Deuteronomy 4:19
18 anything that crawls on the ground, or any fish in the deep waters under the earth. 19 When you look up to the sky and see the sun, moon, and stars—the whole heavenly creation—you must not be seduced to worship and serve them, for the Lord your God has assigned them to all the people of the world. 20 You, however, the Lord has selected and brought from Egypt, that iron-smelting furnace, to be his special people as you are today.
Isaiah 47:13
12 Persist in trusting your amulets and your many incantations, which you have faithfully recited since your youth! Maybe you will be successful—maybe you will scare away disaster. 13 You are tired out from listening to so much advice. Let them take their stand—the ones who see omens in the sky, who gaze at the stars, who make monthly predictions—let them rescue you from the disaster that is about to overtake you! 14 Look, they are like straw that the fire burns up; they cannot rescue themselves from the heat of the flames. There are no coals to warm them, no firelight to enjoy.
Notes and References
"... Although heaven is deemed the primary dwelling-place of Israel’s God, Israelites are thus dissuaded from contemplating heaven, the sun, the moon, and stars, lest they be tempted to ‘be led astray, and bow down to them, and serve them’ (Deuteronomy 4:19; compare also 2 Kings 23:4; Isaiah 47:13; Amos 5:26-27). So, too, with Sheol: even as allusions to the realm attest the belief that it lies below the earth, as a destination for the dead (e.g. Genesis 37:35; 42:38; 44:29, 31), the redacted Pentateuch discourages further inquiry through the association of the dead and their places with practices condemned as ‘foreign’ and abhorrent (e.g. Deuteronomy 14:1; 18:10–11; compare Numbers 16:20–33) ..."
Reed, Annette Yoshiko "Enoch, Eden, and the Beginnings of Jewish Cosmography" in Scafi, Alessandro (ed.) The Cosmography of Paradise (pp. 67-94) Warburg Institute Colloquia, 2016