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I have found so much gossip on the Net and no Biblical verses that clearly support the 'flat earth' notion.

I know Job spoke of the 'circle of the Earth' and other very interesting aspects of the cosmos. I was hoping better evidence could be provided. One person, of many actually, said the 'circle of the Earth' is referring to a flat earth. Silly of course, as you could more easily prove that any 3D object can look flat when viewed from only one location.

For this question, I am beginning with the assumption that the below-listed texts are related and address this issue: Genesis 1, Psalm 74.12-17, Psalm 104, Job 26.5-14, Job 37, Job 38, Proverbs 3.19-20, and Proverbs 8.22-36. I am looking for someone to address these as a whole, addressing the historical, linguistic, and literary context in which they were written as pertinent to the question.

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4 Answers 4

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The question is really an issue of what kind of cosmology the authors of the various biblical books assume in the course of their writing. When we read the Hebrew scriptures, the few books that have anything to say on the subject never explicitly say 'the earth is flat'. But if we can determine the overall shape of the cosmos as the different writers describe it, we'll be able to know if a 'flat earth' is an accurate label for what the ancient biblical authors believed.

The main biblical texts that describe the cosmos as a whole are Genesis 1, Psalm 74.12-17, Psalm 104, Job 26.5-14, Job 37, Job 38, Proverbs 3.19-20, and Proverbs 8.22-36, along with a few pieces here and there where a particular cosmology is assumed by the writer.


The primeval waters

Ancient Israelite cosmology begins with a mess of waters, representing the pre-creation chaos. The world is created inside of this chaotic sea. These primeval waters are found in:

  • Genesis 1.2,6-7,9,etc., as 'the deep' and 'the waters', so that the earth was created between 'the waters above' and 'the waters below' when God spoke it so
  • Psalm 74.13, as 'the sea' and 'the waters' (and metaphorically as 'the sea monsters' and 'leviathan'), which God 'divided', 'broke', and 'crushed' as the first act of creation
  • Psalm 104.3,6-9, as 'the waters' and 'the deep', which uncovered the earth when God spoke it so
  • Job 26.8,12, as 'the waters' and 'the sea' (and metaphorically as 'Rahab' the sea 'serpent'), which God 'binds up', 'stilled', 'shattered', and 'pierced'
  • Job 38.8-11, as 'the sea' with its 'proud waves', which God 'prescribed limits' so that it would 'come no farther' over the earth
  • Proverbs 3.19-20, as 'the deep', which God 'broke open' when he 'founded the earth'
  • Proverbs 8.27-29, as 'the deep' and 'the sea', upon which God 'drew a circle' (more below on this 'circle'), and was 'assigned a limit' when God spoke it so

The firmament

Within the primeval waters, God creates a solid dome called (in English) 'the firmament'. This crystalline structure is sometimes compared to sapphire, explaining the blue color of the sky. While some English translations use an ambiguous word like 'expanse' or 'canopy' to make the concept more friendly to modern science, which presents a comparatively 'soft' atmosphere around the earth, the biblical authors consistently portray this firmament as solid. This firmament is found in:

  • Genesis 1.6-8, where it is given the name 'Heaven', where its express purpose is to 'separate the waters [above] from the waters [below]'; the Hebrew word used is raqiya, drawn from a verb regularly used to describe striking or pounding on an object; the sense is of an object that has been 'pounded' into its present shape
  • Job 37.18, where it is called 'the sky', and is 'spread out' (the verb root of raqiya), and is described as 'hard as a molten mirror'
  • Proverbs 8.28, where God 'made firm the sky above'

Numerous passages in the bible describe heaven as a scroll or tent that is 'stretched', or may 'collapse'. The sun, moon, and stars were placed in/on the firmament, and moved upon its surface (e.g. Genesis 1.14-19; Joshua 10.13; Daniel 12.3). The firmament rested upon the mountains/pillars (e.g. Job 26.11), and heaven (as in, God's domain) was conceptualized as resting just above the firmament:

  • Exodus 24.1-2,9-11 shows us Moses and the elders of Israel invited by God to the top of Mount Sinai, whereupon 'they saw the God of Israel'; the narrator describes the firmament as 'a pavement of sapphire stone, like the very clearness of heaven'
  • Ezekiel 1.22-28 and 10.1 has the prophet see a vision of the glory of God in heaven, where he describes the firmament as 'shining like a dreadful crystal', above which was 'the likeness of a throne, in appearance like sapphire'
  • (Revelation 4.6 draws on Ezekiel, describing the firmament as 'a sea of glass, like crystal')

Weather functions are executed through openings that are fixed upon the firmament:

  • Genesis 7.11, 8.2, Second Kings 7.2,19, Isaiah 24.18, and Malachi 3.10 describe heaven / the firmament as having 'windows' through which 'the waters above' fall as rain, and most significantly as a world-ending flood
  • Job 37.6,9-12,15-17 describes the weather functions as executed upon God's command, while Job 38.22,35,37 specifies that snow, wind, and rain are found in heavenly 'storehouses' and 'waterskins', with Job 38.28-30 showing their ultimate origin is 'the deep' found above heaven / the firmament

The earth

The earth is then created inside of the primeval waters, underneath the protection of the firmament.

  • Genesis 1.9-10 has 'dry land' created upon 'the waters under the heavens'
  • Psalm 104.5, where God sets 'the earth' on its 'foundations' (i.e. 'pillars', as in Psalm 75.3) and removes the covering of the deep, so that 'the mountains rose' and 'the valleys sank down'
  • Job 26.7,10, where God 'suspends the earth over nothing' and 'inscribed a circle on the face of the waters'
  • Job 38.4, where God 'laid the foundation of the earth'
  • Proverbs 3.19-20, where God 'founded the earth'
  • Proverbs 8.27, where God 'drew a circle on the face of the deep'

Two verses above describe a 'circle' being 'drawn' on the surface of the deep (Job 26.10, Proverbs 8.27). The only other time this specific Hebrew word 'circle' is used outside of these two verses is in Isaiah 40.22, where it describes 'the circle of the earth'. However, a closely related word is used in Isaiah 44.13, where it is often translated as 'compass'. The word 'circle' in the three verses does not describe a sphere, it describes a round, disc-like shape.


Conclusion

To recap the above: the earth was a disc-like mass that rested on 'the water below', and was contained underneath a crystalline dome, which in turn held back 'the waters above'. While none of the biblical texts describe the act of creation in exactly the same way or shape, they are in general agreement and complement each other quite well. The final picture we are left with is something similar to this:1

Ancient Israelite cosmology

This is remarkably similar to the cosmology of other Ancient Near Eastern cultures contemporary to the biblical authors. For a deeper exploration of the similarities between ancient Israelite cosmology and the cosmology of neighboring cultures, I highly recommend the book The Lost World of Genesis One by John H. Walton.

While we should definitely take the time to lend some nuance to the phrase, the Hebrew scriptures certainly describe a 'flat earth'.


Footnotes

1 I am the creator of this illustration. Subject to CC BY-NC.

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  • 1
    Ok, guideline is minimize 'thanks'... but THANKS. Really love Genesis 1.6-8 "pounding" into shape, as God simplifies intensely complex creation topics throughout the Bible by ease of understanding by how he designed us as well; to design, shape and build. There are a number of verses describing God ("work" and "working" -- ergon er'-gon -- to labor, toil, effort, act). I particularly like Job 33:6; Behold, I am according to thy wish in God's stead: I also am formed out of the clay.
    – user3380
    Jan 27, 2014 at 20:13
  • Commentary only: Clearly God created the Earth ultimately as round, meaning a 3D ball. I am not sure why He did not more clearly inspire the Bible writers to state it, though I believe His reasoning is He values faith more so than gold (1 Peter 1:7), and He tests faith throughout the Bible (faith is listed 230 times). Finally, He requires faith before He will reveal Himself to a human being. Hebrews 11:6 And without faith it is impossible to be well-pleasing unto him; for he that cometh to God must believe that he is, and that he is a rewarder of them that seek after him.
    – user3380
    Jan 27, 2014 at 20:49
  • On Job 26:7 -- Strong's Concordance states: "b@liymah bel-ee-mah' -- nothing whatever:--nothing". Contrast with translation of the "north" as "the empty place" is "to lie waste; a desolation (of surface), i.e. desert; figuratively, a worthless thing; adverbially, in vain:--confusion, empty place, without form, nothing, (thing of) nought, vain, vanity, waste, wilderness", I believe the North and the Earth are not similar. Two different words are used, with the Earth hanging on 'nothing, nothing whatsoever'. In my opinion, the north is a wilderness/desert of ice, and the Earth 'hangs' in space.
    – user3380
    Jan 27, 2014 at 21:06
  • I'll make an edit to my answer, to account for your concern over 'north' in Job 26.7.
    – user2910
    Jan 28, 2014 at 23:10
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    Have you seriously considered that Isaiah 40:22 is poetic in nature for example He (God) SITS... on the circle of the earth. Here and there in Isaiah 40 there is poetic speech mixed with literal speech for example verse 6 and 7 says all flesh is grass, the people is grass. The whole chapter is filled with poetic devices I cannot even think how you interpret circle to be literal. Why cant you think of it as God saying the world is round in poetic way? Dont be literal on a poetic phrase you will lose the message.
    – Tony Jays
    Mar 25, 2014 at 20:26
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Short Answer

No, the Bible does not teach that the earth is flat.


Authorial Intent

If we want to understand what the Bible teaches, we have to start by asking what the authors were trying to communicate to their original intended audiences. We can not start with our own questions and try to "see what the Bible says about it". This is something you learn in introductory-level Hermeneutics classes. So the first question we need to ask when interpreting each of these passages is: Was the author trying to advance a particular cosmology? And the answer will almost always be: No.

That is not to say that Scripture is silent on cosmology or the origin of the earth or universe, but even where it does speak to these issues, cosmology was not the the primary intent behind the passage. For instance, Genesis 1:2ff and Exodus 20:11 tell us that God "made" the heavens, the earth, the seas, and everything in them in 6 days, but notice that we are only told about a select few details which pertained directly to the preparation of the place where man would interact with God -- and even then it is all from the perspective of an observer standing on earth (e.g. there were "evenings and mornings".)

The authors of Scripture were concerned first and foremost with man's relationship with God. This is why there is almost nothing in the Bible about what God was doing before Creation, the lives & histories of angels & demons, the existence of other life, parallel universes, the makeup of the atom,... the Bible is almost exclusively about man's relationship with God.

Bias and Agenda

It is important in Bible interpretation to know your bias. For example, modern interpreters will typically approach this particular topic from one of two angles. They will either come at it from the perspective that the ancient writers were primitive, and their ignorance has now been exposed through our recent advances in science, or they will take all Scripture to be the inspired word of God and attempt to show how scientifically progressive the ancient documents were. The first group will often draw pictures (like the one Mark Edward provided in his answer) and try to show how the biblical cosmology corresponds to other primitive cosmologies. The second group will pull verses out of context to show how the biblical authors were way ahead of their time scientifically. (Example.) Though both of these approaches can be very compelling, both approaches are wrong. Our goal should be exegesis, not the advancement of our preconceived notions.

In both cases the error is usually quite clear once you examine the passages they use more carefully and ask the simple question: "Is that really what the author was trying to say?" So let's get to it, and examine the passages that lead Mark Edward and others to claim that the Bible teaches a flat earth.

Genesis 1

Genesis 1 is the bedrock of biblical cosmology and origins. Virtually every other passage in Scripture on the topic is build and based on this chapter. If you misunderstand this chapter, you will almost certainly misunderstand every other passage on the subject.

1:1) The chapter opens up with a brief but powerful theological statement. In the beginning, God created the heavens and the earth. "The heavens and the earth" is a literary device known as a merism. It means "everything". The author wants the reader to know that everything was made by God -- that's where it came from. Right there you have a sharp deviation from virtually every other ancient cosmology. We call it "creation ex nihilo" (creation out of nothing.)

From 1:1 to 1:2) Scholars are divided on the relationship between 1:1 and 1:2ff.

  • Some take 1:1 as chronologically prior to 1:2. In this view, 1:1 describes "creation ex nihlo" -- and perhaps the entire process of the universe's evolutionary development, while 1:2ff describes a subsequent forming / preparing of the creation for man. The strongest exegetical support for this view is the use of a different verb in 1:1 (create) than he regularly uses in 1:2ff (made).1 This is a respectable view, and has recently been championed by Hugh Ross and John Sailhamer, among others.

1) Note that the creation of man is an exception to this pattern, leading many to conclude that this was a special creation event, unlike the origin of the animals and plants.

  • Others take 1:1 as a title and introductory overview to 1:2ff. In this view 1:1 is a brief statement, and in 1:2 the author moves in for a more detailed look. (1:1 also adds information, as noted above.) This is also a respectable view. I lean toward this interpretation based on the "other bookend" in 2:1-4 and the merism in Ex 20:11.

1:2) Either way, we get our first detailed look at ancient cosmology in 1:2. As I noted in another answer, what we see in 1:2 is not empty nothingness, but land, sea, and what we might think of as air. (By "air" I simply mean that the sea had a surface which could be hovered above.) This is in sharp contrast with virtually every other ancient cosmology, including Mark Edward's artwork. The author doesn't specify that the earth was a "sphere" or "flat" -- that wasn't his point. His point was that the earth was unihabitable at first. The land was under the water and there was no light. But the Spirit was hovering over the surface of the water, indicating something special was about to happen.

1:6-8) After making light, God splits the waters so that we now have waters "above" and waters "below", with an expanse called "heaven" in between them. This refutes Mark Edward's notion that the expanse was a solid crystal. (Also, in verse 20 he says that this "expanse" is where the birds fly. Did Moses think the birds flew in solid crystal above the stars? Probably not!) So now we have upper waters, lower waters and sky in between.

1:9-10) Here we see God bring the land up for air and move the waters aside, so now we have dry land and seas.

1:14-18) This is interesting, because now God "makes" (however you take that word) the sun, moon, and stars in the sky. There are two ways to take this.

  • Some would say that since the stars were in the sky, they were beneath the "waters above". So in this view we have land & sea, sky above the land & sea -- with stars in it, and then waters above the starry sky. It is a rare for an exegete to take this position, but it is exegetically possible.

  • Another more common interpretation is that the "waters above" were meant to indicate the clouds, which are not a solid mass of water as Mark Edward assumed. From a human perspective they are "above", and there is sky between us and them. So in this view you have land & sea, sky above the land & sea -- including outer space, and "waters above" which are the clouds. I lean toward this interpretation; I think this is what Moses meant. I don't think Moses was trying to teach his readers that the sun & moon were under the clouds. Even a primitive man could look up and see that the clouds often stood between the observer and the sun, moon, and stars.

The remainder of the chapter (through 2:4 I believe) continues to show how God prepared a place for man to dwell with Him, and show that He set man over His entire creation. There's a lot of theology in this chapter, but we've covered the cosmological clues pretty well, showing that Mark Edward's interpretation is untenable, and Genesis does not match other ancient cosmologies at all. On the other hand, it doesn't gel well with the popular notions of most modern scientists either.

Psalm 74:12-17

Mark brought up this passage as evidence that the author held to primitive cosmologies, but this passage is not talking about cosmology -- or even creation.

. . . God is my king from of old, Who works deeds of deliverance . . .

. . . You divided the sea by Your strength . . .

The most natural way of taking this would be as a reference to the Exodus, not to the Creation Week. I won't comment on the entire passage, but when the Psalmist speaks of God crushing the heads of sea monsters and giving Leviathan as food for those in the wilderness, we can't just jump to the conclusion that this is about God creating the world by conquering other primordial gods as Mark Eward suggested. For further study, pick up a good commentary on the passage and seek to understand the author's intent.

Psalm 104

Mark Edward suggests that this poetic song teaches us that the earth is on foundations. First, consider some of the language used in this poetic song.

He makes the clouds His chariot;
He walks upon the wings of the wind;

The earth is satisfied with the fruit of His works.

The sun knows the place of its setting.

You open Your hand, they are satisfied with good.
You hide Your face, they are dismayed;

I don't know anybody who would take this to mean that God has a hand and a face, the sun has a brain, God's activities cause apples & oranges to pop out all over the place, the wind has wings, and God likes to ride in a chariot made of water vapors. As any good hermeneutics book will tell you, you need to understand the kind of writing you are reading before you begin interpretation; you can't just take a verse out of a poetic song, take it literally, and then use it to make the Bible look ridiculous.

The author's intent was to sing poetic songs about the greatness of God's deeds. Yes, it suggests that during Creation God commanded the waters to recede and the mountains to rise. The author got that idea, of course, from Genesis 1. This isn't a standard, primitive cosmology; it's a Genesis 1 cosmology.

Proverbs 3:19-20, 8:22-36

The same thing can be said here. In the first passage, the author simply says "the deeps were broken up"; this is just basic Genesis 1 stuff, which I covered earlier. Mark Edward claimed that since this passage says the earth was "founded" this must mean that it was sitting on a physical foundation. The obvious problem with that approach to interpretation is that words have a semantic range, and the context is our only way of zeroing in on the author's usage of a term. The word clearly means "founded" here, not "on a physical foundation in primeval waters". (Note also that this statement occurs in a passage which calls wisdom a woman. The author clearly did not mean that to be taken literally, and he didn't mean for "foundation" to be taken as brick and mortar either.) The intent here was not to teach a flat earth; it was to magnify God for His wisdom during Creation.

The second passage doesn't teach a flat earth either. Mark Edward cites this passage as support that the "firmament" of Genesis 1 was a solid object. Here's what it actually says:

“When He established the heavens, I was there,
When He inscribed a circle on the face of the deep,
When He made firm the skies above,
When the springs of the deep became fixed,
When He set for the sea its boundary
So that the water would not transgress His command,

The author is clearly speaking of God's wisdom in setting boundaries for various things. Mark Edwards, however, sees the word "firm" and interprets it to mean "a literal, solid, crystaline dome over the starry sky". Not only does his interpretation ignore the authorial intent, but it doesn't even make sense to think that Solomon would say such a thing. Does he mean to suggest that Solomon was unaware that birds fly in the sky? Or that Solomon never made it to verse 20 in his readings of Genesis 1? These proverbs do not teach a flat earth, nor do they imply a primitive cosmology. They speak of God's great wisdom during Creation.

Job 26:5-14

Job does not teach a flat earth or primitive cosmology either. Since Mark Edward leaned heavily on Job for his answer, I need to cover several things here.

  • First, speaking of Sheol as a place "down below" was as common in biblical times as it is today. This was not a statement about cosmology. Job 26:5-6 simply teach that God is aware even of what goes on in the realm of the dead.

  • In 26:7 Job expresses his awe and wonder that the stuff "above" is not sitting on anything and yet it does not fall. Likewise, the stuff "below" (earth, seas, etc.) is not suspended in some way by the things above, and yet somehow is maintained below them without falling. First, this directly refutes Mark Edward's claims about biblical cosmology. Clearly Job did not believe that heaven was resting on pillars. Second, Job wasn't making positive affirmations about cosmology; he was speaking of what was not the case.

  • In 26:8 Job expresses his awe about the clouds. 26:9 says the clouds cover the moon. Nothing strange here. Is 26:10 speaking of an "opening" in the primordial waters? Is it teaching a flat earth? No. Look at the text more closely. The circle is "on the surface of the waters" and and is "at the boundary of light and darkness". This is probably referring to the horizon or reflection of the sun on the ocean, as the NET Bible and others have captured well:

"He marks out the horizon on the surface of the waters as a boundary between light and darkness." --NET Bible

Mark Edward's takes it as an imaginary, circular division between light and darkness in the sky, but not even a primitive man would conclude that; simple observation of the sky would refute such a notion.

  • Mark claims that verse 11 teaches that heaven sits on pillars. Read the whole verse though:

“The pillars of heaven tremble
And are amazed at His rebuke.

The only way to conclude that these are literal "pillars" would be to also conclude that these literal "pillars" had personalities and could be amazed! Mark Edward's artwork has mountains holding up the sky. It is quite clear that Job was not thinking of mountains (or stone pillars) which physically support the sky. So what is Job saying? You could either take it poetically, or you could take the "pillars" in another sense as spiritual powers, but either way this verse is not helpful in reconstructing Job's cosmology; that's simply not what he was talking about. I'll stop there for now.

Conclusion

When we read Scripture we need to respect the authorial intent. We cannot allow ourselves to bring modern assumptions to the text as so many do today. Mark Edward did in his answer; he assumed that the authors were primitive and that they taught a rather standard primitive cosmology. As we have seen, that assumption is false. The biblical cosmology and story of origins is totally different from other ancient cosmologies.

The biblical cosmology -- and in particular its origin -- is really only outlined in Genesis 1 and those texts which reference Genesis 1. This unique depiction of cosmic origins was just as much at odds with primitive cosmological creation myths as it is with the notions of modern scientists. It is just as inappropriate to classify it as "primitive" as it is to classify it as "modern".

Beyond creation, the Bible's post-creation cosmology is not at all at odds with our modern observations. Scripture teaches that there is dry land, seas with land under them, "waters above" which likely are a reference to the clouds, and a sky in which birds fly and stars were placed. Job (among others) believed that the stuff "up there" was not physically connected to the stuff "down here" by pillars or ropes or anything of that sort, but rather that it was set there by God. The biblical authors were in awe of what God had made and were careful not to claim wisdom which was beyond them. Indeed, most of the passages in Job are intended to show man's ignorance about how things work, not to detail their operation.

In summary, with regards to the question of whether the Bible teaches that the earth is flat, the answer is very clearly: No.

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  • 2
    Better. You could have made the case for "modern textual/critical approach" which includes Mark's position, yet doesn't become a 'war of words' between you and Mark. I like this example that Paul Vargas posted in the Library, found here. Bart Erhman and Daniel Wallace are polar opposites, yet respect each other and have debated numerous occasions.
    – Tau
    Feb 5, 2015 at 20:32
  • 1
    @BruceAlderman Thank you for that unsubstantiated assertion... Regarding Jesus' statement about the smallest seed in the garden, please post a separate question. I can't chase tangents in the comments.
    – Jas 3.1
    Jun 28, 2015 at 3:03
  • 1
    @BruceAlderman Also it's pretty clear from the OP's explanation (never mind the site they posted on) that they were looking for contextually-sensitive exegesis. Out of curiosity, did you actually read the entire question and my entire response?
    – Jas 3.1
    Jun 28, 2015 at 3:07
  • This does answer the question, but it seems to spend more time refuting another answer than it does on answering. Mark E. is mentioned more times than anything in the OP's question. I would suggest it's okay to mention other views and even a specific answer, but refuting other views should be done in targeting the general view not one specific holder of that view, and at most one mention of another site user as an instance of that view would probably suffice. The balance seems off in reading this—perhaps sections could be edited to focus on answering the question and reduce the polemic tone.
    – Caleb
    Oct 14, 2017 at 9:22
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People have a tendency to read scripture with their own special colored glasses. They have an image set, or a belief system in place, and the scriptures are filtered through those biases.

There is a method for reading scripture that many people are not accustomed to, or are not taught. The literary devices in the scriptures tell us when God is speaking poetically, so that we can know when His word is being used figuratively and symbolically.

The little words - as, like, but, for, etc. - the adverbs, prepositions, and conjunctions are clues. They are usually found in poetic couplets, and indicate similes and metaphors, as well as parallel synonyms or antonyms.

For instance in Psa. 12:6,

"The words of the Lord are pure words: as silver tried in a furnace of earth, purified seven times." (KJV)

The words of the Lord are compared to the purest silver, purified seven times. The indicator is the word "as". Silver is used as a metaphor for the purity of God's word, and is therefore poetic symbolism.

Psa. 103:15,

"As for man, his days are as grass: as a flower of the field, so he flourisheth." (KJV)

Again, the poetic use of the metaphor of grass to the days of man - the life of man - is employed figuratively and is not literal.

Psa. 119:19,

"Thou puttest away all the wicked of the earth like dross: therefore I love thy testimonies." (KJV)

Another metaphorical use, comparing the wicked people to dross. It prepares us for its use again in Ezek. 22:18-19:

"18 Son of man, the house of Israel is to me become dross: all they are brass, and tin, and iron, and lead, in the midst of the furnace; they are even the dross of silver.

19 Therefore thus saith the Lord God; Because ye are all become dross, behold, therefore I will gather you into the midst of Jerusalem."

20 As they gather silver, and brass, and iron, and lead, and tin, into the midst of the furnace, to blow the fire upon it, to melt it; so will I gather you in mine anger and in my fury, and I will leave you there, and melt you."

These comparisons and metaphors are the definitions we need to be able to decode the scriptures, as once God uses it He doesn't change it. And, if we do not see these parallels, metaphors, synonyms, antonyms, etc. then the scripture is very probably literal.

So when we see the verse at Isa. 40:22 there are some things to note.

"It is he that sitteth upon the circle of the earth, and the inhabitants thereof are as grasshoppers; that stretcheth out the heavens as a curtain, and spreadeth them out as a tent to dwell in:" (KJV)

There are comparisons and metaphors in this verse: inhabitants of the earth are like grasshopper; the heavens are like a curtain spread out like a tent. But, there is not a comparison or metaphor in the first half. The first part of this verse does not compare the earth to anything else. It is instead a description of the earth in the shape of a circle - a two dimensional geometric shape... which having only two dimensions does not have volume.

That would appear to indicate a plane, or flat shape of the earth.

Job 38:4 appears very literal.

"Where wast thou when I laid the foundations of the earth? declare, if thou hast understanding." (KJV)

As God was calling Job out, He wasn't fooling around or being poetical. He said that He laid the foundations of the earth, and this verse is not poetic or figurative. This verse is literal.

In Prov. chap. 8 during the description of Christ's presence at the creation we read some very literal statements:

"25 Before the mountains were settled, before the hills was I brought forth:

26 While as yet he had not made the earth, nor the fields, nor the highest part of the dust of the world.

27 When he prepared the heavens, I was there: when he set a compass upon the face of the depth:

28 When he established the clouds above: when he strengthened the fountains of the deep:

29 When he gave to the sea his decree, that the waters should not pass his commandment: when he appointed the foundations of the earth:

30 Then I was by him, as one brought up with him: and I was daily his delight, rejoicing always before him;

31 Rejoicing in the habitable part of his earth; and my delights were with the sons of men." (*KJV)

These are literal statements of fact; they are not presented as metaphors or parallel comparisons.

Acts 17:26,

"And hath made of one blood all nations of men for to dwell on all the face of the earth, and hath determined the times before appointed, and the bounds of their habitation;" (KJV)

We are bounded in a very safe environment that our Creator made especially for us. The bounds of our habitation are the firmament above, and the waters below. When He says that the He "compassed the waters with bounds" (Job 26:10), or "layeth the beams of His chambers in the waters" (Psa. 104:3), or that "the world also is stablished that it cannot be moved" (Psa. 93:1) they are very straightforward and literal statements.

One more to look at is Job 37:18,

"Hast thou with him spread out the sky, which is strong, and as a molten looking glass?" (KJV)

The first part of the verse tells us that God spread out the sky. The second part describes the sky ("which" refers to the sky) with the metaphor indicated by the word "as". The metaphor of the molten looking glass describes the nature and character of the sky. A molten looking glass is hard, and not penetrable. This verse alone should give the ball earth theorists much pause.

The stars are lights in the sky (Gen. 1:14-18) for light upon the earth. Light travels through waves, just like radio signals travel through waves. Real science tells us that the inverse square law bounds the travel of waves only so far. The stars cannot be lights for the earth if they are millions of miles away.

As God has appointed the bounds of our habitation (Acts 17:26) and as we have many descriptions of that habitation, and many statements of His creative actions, we should be able to fully rely upon His word to know that we are not getting out of here short of death!

There are many other metaphors indicated in the scriptures that offer much study for the codes of the prophesies. I have explored a few at my site Shreddingtheveil. You might enjoy the posts "Heaven And Earth Have Passed Away", the eight parts of "The Signs of Revelation", and "Frequent Mistakes - Part V: Roses are Red, Violets are Blue..."

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  • Kudos to a well-written response! Job 38:14 is also an extremely helpful verse in making your point: 14_ The earth takes shape like clay under a seal; its hills stand out like the folds of a garment. 1
    – user43684
    Jun 11, 2021 at 21:37
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Does the Bible describe the “earth” as flat?

No the Bible does not describe the earth as "flat" on the contrary it is scientifically correct and says that God as " hangs the earth on nothing. "and that the earth is a circle.

Job 26:7,10 (NASB)

7 “He stretches out the north over empty space ,and hangs the earth on nothing." 10 “He has inscribed a circle on the surface of the waters ,at the boundary of light and darkness.

By his degree the waters are redistricted to their proper place, they do not flood the land nor to they fly off into space.

Job 38:8-11 (NASB)

8 “Or who enclosed the sea with doors When, bursting forth, it went out from the womb; 9 When I made a cloud its garment And thick darkness its swaddling band, 10 And I [a]placed boundaries on it And set a bolt and doors, 11 And I said, ‘Thus far you shall come, but no farther; And here shall your proud waves stop’?

God sits above the circle of the earth. From God's view point the earth is a circle like the moon is to us.

Isaiah 40:22 (NASB)

22 "It is He [God] who sits above the circle of the earth, And its inhabitants are like grasshoppers, Who stretches out the heavens like a curtain And spreads them out like a tent to dwell in."

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  • Mmmm...no. A circle and sphere are two distinctly different things. As God looks down (birds-eye view) upon his creation from the third heaven, the firmament encircles the flat land as a circle. This is a helpful verse: Job 38:14- The earth takes shape like clay under a seal; its hills stand out like the folds of a garment.
    – user43684
    Jun 11, 2021 at 21:28

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