We can answer a question that you may not have realized needed to be asked: what's the difference between water of life and normal water? Is there a chemical difference, or is this intended as a metaphor?
Deducing Life in Zero-G
The creation of gravity is one thing, but how do we deduce that life began before it? There are several clues. One involves the scriptural metaphor that milk has to come before solid food.
Got Milk?
By the end of the first day, there was a watery matrix that included atoms and molecules, cellular and multi-cellular life with replicating DNA, and the life forms we know of as Precambrian fossils.
Soup or Milk?
Popular science (SciPop) came up with the theory of abiogenesis in a primordial soup many years ago. Then amino acids were made from simple precursors in a lab and SciPop decided that it had proven its theory.
Let Light Be Nucleosynthesis
"Let light be, and light was" is normally translated as "let there be light, and there was light." We (that's me and the Holy spirit) develop the logic of how God caused light to appear.
The Sincere Milk of the Word
Just as a baby needs milk before it can eat solid food, the creative work of the 1st day produced light and a watery suspension like milk. It was homogeneous, as we know from the CMBR.
The Milk of the Word
We find that there are passages of scripture which, though appearing to be metaphorical, describe actual physical conditions or chemical reactions. These misunderstood passages are dismissed as flowery poetic language.If a baby needs milk to survive before it can tolerate solid food, has this been patterned after the processes which took place on the first and second days of the creation of the universe?
October 8th
If the deep was the source of Hydrogen for nucleosynthesis on the first day, then we would expect to find that radiation from this event is evenly distributed throughout the universe.
January 31st
God could have made a perfect creation from nothing, he didn't. Instead God used water. The result is a creation where there's continuous struggle between light and dark. Why? So that we may have free will.
