced his labours, the length of the year had
already been determined, the equinoxes and solstices had been
recognized, the ecliptic, the celestial equator, and the poles of
both great circles were known, and the five principal planets were
familiar objects. This Early astronomy must have had its history,
its stages of development, but we can only with difficulty trace
them out. It cannot have sprung into existence full-grown any more
than the other sciences; it must have started from zero, and men
must have slowly fought their way from one observation to another,
with gradually widening conceptions, before they could bring it
even to that stage of development in which it was when the
observers of the Museum of Alexandria began their
work.The books of the Old Testament were written at different
times during the progress of this Early age of astronomy. We should
therefore naturally expect to find the astronomical allusions
written from the standpoint of such scientific knowledge as had
then been acquired. We cannot for a moment expect that any
supernatural revelation of purely material facts would be imparted
to the writers of sacred books, two or three thousand years before
the progress of science had brought those facts to light, and we
ought not to be surprised if expressions are occasionally used
which we should not ourselves use to-day, if we were writing about
the phenomena of nature from a technical point of view. It must
further be borne in mind that the astronomical references are not
numerous, that they occur mostly in poetic imagery, and that Holy
Scripture was not intended to give an account of the scientific
achievements, if any, of the Hebrews of old. Its purpose was wholly
different: it was religious, not scientific; it was meant to give
spiritual, not intellectual enlightenment.An exceedingly valuable and interesting work has recently
been brought out by the most eminent of living Italian astronomers,
Prof. G. V. Schiaparelli, on this subject of "Astronomy in the Old
Testament," to which work I should like here to acknowledge my
indebtedness. Yet I feel that the avowed object of his
book,[7:1]--to "discover what ideas the ancient Jewish sages held
regarding the structure of the universe, what observations they
made of the stars, and how far they made use of them for the
measurement and division of time"--is open to this criticism,--that
sufficient material for carrying it out is not within our reach. If
we were to accept implicitly the argument from the silence of
Scripture, we should conclude that the Hebrews--though their
calendar was essentially a lunar one, based upon the actual
observation of the new moon--had never noticed that the moon
changed its apparent form as the month wore on, for there is no
mention in the Bible of the lunar phases.The references to the heavenly bodies in Scripture are not
numerous, and deal with them either as time-measurers or as
subjects for devout allusion, poetic simile, or symbolic use. But
there is one characteristic of all these references to the
phenomena of Nature, that may not be ignored. None of the ancients
ever approached the great Hebrew writers in spiritual elevation;
none equalled them in poetic sublimity; and few, if any, surpassed
them in keenness of observation, or in quick sympathy with every
work of the Creator.These characteristics imply a natural fitness of the Hebrews
for successful scientific work, and we should have a right to
believe that under propitious circumstances they would have shown a
pre-eminence in the field of physical research as striking as is
the superiority of their religious conceptions over those of the
surrounding nations. We cannot, of course, conceive of the average
Jew as an Isaiah, any more than we can conceive of the average
Englishman as a Shakespeare, yet the one man, like the other, is an
index of the advancement and capacity of his race; nor could
Isaiah's writings have been preserved, more than those of
Shakespeare, without a true appreciation of them on the part of
many of his countrymen.But the necessary conditions for any great scientific
development were lacking to Israel. A small nation, planted between
powerful and aggressive empires, their history was for the most
part the record of a struggle for bare existence; and after three
or four centuries of the unequal conflict, first the one and then
the other of the two sister kingdoms was overwhelmed. There was but
little opportunity during these years of storm and stress for men
to indulge in any curious searchings into the secrets of
nature.Once only was there a long interval of prosperity and peace;
viz. from the time that David had consolidated the kingdom to the
time when it suffered disruption under his grandson, Rehoboam; and
it is significant that tradition has ascribed to Solomon and to his
times just such a scientific activity as the ability and
temperament of the Hebrew race would lead us to expect it to
display when the conditions should be favourable for
it.Thus, in the fourth chapter of the First Book of Kings, not
only are the attainments of Solomon himself described, but other
men, contemporaries either of his father David or himself, are
referred to, as distinguished in the same direction, though to a
less degree."And God gave Solomon wisdom and understanding exceeding
much, and largeness of heart, even as the sand that is on the
seashore. And Solomon's wisdom excelled the wisdom of all the
children of the east country, and all the wisdom of Egypt. For he
was wiser than all men; than Ethan the Ezrahite, and Heman, and
Chalcol, and Darda, the sons of Mahol: and his fame was in all
nations round about. And he spake three thousand proverbs: and his
songs were a thousand and five. And he spake of trees, from the
cedar-tree that is in Lebanon even unto the hyssop that springeth
out of the wall: he spake also of beasts, and of fowl, and of
creeping things, and of fishes. And there came of all people to
hear the wisdom of Solomon, from all kings of the earth, which had
heard of his wisdom."The tradition of his great eminence in scientific research is
also preserved in the words put into his mouth in the Book of the
Wisdom of Solomon, now included in the Apocrypha."For" (God) "Himself gave me an unerring knowledge of the
things that are, to know the constitution of the world, and the
operation of the elements; the beginning and end and middle of
times, the alternations of the solstices and the changes of
seasons, the circuits of years and the positions" (margin, constellations) "of stars; the
natures of living creatures and the ragings of wild beasts, the
violences of winds and the thoughts of men, the diversities of
plants and the virtues of roots: all things that are either secret
or manifest I learned, for she that is the artificer of all things
taught me, even Wisdom."Two great names have impressed themselves upon every part of
the East:--the one, that of Solomon the son of David, as the master
of every secret source of knowledge; and the other that of
Alexander the Great, as the mightiest of conquerors. It is not
unreasonable to believe that the traditions respecting the first
have been founded upon as real a basis of actual achievement as
those respecting the second.But to such scientific achievements we have no express
allusion in Scripture, other than is afforded us by the two
quotations just made. Natural objects, natural phenomena are not
referred to for their own sake. Every thought leads up to God or to
man's relation to Him. Nature, as a whole and in its every aspect
and detail, is the handiwork of Jehovah: that is the truth which
the heavens are always declaring;--and it is His power, His wisdom,
and His goodness to man which it is sought to illustrate, when the
beauty or wonder of natural objects is described."When I consider Thy heavens, the work of Thy fingers, The
moon and the stars, which Thou hast ordained; What is man, that
Thou art mindful of him? And the son of man, that Thou visitest
him?"The first purpose, therefore, of the following study of the
astronomy of the Bible is,--not to reconstruct the astronomy of the
Hebrews, a task for which the material is manifestly
incomplete,--but to examine such astronomical allusions as occur
with respect to their appropriateness to the lesson which the
writer desired to teach. Following this, it will be of interest to
examine what connection can be traced between the Old Testament
Scriptures and the Constellations; the arrangement of the stars
into constellations having been the chief astronomical work
effected during the centuries when those Scriptures were severally
composed. The use made of the heavenly bodies as time-measurers
amongst the Hebrews will form a third division of the subject;
whilst there are two or three incidents in the history of Israel
which appear to call for examination from an astronomical point of
view, and may suitably be treated in a fourth and concluding
section.FOOTNOTES:[7:1]Astronomy in the Old
Testament, p. 12.
CHAPTER II
THE CREATIONA few years ago a great eclipse of the sun, seen as total
along a broad belt of country right across India, drew thither
astronomers from the very ends of the earth. Not only did many
English observers travel thither, but the United States of America
in the far west, and Japan in the far east sent their contingents,
and the entire length of country covered by the path of the shadow
was dotted with the temporary observatories set up by the men of
science.It was a wonderful sight that was vouchsafed to these
travellers in pursuit of knowledge. In a sky of unbroken purity,
undimmed even for a moment by haze or cloud, there shone down the
fierce Indian sun. Gradually a dark mysterious circle invaded its
lower edge, and covered its brightness; coolness replaced the
burning heat; slowly the dark covering crept on; slowly the
sunlight diminished until at length the whole of the sun's disc was
hidden. Then in a moment a wonderful starlike form flashed out, a
noble form of glowing silver light on the deep purple-coloured
sky.There was, however, no time for the astronomers to devote to
admiration of the beauty of the scene, or indulgence in rhapsodies.
Two short minutes alone were allotted them to note all that was
happening, to take all their photographs, to ask all the questions,
and obtain all the answers for which this strange veiling of the
sun, and still stranger unveiling of his halo-like surroundings,
gave opportunity. It was two minutes of intensest strain, of
hurried though orderly work; and then a sudden rush of sunlight put
an end to all. The mysterious vision had withdrawn itself; the
colour rushed back to the landscape, so corpse-like whilst in the
shadow; the black veil slid rapidly from off the sun; the heat
returned to the air; the eclipse was over.But the astronomers from distant lands were not the only
people engaged in watching the eclipse. At their work, they could
hear the sound of a great multitude, a sound of weeping and
wailing, a people dismayed at the distress of their
god.It was so at every point along the shadow track, but
especially where that track met the course of the sacred river.
Along a hundred roads the pilgrims had poured in unceasing streams
towards Holy Mother Gunga; towards Benares, the sacred city;
towards Buxar, where the eclipse was central at the river bank. It
is always meritorious--so the Hindoo holds--to bathe in that sacred
river, but such a time as this, when the sun is in eclipse, is the
most propitious moment of all for such lustration.Could there be a greater contrast than that offered between
the millions trembling and dismayed at the signs of heaven, and the
little companies who had come for thousands of miles over land and
sea, rejoicing in the brief chance that was given them for learning
a little more of the secrets of the wonders of Nature?The contrast between the heathen and the scientists was in
both their spiritual and their intellectual standpoint, and, as we
shall see later, the intellectual contrast is a result of the
spiritual. The heathen idea is that the orbs of heaven are divine,
or at least that each expresses a divinity. This does not in itself
seem an unnatural idea when we consider the great benefits that
come to us through the instrumentality of the sun and moon. It is
the sun that morning by morning rolls back the darkness, and brings
light and warmth and returning life to men; it is the sun that
rouses the earth after her winter sleep and quickens vegetation. It
is the moon that has power over the great world of waters, whose
pulse beats in some kind of mysterious obedience to her
will.Natural, then, has it been for men to go further, and to
suppose that not only is power lodged in these, and in the other
members of the heavenly host, but that it is living, intelligent,
personal power; that these shining orbs are beings, or the
manifestations of beings; exalted, mighty, immortal;--that they are
gods.But if these are gods, then it is sacrilegious, it is
profane, to treat them as mere "things"; to observe them minutely
in the microscope or telescope; to dissect them, as it were, in the
spectroscope; to identify their elements in the laboratory; to be
curious about their properties, influences, relations, and actions
on each other.And if these are gods, there are many gods, not One God. And
if there are many gods, there are many laws, not one law. Thus
scientific observations cannot be reconciled with polytheism, for
scientific observations demand the assumption of one universal law.
The wise king expressed this law thus:--"The thing that hath been, it is that which shall be." The
actual language of science, as expressed by Professor Thiele, a
leading Continental astronomer, states that--"Everything that exists, and everything that happens, exists
or happens as a necessary consequence of a previous state of
things. If a state of things is repeated in every detail, it must
lead to exactly the same consequences. Any difference between the
results of causes that are in part the same, must be explainable by
some difference in the other part of the
causes."[15:1]The law stated in the above words has been called the Law of
Causality. It "cannot be proved, but must be believed; in the same
way as we believe the fundamental assumptions of religion, with
which it is closely and intimately connected. The law of causality
forces itself upon our belief. It may be denied in theory, but not
in practice. Any person who denies it, will, if he is watchful
enough, catch himself constantly asking himself, if no one else,
whythishas happened, and
notthat. But in that very
question he bears witness to the law of causality. If we are
consistently to deny the law of causality, we must repudiate all
observation, and particularly all prediction based on past
experience, as useless and misleading."If we could imagine for an instant that the same complete
combination of causes could have a definite number of different
consequences, however small that number might be, and that among
these the occurrence of the actual consequence was, in the old
sense of the word, accidental, no observation would ever be of any
particular value."[16:1]So long as men hold, as a practical faith, that the results
which attend their efforts depend upon whether Jupiter is awake and
active, or Neptune is taking an unfair advantage of his brother's
sleep; upon whether Diana is bending her silver bow for the battle,
or flying weeping and discomfited because Juno has boxed her
ears--so long is it useless for them to make or consult
observations.But, as Professor Thiele goes on to say--"If the law of causality is acknowledged to be an assumption
which always holds good, then every observation gives us a
revelation which, when correctly appraised and compared with
others, teaches us the laws by which God rules the
world."By what means have the modern scientists arrived at a
position so different from that of the heathen? It cannot have been
by any process of natural evolution that the intellectual
standpoint which has made scientific observation possible should be
derived from the spiritual standpoint of polytheism which rendered
all scientific observation not only profane but
useless.In the old days the heathen in general regarded the heavenly
host and the heavenly bodies as the heathen do to-day. But by one
nation, the Hebrews, the truth that--"In the beginning God created the heaven and the
earth"was preserved in the first words of their Sacred Book. That
nation declared--"All the gods of the people are idols: but the Lord made the
heavens."For that same nation the watchword was--"Hear, O Israel: the Lord our God is one Lord."From these words the Hebrews not only learned a great
spiritual truth, but derived intellectual freedom. For by these
words they were taught that all the host of heaven and of earth
were created things--merely "things," not divinities--and not only
that, but that the Creator was One God, not many gods; that there
was but one law-giver; and that therefore there could be no
conflict of laws. These first words of Genesis, then, may be called
the charter of all the physical sciences, for by them is conferred
freedom from all the bonds of unscientific superstition, and by
them also do men know that consistent law holds throughout the
whole universe. It is the intellectual freedom of the Hebrew that
the scientist of to-day inherits. He may not indeed be able to rise
to the spiritual standpoint of the Hebrew, and consciously
acknowledge that--"Thou, even Thou, art Lord alone; Thou hast made heaven, the
heaven of heavens, with all their host, the earth, and all things
that are therein, the seas, and all that is therein, and Thou
preservest them all; and the host of heaven worshippeth
Thee."But he must at least unconsciously assent to it, for it is on
the first great fundamental assumption of religion as stated in the
first words of Genesis, that the fundamental assumption of all his
scientific reasoning depends.Scientific reasoning and scientific observation can only hold
good so long and in so far as the Law of Causality holds good. We
must assume a pre-existing state of affairs which has given rise to
the observed effect; we must assume that this observed effect is
itself antecedent to a subsequent state of affairs. Science
therefore cannot go back to the absolute beginnings of things, or
forward to the absolute ends of things. It cannot reason about the
way matter and energy came into existence, or how they might cease
to exist; it cannot reason about time or space, as such, but only
in the relations of these to phenomena that can be observed. It
does not deal with things themselves, but only with the relations
between things. Science indeed can only consider the universe as a
great machine which is in "going order," and it concerns itself
with the relations which some parts of the machine bear to other
parts, and with the laws and manner of the "going" of the machine
in those parts. The relations of the various parts, one to the
other, and the way in which they work together, may afford some
idea of the design and purpose of the machine, but it can give no
information as to how the material of which it is composed came
into existence, nor as to the method by which it was originally
constructed. Once started, the machine comes under the scrutiny of
science, but the actual starting lies outside its
scope.Men therefore cannot find out for themselves how the worlds
were originally made, how the worlds were first moved, or how the
spirit of man was first formed within him; and this, not merely
because these beginnings of things were of necessity outside his
experience, but also because beginnings, as such, must lie outside
the law by which he reasons.By no process of research, therefore, could man find out for
himself the facts that are stated in the first chapter of Genesis.
They must have been revealed. Science cannot inquire into them for
the purpose of checking their accuracy; it must accept them, as it
accepts the fundamental law that governs its own working, without
the possibility of proof.And this is what has been revealed to man:--that the heaven
and the earth were not self-existent from all eternity, but were in
their first beginning created by God. As the writer of the Epistle
to the Hebrews expresses it: "Through faith we understand that the
worlds were framed by the word of God, so that things which are
seen were not made of things which do appear." And a further fact
was revealed that man could not have found out for himself; viz.
that this creation was made and finished in six Divine actings,
comprised in what the narrative denominates "days." It has not been
revealed whether the duration of these "days" can be expressed in
any astronomical units of time.Since under these conditions science can afford no
information, it is not to be wondered at that the hypotheses that
have been framed from time to time to "explain" the first chapter
of Genesis, or to express it in scientific terms, are not wholly
satisfactory. At one time the chapter was interpreted to mean that
the entire universe was called into existence about 6,000 years
ago, in six days of twenty-four hours each. Later it was recognized
that both geology and astronomy seemed to indicate the existence of
matter for untold millions of years instead of some six thousand.
It was then pointed out that, so far as the narrative was
concerned, there might have been a period of almost unlimited
duration between its first verse and its fourth; and it was
suggested that the six days of creation were six days of
twenty-four hours each, in which, after some great cataclysm, 6,000
years ago, the face of the earth was renewed and replenished for
the habitation of man, the preceding geological ages being left
entirely unnoticed. Some writers have confined the cataclysm and
renewal to a small portion of the earth's surface--to "Eden," and
its neighbourhood. Other commentators have laid stress on the truth
revealed in Scripture that "one day is with the Lord as a thousand
years, and a thousand years as one day," and have urged the
argument that the six days of creation were really vast periods of
time, during which the earth's geological changes and the evolution
of its varied forms of life were running their course. Others,
again, have urged that the six days of creation were six literal
days, but instead of being consecutive were separated by long ages.
And yet again, as no man was present during the creation period, it
has been suggested that the Divine revelation of it was given to
Moses or some other inspired prophet in six successive visions or
dreams, which constituted the "six days" in which the chief facts
of creation were set forth.All such hypotheses are based on the assumption that the
opening chapters of Genesis are intended to reveal to man certain
physical details in the material history of this planet; to be in
fact a little compendium of the geological and zoological history
of the world, and so a suitable introduction to the history of the
early days of mankind which followed it.It is surely more reasonable to conclude that there was no
purpose whatever of teaching us anything about the physical
relationships of land and sea, of tree and plant, of bird and fish;
it seems, indeed, scarcely conceivable that it should have been the
Divine intention so to supply the ages with a condensed manual of
the physical sciences. What useful purpose could it have served?
What man would have been the wiser or better for it? Who could have
understood it until the time when men, by their own intellectual
strivings, had attained sufficient knowledge of their physical
surroundings to do without such a revelation at all?But although the opening chapters of Genesis were not
designed to teach the Hebrew certain physical facts of nature, they
gave him the knowledge that he might lawfully study nature. For he
learnt from them that nature has no power nor vitality of its own;
that sun, and sea, and cloud, and wind are not separate deities,
nor the expression of deities that they are but "things," however
glorious and admirable; that they are the handiwork of God;
and--"The works of the Lord are great, Sought out of all them that
have pleasure therein. His work is honour and majesty; And His
righteousness endureth for ever. He hath made His wonderful works
to be remembered."What, then, is the significance of the detailed account given
us of the works effected on the successive days of creation? Why
are we told that light was made on the first day, the firmament on
the second, dry land on the third, and so on? Probably for two
reasons. First, that the rehearsal, as in a catalogue, of the
leading classes of natural objects, might give definiteness and
precision to the teaching that each and all were creatures, things
made by the word of God. The bald statement that the heaven and the
earth were made by God might still have left room for the
imagination that the powers of nature were co-eternal with God, or
were at least subordinate divinities; or that other powers than God
had worked up into the present order the materials He had created.
The detailed account makes it clear that not only was the universe
in general created by God, but that there was no part of it that
was not fashioned by Him.The next purpose was to set a seal of sanctity upon the
Sabbath. In the second chapter of Genesis we read--"On the seventh day God ended His work which He had made; and
He rested on the seventh day from all His work which He had made.
And God blessed the seventh day, and sanctified it: because that in
it He had rested from all His work which God created and
made."In this we get the institution of theweek, the first ordinance imposed by
God upon man. For in the fourth of the ten commandments which God
gave through Moses, it is said--"The seventh day is the sabbath of the Lord thy God: in it
thou shalt not do any work. . . . For in six days the Lord made
heaven and earth, the sea, and all that in them is, and rested the
seventh day: wherefore the Lord blessed the sabbath day, and
hallowed it."And again, when the tabernacle was being builded, it was
commanded--"The children of Israel shall keep the sabbath, to observe
the sabbath throughout their generations, for a perpetual covenant.
It is a sign between Me and the children of Israel for ever: for in
six days the Lord made heaven and earth, and on the seventh day He
rested, and was refreshed."God made the sun, moon, and stars, and appointed them "for
signs, and for seasons, and for days, and years." The sun marks out
the days; the moon by her changes makes the months; the sun and the
stars mark out the seasons and the years. These were divisions of
time which man would naturally adopt. But there is not an exact
number of days in the month, nor an exact number of days or months
in the year. Still less does the period of seven days fit precisely
into month or season or year; the week is marked out by no phase of
the moon, by no fixed relation between the sun, the moon, or the
stars. It is not a division of time that man would naturally adopt
for himself; it runs across all the natural divisions of
time.What are the six days of creative work, and the seventh
day--the Sabbath--of creative rest? They are not days of man, they
are days of God; and our days of work and rest, our week with its
Sabbath, can only be the figure and shadow of that week of God;
something by which we may gain some faint apprehension of its
realities, not that by which we can comprehend and measure
it.Our week, therefore, is God's own direct appointment to us;
and His revelation that He fulfilled the work of creation in six
acts or stages, dignifies and exalts the toil of the labouring man,
with his six days of effort and one of rest, into an emblem of the
creative work of God.FOOTNOTES:[15:1] T. N. Thiele, Director of the Copenhagen
Observatory,Theory of Observations, p. 1.[16:1] T. N. Thiele, Director of the Copenhagen
Observatory,Theory of Observations, p. 1.
CHAPTER III
THE DEEPThe second verse of Genesis states, "And the earth was
without form and void [i. e.waste and empty] and darkness was upon the face of the deep."
The wordteh[=o]m, here
translateddeep, has been used
to support the theory that the Hebrews derived their Creation story
from one which, when exiles in Babylon, they heard from their
conquerors. If this theory were substantiated, it would have such
an important bearing upon the subject of the attitude of the
inspired writers towards the objects of nature, that a little space
must be spared for its examination.The purpose of the first chapter of Genesis is to tell us
that--"In the beginning God created the heaven and the
earth."From it we learn that the universe and all the parts that
make it up--all the different forms of energy, all the different
forms of matter--are neither deities themselves, nor their
embodiments and expressions, nor the work of conflicting deities.
From it we learn that the universe is not self-existent, nor even
(as the pantheist thinks of it) the expression of one vague,
impersonal and unconscious, but all-pervading influence. It was not
self-made; it did not exist from all eternity. It is not God, for
God made it.But the problem of its origin has exercised the minds of many
nations beside the Hebrews, and an especial interest attaches to
the solution arrived at by those nations who were near neighbours
of the Hebrews and came of the same great Semitic
stock.From the nature of the case, accounts of the origin of the
world cannot proceed from experience, or be the result of
scientific experiment. They cannot form items of history, or arise
from tradition. There are only two possible sources for them; one,
Divine revelation; the other, the invention of men.The account current amongst the Babylonians has been
preserved to us by the Syrian writer Damascius, who gives it as
follows:--"But the Babylonians, like the rest of the Barbarians, pass
over in silence the one principle of the Universe, and they
constitute two, Tavthê and Apasôn, making Apasôn the husband of
Tavthê, and denominating her "the mother of the gods." And from
these proceeds an only-begotten son, Mumis, which, I conceive, is
no other than the intelligible world proceeding from the two
principles. From them also another progeny is derived, Lakhê and
Lakhos; and again a third, Kissarê and Assôros, from which last
three others proceed, Anos and Illinos and Aos. And of Aos and
Dakhê is born a son called Bêlos, who, they say, is the fabricator
of the world."[26:1]The actual story, thus summarized by Damascius, was
discovered by Mr. George Smith, in the form of a long epic poem, on
a series of tablets, brought from the royal library of Kouyunjik,
or Nineveh, and he published them in 1875, in his book onThe Chaldean Account of Genesis. None
of the tablets were perfect; and of some only very small portions
remain. But portions of other copies of the poem have been
discovered in other localities, and it has been found possible to
piece together satisfactorily a considerable section, so that a
fair idea of the general scope of the poem has been given to
us.It opens with the introduction of a being, Tiamtu--the Tavthê
of the account of Damascius,--who is regarded as the primeval
mother of all things."When on high the heavens were unnamed, Beneath the earth
bore not a name: The primeval ocean was their producer; Mummu
Tiamtu was she who begot the whole of them. Their waters in one
united themselves, and The plains were not outlined, marshes were
not to be seen. When none of the gods had come forth, They bore no
name, the fates (had not been determined) There were produced the
gods (all of them)."[27:1]The genealogy of the gods follows, and after a gap in the
story, Tiamat, or Tiamtu, is represented as preparing for battle,
"She who created everything . . . produced giant serpents." She
chose one of the gods, Kingu, to be her husband and the general of
her forces, and delivered to him the tablets of fate.The second tablet shows the god An[vs]ar, angered at the
threatening attitude of Tiamat, and sending his son Anu to speak
soothingly to her and calm her rage. But first Anu and then another
god turned back baffled, and finally Merodach, the son of Ea, was
asked to become the champion of the gods. Merodach gladly
consented, but made good terms for himself. The gods were to assist
him in every possible way by entrusting all their powers to him,
and were to acknowledge him as first and chief of all. The gods in
their extremity were nothing loth. They feasted Merodach and, when
swollen with wine, endued him with all magical powers, and hailed
him--"Merodach, thou art he who is our avenger, (Over) the whole
universe have we given thee the kingdom."[28:1]At first the sight of his terrible enemy caused even Merodach
to falter, but plucking up courage he advanced to meet her, caught
her in his net, and, forcing an evil wind into her open
mouth--"He made the evil wind enter so that she could not close her
lips. The violence of the winds tortured her stomach, and her heart
was prostrated and her mouth was twisted. He swung the club, he
shattered her stomach; he cut out her entrails; he over-mastered
(her) heart; he bound her and ended her life. He threw down her
corpse; he stood upon it."[28:2]The battle over and the enemy slain, Merodach considered how
to dispose of the corpse."He strengthens his mind, he forms a clever plan, And he
stripped her of her skin like a fish, according to his
plan."[28:3]Of one half of the corpse of Tiamat he formed the earth, and
of the other half, the heavens. He then proceded to furnish the
heavens and the earth with their respective equipments; the details
of this work occupying apparently the fifth, sixth, and seventh
tablets of the series.Under ordinary circumstances such a legend as the foregoing
would not have attracted much attention. It is as barbarous and
unintelligent as any myth of Zulu or Fijian. Strictly speaking, it
is not a Creation myth at all. Tiamat and her serpent-brood and the
gods are all existent before Merodach commences his work, and all
that the god effects is a reconstruction of the world. The method
of this reconstruction possesses no features superior to those of
the Creation myths of other barbarous nations. Our own Scandinavian
ancestors had a similar one, the setting of which was certainly not
inferior to the grotesque battle of Merodach with Tiamat. The prose
Edda tells us that the first man, Bur, was the father of Bör, who
was in turn the father of Odin and his two brothers Vili and Ve.
These sons of Bör slew Ymir, the old frost giant."They dragged the body of Ymir into the middle of
Ginnungagap, and of it formed the earth. From Ymir's blood they
made the sea and waters; from his flesh, the land; from his bones,
the mountains; and his teeth and jaws, together with some bits of
broken bones, served them to make the stones and
pebbles."It will be seen that there is a remarkable likeness between
the Babylonian and Scandinavian myths in the central and essential
feature of each, viz. the way in which the world is supposed to
have been built up by the gods from the fragments of the anatomy of
a huge primæval monster. Yet it is not urged that there is any
direct genetic connection between the two; that the Babylonians
either taught their legend to the Scandinavians or learnt it from
them.Under ordinary circumstances it would hardly have occurred to
any one to try to derive the monotheistic narrative of Gen. i. from
either of these pagan myths, crowded as they are with uncouth and
barbarous details. But it happened that Mr. George Smith, who
brought to light the Assyrian Creation tablets, brought also to
light a Babylonian account of the Flood, which had a large number
of features in common with the narrative of Gen. vi.-ix. The actual
resemblance between the two Deluge narratives has caused a
resemblance to be imagined between the two Creation narratives. It
has been well brought out in some of the later comments of
Assyriologists that, so far from there being any resemblance in the
Babylonian legend to the narrative in Genesis, the two accounts
differin toto. Mr. T. G.
Pinches, for example, points out that in the Babylonian account
there is--"No direct statement of the creation of the heavens and the
earth;"No systematic division of the things created into groups and
classes, such as is found in Genesis;"No reference to the Days of Creation;"No appearance of the Deity as the first and only cause of
the existence of things."[30:1]Indeed, in the Babylonian account, "the heavens and the earth
are represented as existing, though in a chaotic form, from the
first."Yet on this purely imaginary resemblance between the Biblical
and Babylonian Creation narratives the legend has been founded
"that the introductory chapters of the Book of Genesis present to
us the Hebrew version of a mythology common to many of the Semitic
peoples." And the legend has been yet further developed, until
writers of the standing of Prof. Friedrich Delitzsch have claimed
that the Genesis narrative wasborrowedfrom the Babylonian, though
"the priestly scholar who composed Genesis, chapter i. endeavoured
of course to remove all possible mythological features of this
Creation story."[31:1]If the Hebrew priest did borrow from the Babylonian myth,
what was it that he borrowed? Not the existence of sea and land, of
sun and moon, of plants and animals, of birds and beasts and
fishes. For surely the Hebrew may be credited with knowing this
much of himself, without any need for a transportation to Babylon
to learn it. "In writing an account of the Creation, statements as
to what are the things created must of necessity be
inserted,"[31:2] whenever, wherever, and by whomsoever that account
is written.What else, then, is there common to the two accounts?Tiamatis the name given to the
Babylonian mother of the universe, the dragon of the deep; and in
Genesis it is written that "darkness was upon the face of
thedeep(teh[=o]m)."Here, and here only, is a point of possible connection; but
if it be evidence of a connection, what kind of a connection does
it imply? It implies that the Babylonian based his barbarous myth
upon the Hebrew narrative. There is no other possible way of
interpreting the connection,--if connection there be.The Hebrew word would seem to mean, etymologically, "surges," "storm-tossed waters,"--"Deep calleth
unto deep at the noise of Thy waterspouts." Our word "deep" is apt to give us the idea of
stillness--we have the proverb, "Still waters run deep,"--whereas
in some instancesteh[=o]mis
used in Scripture of waters which were certainly shallow, as, for
instance, those passed through by Israel at the Red
Sea:--"Pharaoh's chariots and his host hath He cast into the sea:
his chosen captains also are drowned in the Red Sea. Thedepthshave covered them."In other passages the words used in our Authorized Version,
"deep" or "depths," give the correct
signification.But deep waters, or waters in commotion, are in either case
natural objects. We get the wordteh[=o]mused continually in Scripture
in a perfectly matter-of-fact way, where there is no possibility of
personification or myth being intended. Tiamat, on the contrary,
the Babylonian dragon of the waters, is a mythological
personification. Now the natural object must come first. It never
yet has been the case that a nation has gained its knowledge of a
perfectly common natural object by de-mythologizing one of the
mythological personifications of another nation. The Israelites did
not learn aboutteh[=o]m, the
surging water of the Red Sea, that rolled over the Egyptians in
their sight, from any Babylonian fable of a dragon of the waters,
read by their descendants hundreds of years later.Yet further, the Babylonian account of Creation is
comparatively late; the Hebrew account, as certainly, comparatively
early. It is not merely that the actual cuneiform tablets are of
date about 700 B.C., coming as they do from the Kouyunjik mound,
the ruins of the palace of Sennacherib and Assurbanipal, built
about that date. The poem itself, as Prof. Sayce has pointed out,
indicates, by the peculiar pre-eminence given in it to Merodach,
that it is of late composition. It was late in the history of
Babylon that Merodach was adopted as the supreme deity. The
astronomical references in the poem are more conclusive still, for,
as will be shown later on, they point to a development of astronomy
that cannot be dated earlier than 700 B.C.On the other hand, the first chapter of Genesis was composed
very early. The references to the heavenly bodies in verse 16 bear
the marks of the most primitive condition possible of astronomy.
The heavenly bodies are simply the greater light, the lesser light,
and the stars--the last being introduced quite parenthetically. It
is the simplest reference to the heavenly bodies that is made in
Scripture, or that, indeed, could be made.There may well have been Babylonians who held higher
conceptions of God and nature than those given in the Tiamat myth.
It is certain that very many Hebrews fell short of the teaching
conveyed in the first chapter of Genesis. But the fact remains that
the one nation preserved the Tiamat myth, the other the narrative
of Genesis, and each counted its own Creation story sacred. We can
only rightly judge the two nations by what they valued. Thus
judged, the Hebrew nation stands as high above the Babylonian in
intelligence, as well as in faith, as the first chapter of Genesis
is above the Tiamat myth.FOOTNOTES:[26:1]Records of the Past, vol. i. p. 124.[27:1]The Old Testament in the Light of the
Historical Records of Assyria and Babylonia, by
T. G. Pinches, p. 16.[28:1]The Old Testament in the Light of the
Historical Records of Assyria and Babylonia, by
T. G. Pinches, p. 16.[28:2]Records of the Past, vol. i. p. 140.[28:3]Ibid.p.
142.[30:1]The Old Testament in the Light of the
Historical Records of Assyria and Babylonia, by
T. G. Pinches, p. 49.[31:1]Babel and Bible,
Johns' translation, pp. 36 and 37.[31:2]The Old Testament in the Light of the
Historical Records of Assyria and Babylonia, by
T. G. Pinches, p. 48.
CHAPTER IV
THE FIRMAMENTThe sixth verse of the first chapter of Genesis presents a
difficulty as to the precise meaning of the principal word, viz.
that translatedfirmament."And God said, Let there be ar[=a]qi[=a]`in the midst of the
waters, and let it divide the waters from the waters. And God made
ther[=a]qi[=a]`, and divided
the waters which were under ther[=a]qi[=a]`from the waters which were
above ther[=a]qi[=a]`: and it
was so. And God called ther[=a]qi[=a]`
Shamayim. And the evening and the morning were
the second day."It is, of course, perfectly clear that by the wordr[=a]qi[=a]`in the preceding passage
it is the atmosphere that is alluded to. But later on in the
chapter the word is used in a slightly different connection. "God
said, Let there be lights in the firmament of heaven."As we look upward from the earth, we look through a twofold
medium. Near the earth we have our atmosphere; above that there is
inter-stellar space, void of anything, so far as we know, except
the Ether. We are not able to detect any line of demarcation where
our atmosphere ends, and the outer void begins. Both therefore are
equally spoken of as "the firmament"; and yet there is a difference
between the two. The lower supports the clouds; in the upper are
set the two great lights and the stars. The upper, therefore, is
emphaticallyreqi[=a]` hasshamayim, "the firmament of heaven," of the "uplifted." It is "in the
face of"--that is, "before," or "under the eyes of,"
"beneath,"--this higher expanse that the fowls of the air fly to
and fro.The firmament, then, is that which Tennyson sings of as "the
central blue," the seeming vault of the sky, which we can consider
as at any height above us that we please. The clouds are above it
in one sense; yet in another, sun, moon and stars, which are
clearly far higher than the clouds, are set in it.There is no question therefore as to what is referred to by
the word "firmament"; but there is a question as to the
etymological meaning of the word, and associated with that, a
question as to how the Hebrews themselves conceived of the
celestial vault.The wordr[=a]qi[=a]`,
translated "firmament," properly signifies "an expanse," or
"extension," something stretched or beaten out. The verb from which
this noun is derived is often used in Scripture, both as referring
to the heavens and in other connections. Thus in Job xxxvii. 18,
the question is asked, "Canst thou with Himspread
outthe sky, which is strong as a molten mirror?"
Eleazar, the priest, after the rebellion of Korah, Dathan and
Abiram took the brazen censers of the rebels, and they were
"made broadplates for a
covering of the altar." The goldsmith described by Isaiah as making
an idol, "spreadeth it overwith gold"; whilst Jeremiah says, "silverspreadinto plates is brought from
Tarshish." Again, in Psalm cxxxvi., in the account of creation we
have the same word used with reference to the earth, "To him
thatstretched outthe earth
above the waters." In this and in many other passages the idea of
extension is clearly that which the word is intended to convey. But
the Seventy, in making the Greek Version of the Old Testament, were
naturally influenced by the views of astronomical science then held
in Alexandria, the centre of Greek astronomy. Here, and at this
time, the doctrine of the crystalline spheres--a misunderstanding
of the mathematical researches of Eudoxus and others--held
currency. These spheres were supposed to be a succession of
perfectly transparent and invisible solid shells, in which the sun,
moon, and planets were severally placed. The Seventy no doubt
considered that in renderingr[=a]qi[=a]`, bystere[=o]ma, i. e. firmament, thus
conveying the idea of a solid structure, they were speaking the
last word of up-to-date science.There should be no reluctance in ascribing to the Hebrews an
erroneous scientific conception if there is any evidence that they
held it. We cannot too clearly realize that the writers of the
Scriptures were not supernaturally inspired to give correct
technical scientific descriptions; and supposing they had been so
inspired, we must bear in mind that we should often consider those
descriptions wrong just in proportion to their correctness, for the
very sufficient reason that not even our own science of to-day has
yet reached finality in all things.There should be no reluctance in ascribing to the Hebrews an
erroneous scientific conception if there is any evidence that they
held it. In this case, there is no such evidence; indeed, there is
strong evidence to the contrary.The Hebrew wordr[=a]qi[=a]`, as already shown, really signifies "extension," just as the
word for heaven,shamayimmeans
the "uplifted." In these two words, therefore, significant
respectively of a surface and of height, there is a recognition of
the "three dimensions,"--in other words, of Space.When we wish to refer to super-terrestrial space, we have two
expressions in modern English by which to describe it: we can speak
of "the vault of heaven," or of "the canopy of heaven." "The vault
of heaven" is most used, it has indeed been recently adopted as the
title of a scientific work by a well-known astronomer. But the
wordvaultcertainly gives the
suggestion of a solid structure; whilst the wordcanopycalls up the idea of a slighter
covering, probably of some textile fabric.