Shamayim
From Textus Receptus
Shamayim (םשמי), the Hebrew word for "heaven", denotes any of the following: (1) a component of the cosmos, the other elements being the earth (erets) and the underworld (sheol); (2) the dwelling place of God and other divine beings; and (3), in post-Old Testament literature (including the New Testament), the abode of the righteous dead.[]
The Old Testament authors pictured the earth as a flat disk floating in water, with the heavens above and the underworld below.[] The raqiya (firmament), a solid inverted bowl above the earth, coloured blue by the cosmic ocean, kept the waters above the earth from flooding the world.[] From about 300 BCE the three-tiered cosmos was largely replaced by a newer Greek model which saw the earth as a sphere at the centre of a set of seven concentric heavens, one for each planet plus the sun and moon, with the realm of God in an eighth and highest heaven, but although several Jewish works from this period have multiple heavens, as do some New Testament works, none have exactly the formal Greek system.[]
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