You should stick to spankin your monkey Bucko..there is no master plan.
I guess we'll all find out when our time here is over.
Until that time I will continue to try to understand this wonderful universe that I have the privelige to inhabit.
What you are trying to convince me of is that members of an agrarian society over the period from 5000 thousand years ago to 2000 years ago, totally understood the working of the universe. That they had such a personal relationship with the Diety that everything they stated will stand for all time.
Simply, humans wrote the Bible.
Explain the knowledge these humans must have had in order to write of things that wasn't scientific fact until centuries later.
For example the Bible includes a reasonably complete description of the hydrological cycle in Psalms 135:7, Jeremiah 10:13 and Job 36:27-29. The Bible speaks of how the clouds hold vast amount of water and speaks about the hydrothermal vents in Genesis 7:11 and Job 38:16, written before 1400BC—more than 3,000 years before their discovery by science.
There are statements consistent with geology, physics, paleontology, astronomy, meteorology, biology and anthropology written by men hundreds or even thousands of years before being recorded elsewhere.
Ecclesiastes 1:6, "The wind goeth toward the south, and turneth about unto the north; it whirleth about continually, and the wind returneth again according to his circuits."
This describes the jet stream, first discovered by airmen in WWII.
In Psalms 8:8 and Isaiah 43:16 it speaks about "paths" in the ocean, it wasn't until the 1800's when scientist discovered that the oceans had circulating currents or paths.
"By faith we understand that the worlds were prepared by the word of God, so that what is seen was not made out of things which are visible." Hebrews 11"3 written between 64-68 AD.
This speaks about things made up of sub-atomic particles invisible to the naked eye. The first sub-atomic particle to be discovered by modern science was the electron. It was first discovered by J.J. Thomson in 1897.