That would be the fourth day. The fourth day was when God created the sun and the moon. He also created the stars, which includes all astronomical bodies.
Source: Genesis 1:14-19
Answer:
Sometime way before Genesis 1. Contrary to the majority who read Genesis, it is not speaking of the initial Creation when the angels shouted with joy (Job 38:7). The earth was already there but in darkness, under water and God renewed the planet and brought forth physical life as we currently know it(Psalm 104:30).
A careful study of Genesis 1 would tell the reader that all was 'created' way before the Earth was renewed. There is a difference of Hebrew words translated as 'created' and 'made' in Genesis 1. Verse 1 says, "In the beginning God 'created' the heavens and the earth (the Big Bang of Science). The term for created in Hebrew is 'bara' which is only used for a divine creation - making something out of nothing or had no existence prior to this time. So when God created the heavens (atmosphere on Earth and the Universe) it included the Sun, moon, planets, stars, etc. And this is why there was light that was divided into day and night on the very 1st day.
The Hebrew word for 'made' in verse 16 is 'asah' and generally means to make or reconstitute something that has already existed. So God more accurately 'fixed' the objects of space into their proper places on the 4th day. These were set to divide night from day, for signs of seasons - days, months, and years (not the 'week' as God defined the Week in Creation and gave mankind the Sabbath rest to recall this great and wonderful work for all generations).
The reader can now see the emphasis in Genesis 1:14-16 in not on the creation of something from nothing but on establishing the purposes for these wonderful and great lights in the heavens (space). Placing the Sun, moon, etc in their proper orbits setting the astronomical standards for the calendar and allowing man to measure the days, months, and years (again this excludes the Week given to man).
Nothing. On the seventh day God rested.
Yes god did create the sun on the first day. NO! He created the sun AND the moon on the 4th day!!!
the 6th day
God said let there be light
God didn't create anything on the fifth year, but he did create poultry and seafood on the fifth day.
God made dry land and he made grass and plants on the third day!
No, on the second day God created the separation between the heavens and the earth.
On the second day God created a dome, the sky, and he created both day and evening.
On the sixth day, God created land animals and humans according to the Bible.
forth day
Does God really need a reason to do anything?
The earth is a planet and seems to have been created before day 1 in the first creation account in Genesis. The ancients did not realise that the other planets were worlds as large as our own; they simply thought of them as lights placed in the firmament, just above the earth, which was the centre of the universe. Genesis says that God created the lights in the firmament on the fourth day.For more information, please visit: http://christianity.answers.com/theology/the-story-of-creation