🚨‼️The world mocked Bible believers for saying there are angels, devils, principalities, powers, rulers of darkness, and spiritual wickedness in high places. Then the same world turned around and said we need to start taking “non-human intelligence” seriously. That is not progress. That is rebranding. They laughed at the Bible’s vocabulary, then borrowed the Bible’s territory and gave it a government-approved name.
Do not miss what is happening. The devil does not need this generation to believe in demons anymore. He only needs them to believe in advanced beings, interdimensionals, higher intelligences, light beings, future humans, and galactic messengers without the King James Bible as the judge. Once you remove Scripture, every devil gets to introduce himself as a visitor.
The Bible believer is not shocked that something may be operating above mankind. We have been told that from Genesis to Revelation. The issue is not whether there are beings beyond man. The issue is whether they are holy or fallen, truthful or lying, obedient to God or working against Him. A glowing messenger in the sky is not trustworthy because it shines. Satan himself is transformed into an angel of light.
So no, I am not waiting for disclosure. I already have revelation. I am not waiting for the Pentagon to tell me what is in the heavens. I have a Book that told me who made the firmament, who rules the angels, who judged the old world, who confounded Babel, who spoiled principalities and powers, and who is coming again. The world is being prepared to meet a lie. The Bible believer is waiting to meet the Lord.
The Firmament Dome Exposed: The Biblical Case for the Vaulted Heaven Above the Earth
The doctrine of the firmament dome is not some side issue for curious people with too much time on their hands. It goes to the heart of how a man reads his Bible, how he understands creation, and whether he is going to let Scripture speak for itself or force it to bow to the opinions of modern men in white coats. Once you start reading Genesis, Job, Psalms, Isaiah, Ezekiel, and Revelation with plain eyes instead of with a head stuffed full of scientific tradition, you begin to notice something the saints were never supposed to miss. God did not describe a spinning ball flying through a godless vacuum. He described an earth established, founded, spread out over the waters, and enclosed beneath the heavens He stretched forth like a curtain and spread out like a tent to dwell in. That language is not accidental. It is not poetic filler. It is structural language. It is architectural language. It is the language of a Builder telling you what He built.
What has happened is simple. Men were taught from childhood to sneer at the text before they ever studied it. They were trained to assume that when the Bible says the earth is established, it cannot be moved, that must mean something other than what it says. When Job speaks of the heavens as strong, and as a molten looking glass, that must be symbolic. When Genesis says the firmament divided the waters above from the waters beneath, that must be some primitive misunderstanding. When the Psalms speak of the foundations of the earth, when Proverbs speaks of the circle on the face of the deep, when Ezekiel and John describe a crystal-like expanse before the throne, all of that must be reinterpreted until it means the opposite of the plain reading. That is not Bible study. That is damage control. That is men rescuing their traditions from the word of God.
The issue before us is not whether this subject makes the world comfortable. The issue is whether the Bible can be trusted to say what it means. If the Scriptures present a real firmament, a real heaven stretched out above the earth, a real separation of waters, a real order to creation, then the believer has no business apologizing for it. He ought to stand on it. He ought to preach it. He ought to search it out until every verse on the subject is brought into the light. And if that makes the educated world laugh, let them laugh. They laughed at Noah before the flood came too. The authority for this subject is not the university, not the observatory, not the media, not the expert class, and not the latest computer-generated fantasy. The authority is the King James Bible, and if a man will let that Book talk, the case for a real firmament dome above the earth is far stronger than most Christians have ever been told.
1. The Firmament Begins in Genesis, Not in Myth
The first place a Bible believer must go is Genesis 1, because that is where God lays down the structure of the created order. “And God said, Let there be a firmament in the midst of the waters, and let it divide the waters from the waters” (Genesis 1:6). There is nothing vague about that statement. The firmament is not the waters. The firmament is not merely atmosphere. The firmament is placed in the midst of the waters as a divider. One body of waters is beneath it and another body of waters is above it. That means the created world is not presented as an endless open expanse. It is presented as a structured realm with boundaries, divisions, and levels. The first thing the modern system must do is explain away that division, because once you admit the text means what it says, the whole model men have been fed begins to shake.
Then the passage goes further. “And God made the firmament, and divided the waters which were under the firmament from the waters which were above the firmament” (Genesis 1:7). Notice that God made it. It is not an illusion. It is not merely
🚨‼️There’s something I noticed yesterday that needs to be said plainly. The moment you stop posting soft encouragement and start using Scripture to correct error, the tone toward you changes. Refuting false teaching on the rapture or calling out compromise in so-called Christian platforms suddenly becomes “unloving.” But the same Bible that tells us to love one another also commands us to “prove all things; hold fast that which is good” (1 Thessalonians 5:21). Truth is not unloving just because it is uncomfortable.
Some have forgotten that we are not just spectators in a religious community. We are in a war. “Thou therefore endure hardness, as a good soldier of Jesus Christ” (2 Timothy 2:3). A soldier does not apologize for carrying a weapon, and the Word of God is called “the sword of the Spirit” (Ephesians 6:17). We are told plainly, “the weapons of our warfare are not carnal, but mighty through God” (2 Corinthians 10:4). That means sometimes the ministry is not soothing, it is confrontational, defensive, and corrective.
Grace does not cancel discernment. Paul said, “do not ye judge them that are within?” (1 Corinthians 5:12). That is not hatred, that is responsibility. The modern church has redefined grace into silence, but biblical grace teaches, warns, and rebukes. “Preach the word; be instant in season, out of season; reprove, rebuke, exhort with all longsuffering and doctrine” (2 Timothy 4:2). Notice the balance. Longsuffering is there, but so is rebuke. If you remove one, you are no longer following Scripture, you are following culture.
At the end of the day, I am not standing before followers, I am standing before God. And I will not say, “I softened the truth to keep people comfortable.” If that costs followers, so be it. If it means blocking those who only want to argue and not learn, so be it. We are living in a Laodicean age that loves a form of godliness without power, but I intend to stay with the Book. Truth will always offend those who don’t want it, but it will also strengthen those who do.
🚨‼️Dismissing an entire people group while misrepresenting Scripture is not truth, it’s confusion. The Bible already tells us exactly where Israel stands right now: “as concerning the gospel, they are enemies… but as touching the election, they are beloved for the fathers’ sakes” (Romans 11:28). That means two things at once, yes, many reject Christ today, but God is not finished with them, and no believer has the authority to write them off or turn that into hatred. At the same time, supporting Israel politically or blindly is not the gospel either; salvation is still only through Jesus Christ alone (John 14:6). So instead of emotional statements and sweeping accusations, stick with the Book, pray for the peace of Jerusalem (Psalm 122:6), preach the gospel to Jew and Gentile alike, and let God fulfill His promises exactly as He said He would.
Waters Above: The Forgotten Ocean in the Sky
Passage: Genesis 1:6-7
Introduction
One of the strangest things about modern Christianity is how quickly it will surrender plain Bible statements the minute a man in a lab coat, a government badge, or a telescope starts clearing his throat. You can hand some of these fellows Genesis 1, and they will nod their heads until the chapter begins to say something that embarrasses their schoolbook science. Then all at once, the words of God become “poetic,” “figurative,” “phenomenological,” or some other ten-dollar seminary word that means, “I do not believe what I just read, but I am too educated to say it that plainly.” Genesis 1:6-7 is one of those passages. God says, “Let there be a firmament in the midst of the waters, and let it divide the waters from the waters” (Genesis 1:6). Then He says He “divided the waters which were under the firmament from the waters which were above the firmament” (Genesis 1:7). That is not complicated. That is not mystical. That is not ancient superstition. That is revelation. There are waters below and waters above, and the firmament divides the two.
Now that doctrine used to be common enough for a child to grasp. A man reading his Bible would conclude that there is a real body of waters above the heavens. David confirms it in Psalm 148:4, “Praise him, ye heavens of heavens, and ye waters that be above the heavens.” But somewhere along the line, Christians decided they needed the approval of NASA, secular astronomy departments, and globe-chanting evangelicals more than they needed a clean conscience before God. So the waters above got edited out. They were turned into “water vapor,” or “ancient Near Eastern imagery,” or “symbolic chaos language,” or whatever other nonsense was needed to make Moses safe for the modern reader. In other words, the Bible had to be rewritten in the mind so the television would not be offended.
The truth is much simpler than the experts want it to be. There are literal waters above the firmament, and their existence wrecks the whole mythology of boundless outer space. If there are waters above the heavens, then the heavens are bounded. If the heavens are bounded, then they are not endless vacuum. If they are not endless vacuum, then the globe-space religion is a lie. That is why this doctrine matters. It is not a hobby subject for a handful of contrarians. It is a direct collision between biblical revelation and modern mythology. It is about whether the words of God will be allowed to mean what they say. And for the Bible believer, that issue is already settled.
1. The Text Says Waters Above, So That Is What It Means
The first rule of sound Bible study is that the words mean what they say unless the context plainly forces you elsewhere. Genesis 1:6 says, “And God said, Let there be a firmament in the midst of the waters, and let it divide the waters from the waters.” Then verse 7 says, “And God made the firmament, and divided the waters which were under the firmament from the waters which were above the firmament.” There is no ambiguity there unless a man brings ambiguity into it. The text does not say gases above. It does not say moisture concepts above. It does not say symbolic waters. It says waters above. That ought to settle it for anyone who has not sold his brain to the scientific priesthood.
The funny thing about these passages is that the Christians who suddenly become figurative here are usually the same people who are literalists everywhere else until the Bible collides with modern dogma. Let the Bible say Jesus rose bodily from the dead, and they will insist on literalness. Let it say there were twelve tribes, twelve apostles, and five loaves, and they are all for literalness. But let it say there are waters above the firmament, and now suddenly they are speaking in riddles. That is not scholarship. That is cowardice with references. It is a man trying to keep one eye on Scripture and the other eye on his
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"Love God and your neighbors as you love yourself."
Let's be honest here just for a second.
No one does that.
No one can do that.
Because we are all self obsessed idolators who try to navigate through life on our own.
We come first.
Enter Jesus.
The One who loves and came for and forgives such ungodly, untrusting ones such as we are.