Erich wrote:I would be curious to here some of your reasons or views as to why there is a gap but I don’t want to cause you anymore “ugh’s”

so please don’t feel like you have to respond. Or if you have responded on a previous thread would you be willing to post the link?
The reason I said "ugh" was because, first of all, I've been getting into discussions about the universe and Creation with people recently (but not on this forum) ad nauseum. Secondly, I myself am more interested in the why's than the how's.
As far as the "gap" theory goes, I'm open to other explanations but at present I've settled on this one.
Erich wrote:I will say in opposition to the Gap theory though that Steve G. makes some interesting points in his Genesis studies about how the word “was” (Gen 1:2) would be very unlikely to mean “became” as those who hold this view assume.
Steve is correct. There is no implied "became" in this verse.
Erich wrote:I could go into the gory details

but Steve G. explains it a lot better than I in his study. He also discusses, using additional passages, what the meaning of “formless void” would most likely mean.
I haven't read Steve G.'s study yet. As far as the meaning of "formless void," though, this phrase has more than one shade of meaning, from what I've researched. I've devoted a lot of time to studying the cultural context of the bible in order to understand things like this, and what I've found is that it means the following:
1. The phrase does not imply "nothingness", but rather formlessness. It's as if all of Creation is awaiting the tending and shaping hand of God to make it into something. This phrase can apply to the world before God shaped it, but it can also apply to Jerusalem after the city was destroyed (Jer. 4:19-28 ), simply because that wasn't the final state of the city. It awaited God's forming and shaping hand to rebuild it.
2. The phrase not only implies the potential to be shaped, but also the judgment of God in a negative sense. But that would beg the question, who or what is being judged here in Genesis 1:2?
As an aside, Jewish commentators have noticed that the biblical text uses the various names (or titles) of God only in certain senses. In other words, the title "Elohim" conveys the sense of "judgment" or "justice" whereas Yehovah conveys the sense of "mercy." It's true that the use of "Elohim" in Genesis 1 conveys the sense of "righteous judgment" (compare Ps. 82:5, which implies that the earth was founded upon the principle of righteous judgment and righteous decrees of law), but is that the only kind of judgment in view here?
Erich wrote:There is also the issue of Ex 20:11 were God seems to not mention any gap. Also if there is a gap the Bible doesn’t seem to mention it anywhere or what may have taken place in that gap. In other words what would cause us to think there was a gap?
Different things, including a study I once did concerning the angels. (Yes, I noticed that you mentioned them too.)
Anyway, Exodus 20:11 doesn't need to allow for a "gap". In Genesis 1, we see that God "created" - Hebrew
bara - the heavens, the earth, the living creatures, etc. The sense of the word in this context is to bring something into being from the primordial "formless void", and this is something that only God can do. This isn't limited to the very beginning of history though, since as we've seen, the destroyed city of Jerusalem can be described as a "formless void." In other words, God can bring things into being from this "formless void", and subsequent events can return those things back to the state of being a "formless void." God certainly did "create" the heavens and the earth in six days out of the formless void, but that doesn't mean that nothing ever existed prior to those six days. Whatever did exist would have had to have been completely destroyed - a-la Jerusalem - though. And in my opinion, that's exactly what happened.
Erich wrote:I agree that there is a very intricate, symbolic progression to creation which if this is true what would the symbolic meaning of a gap in the beginning be?
Well, we aren't told about a gap in Genesis 1-3, so any gap that might have existed didn't have any symbolic meaning that pertained to the Creation story. However, there are other passages which imply that the gap's symbolic meaning would have been akin to the Israelites taking possession of the land of Canaan after the wickedness of the then-present inhabitants of the land merited their destruction. (See Gen. 15:7-16) The gap (which, I believe, consisted of the angelic rule over the earth, prior to the time of man) would be parallel to the period of time that the land of Israel was in the possession of its wicked inhabitants, prior to its possession by the Israelites themselves.
Damon