Monday, January 5, 2026

Exegeting בָּרָא (bārā’) - Creation

 

“In the beginning, God created the heavens and the earth. The earth was without form and void, and darkness was over the face of the deep. And the Spirit of God was hovering over the face of the waters” (Genesis 1:1–2, ESV). These words set the horizon of Biblical theology. They open the canonical story not with human initiative, not with cosmic accident, but with the sovereign, speaking God whose act of creation establishes reality, meaning, and destiny. This opening, dense with theological freight, delivers a singular claim that reverberates through the entire Bible. Only God creates. The Hebrew verb that anchors this claim, בָּרָא (bārā’), is used in the Old Testament with God, and only God, as its subject when it bears the sense “create.” The Church’s confession of the Creator therefore stands not on a speculative cosmology but on the revealed name and work of the Lord who calls being from nonbeing and order from the unstructured deep.

This essay offers a Biblical-theological meditation at doctoral depth on bārā’. We will examine its lexical contours, its distribution and force in Genesis 1–2, its relation to the companion verbs עָשָׂה (‘āsâ, “make, do”) and יָצַר (yāṣar, “form, fashion”), and its theological amplification in the Psalms and Isaiah’s “new creation” oracles. Along the way, we will mark key Hebrew phrases within Genesis 1:1–2 and trace how these ideas ground humanity’s dignity and vocation as image-bearers. We will also explain a commonly raised nuance about other stems of the root in Joshua, clarifying that the covenantal claim “only God creates” concerns the specific creative sense of bārā’ and not an unrelated stem meaning “clear” or “cut down.” Finally, we will draw pastoral implications for the life of faith, since the God who “created” in the beginning is also the Redeemer who “creates” clean hearts and who promises “new heavens and a new earth.”


Bārā’ and Its Subject

The verb בָּרָא (bārā’) in the Qal stem carries the sense “to create,” and when used in that sense throughout the Old Testament, God is the subject. Genesis 1:1, 1:21, 1:27, 2:3–4, and 5:1–2 are programmatic examples. Beyond Genesis, the Psalms and the Prophets likewise attest this God-exclusive usage: “Create in me a clean heart, O God” (Psalm 51:10), “By the word of the LORD the heavens were made” and “For he spoke, and it came to be” (Psalm 33:6, 9), “I form light and create darkness” (Isaiah 45:7), “For thus says the LORD, who created the heavens” (Isaiah 45:18), and “Behold, I create new heavens and a new earth” (Isaiah 65:17). The people of God never “create” in this sense. They “make” and “form.” They compose, build, cultivate, craft, and subcreate. They do not bārā’.

A lexical clarification is important. The same tri-consonantal root ב־ר־א appears in the Piel stem in Joshua 17:15 and 17:18, where Israel is told to “clear” forested land. The ESV renders, “go up by yourselves to the forest, and there clear ground for yourselves” (Joshua 17:15; see also 17:18). That usage denotes “to cut down” or “to clear,” not “to create,” and it is a different sense associated with a different verbal stem. It does not qualify or diminish the Old Testament’s theological claim that the Qal sense “create” is reserved for God as subject. The Church therefore, does not ground the assertion “only God creates” in a simplistic total word count but in the carefully observed semantic field where bārā’ in the creative sense belongs wholly to God.

Genesis 1:1–2 as Theological Foundation

The canonical sentence “In the beginning, God created the heavens and the earth” (Genesis 1:1) uses bārā’ in the Qal perfect, portraying a comprehensive act that frames all subsequent verses. “The heavens and the earth” is a merism, שָׁמַיִם וָאָרֶץ (šāmayim wā’āreṣ), expressing the totality of the ordered cosmos. The focus is not material composition but divine agency. The subject is emphatic: אֱלֹהִים (’ĕlōhîm) created. From the first clause, Scripture draws attention to God’s identity and initiative.

Genesis 1:2 then draws the curtain back over the primordial scene: “The earth was without form and void” uses תֹהוּ וָבֹהוּ (tōhû wābōhû), a hendiadys signifying unstructured and unfilled. This phrase appears again in Jeremiah 4:23 in a judgment context, underscoring that tōhû wābōhû communicates an absence of life-supporting order rather than a competing cosmic power. “Darkness was over the face of the deep” introduces תְּהוֹם (tĕhôm), the watery deep, not as a rival deity but as composite matter awaiting God’s structuring word. “And the Spirit of God was hovering over the face of the waters” names רוּחַ אֱלֹהִים (rûaḥ ’ĕlōhîm) as the personal divine agent. The participle מְרַחֶפֶת (mĕraḥefet, “hovering”) evokes the mother bird imagery made explicit in Deuteronomy 32:11, “like an eagle that stirs up its nest, that flutters over its young.” This is not distance; it is personal presence poised to act.

Two exegetical notes deserve mention. First, some have read Genesis 1:1 as a temporal clause “When God began to create,” taking verse 1 as a summary with verses 2–3 narrating the process. Others read it as an independent main clause. The English Standard Version renders verse 1 as an independent declaration. The theological outcome in either construal is the same. God is the Creator. Second, bārā’ in itself does not lexically demand the idea of creation out of nothing. The context of Genesis 1:1–2 and the broader canon yields the doctrine. Hebrews 11:3 is definitive: “By faith we understand that the universe was created by the word of God, so that what is seen was not made out of things that are visible.” The God of Israel is not a shaper of preexistent matter that has its own stubborn eternality. He is the Lord of being, who by the sheer efficacy of His speech summons reality into ordered existence.

Divine Speech, Separation, and Naming: The Pattern of Genesis 1

Genesis 1 is structured by a recurring liturgy of creation: divine speech, execution, evaluation, and naming. “And God said” initiates each act. “And it was so” asserts effective power. “And God saw that it was good” confers evaluation. Naming establishes role and relation within the ordered world. God separates light from darkness, waters above from waters below, and waters from dry land. Separation is not hostility but vocation. The world is ordered into realms that can welcome life.

Within this cadence bārā’ occurs at solemn peaks. On Day Five, “So God created the great sea creatures and every living creature that moves” (Genesis 1:21). On Day Six, “So God created man in his own image” (Genesis 1:27). The term also appears in the narrative heading and coda that frame the seven days: “And God blessed the seventh day and made it holy, because on it God rested from all his work that he had done in creation” (Genesis 2:3), and “These are the generations of the heavens and the earth when they were created” (Genesis 2:4). The deliberate placement signals theological emphasis. God’s creative speech does not simply rearrange. It calls into being new realities fit to receive blessing and to fulfill purpose within God’s cosmic temple.

Two companion verbs deepen the portrait. Alongside bārā’, the author uses עָשָׂה (‘āsâ, “make, do”; see Genesis 1:7, 1:16, 1:25, 1:31; 2:3–4) and יָצַר (yāṣar, “form, fashion”; see Genesis 2:7–8). ‘Āsâ highlights productive activity and completion, the bringing of a thing into its composite wholeness. Yāṣar focuses on shaping with intention, the potter’s craft on clay. When Scripture says “the LORD God formed the man of dust from the ground” (Genesis 2:7), it is neither contradicting nor diminishing bārā’. Rather, the three terms together display facets of divine artistry. God creates by sovereign fiat, God makes by effecting a finished whole, God forms with personal care. All three are God’s verbs.

Humanity as Image: Bārā’ at the Apex

Genesis 1:26–28 marks the highest theological moment of the creation narrative. “Then God said, Let us make man in our image, after our likeness” uses the language of counsel and intention. While the precise import of the plural “Let us” is discussed in Biblical theology, what remains clear is the dignity conferred upon humanity. The nouns צֶלֶם (ṣelem, “image”) and דְּמוּת (dĕmût, “likeness”) denote representative sonship and reflected rule under God. The climactic use of bārā’ in verse 27 is triple and poetic: “So God created man in his own image, in the image of God he created him; male and female he created them.” The repetition piles up significance. Humanity is not an afterthought or a tool. Humanity is fashioned for communion and entrusted with stewardship.

Genesis 1:28 grants the cultural mandate: “And God blessed them. And God said to them, Be fruitful and multiply and fill the earth and subdue it, and have dominion.” Humanity’s work is not creative in the bārā’ sense. It is derivative, priestly, and royal. Human beings “make,” “form,” and “build,” exercising wise rule as God’s image and under God’s law. The distinction safeguards worship. If humans could bārā’, they would be potential rivals. Because only God bārā’, humans are receivers and stewards. The world is a gift before it is a task.

Genesis 1:1–2 Revisited: Key Hebrew Phrases

It is helpful to mark several Hebrew expressions in Genesis 1:1–2 for theological clarity.

בְּרֵאשִׁית (bĕrē’šît, “In the beginning”): This adverbial form situates the narrative at the headwaters of time. God is not included within the temporal horizon. He is before the beginning. The Psalms confess, “Before the mountains were brought forth, or ever you had formed the earth and the world, from everlasting to everlasting you are God” (Psalm 90:2).

שָׁמַיִם וָאָרֶץ (šāmayim wā’āreṣ, “the heavens and the earth”): The merism signals totality. All spatial and created realities belong to God’s artistry.

תֹהוּ וָבֹהוּ (tōhû wābōhû, “without form and void”): The phrase names a state unfit for habitation. Isaiah 45:18 presses the point, citing the Lord “who did not create it empty, he formed it to be inhabited.” God’s subsequent acts remedy tōhû and bōhû by structuring realms and filling them with life.

תְּהוֹם (tĕhôm, “the deep”): Unlike ancient Near Eastern myths where primordial waters personify rival powers, tĕhôm is creaturely and answerable to God’s command. There is no cosmic dualism here.

רוּחַ אֱלֹהִים (rûaḥ ’ĕlōhîm, “the Spirit of God”): The Spirit’s hovering participates in creation from the outset. Psalm 104:30 ties this work to ongoing providence. “When you send forth your Spirit, they are created, and you renew the face of the ground.”

These expressions cohere to proclaim a single theological reality. Creation is the work of the triune God, executed by His Word and Spirit, ordered for life, and crowned with humanity who reflect His character in the world.

Bārā’ in the Psalms: Creation, Providence, and Re-Creation

The Psalter turns the affirmation “only God creates” into doxology and petition. Three texts will illustrate.

First, Psalm 33:6–9 celebrates creation by the divine word. “By the word of the LORD the heavens were made, and by the breath of his mouth all their host. He gathers the waters of the sea as a heap; he puts the deeps in storehouses. Let all the earth fear the LORD; let all the inhabitants of the world stand in awe of him. For he spoke, and it came to be; he commanded, and it stood firm.” The verbs “spoke” and “commanded” match the cadence of Genesis 1. Creation is not only an event long ago. It is a revelation of God’s trustworthiness now. If He speaks and it is so, then His promises are certain, and His judgments are just.

Second, Psalm 104:24–30 extends creation into continual providence. The creatures depend upon God’s open hand, and when He sends forth His Spirit “they are created” and the “face of the ground” is renewed. The present tense of divine involvement means that every breath, every season’s growth, every renewal after winter, is a sign that the Creator has not abandoned His works.

Third, Psalm 51:10 moves from cosmos to heart. David does not ask God to educate him into virtue or to coach him into better choices. He asks for a creative miracle. “Create in me a clean heart, O God, and renew a right spirit within me.” The same verb that framed the beginning now frames the possibility of moral and spiritual newness. This is more than metaphor. Only the God who bārā’ can overcome the guilt and corruption of sin. The Gospel’s promise of the new heart is therefore a creation promise.

Bārā’ in Isaiah: New Creation as the Seal of Monotheism

The density of bārā’ in Isaiah 40–66 is theologically decisive. In the so-called “trial of the gods,” the Lord demonstrates His uniqueness by appealing to creation, providence, and redemption, all with bārā’ language.

Isaiah 43:1: “But now thus says the LORD, he who created you, O Jacob, he who formed you, O Israel.” Creation grounds covenant. God can redeem Israel from exile because He is the Creator of Israel’s very existence as a people.

Isaiah 43:7: God gathers “everyone who is called by my name, whom I created for my glory, whom I formed and made.” Notice again the triad bārā’, yāṣar, ‘āsâ. The combination magnifies the singular claim that Israel’s identity is an act of divine artistry aimed at God’s glory.

Isaiah 45:7: “I form light and create darkness, I make well-being and create calamity, I am the LORD, who does all these things.” Here creation language extends beyond material origins to historical events under divine sovereignty. In context the prophet confronts Israel’s fears about geopolitical upheavals and the scandal of God using a pagan ruler as His instrument. Only the Creator has the right and power to govern history in ways that surpass human expectation.

Isaiah 45:18: “For thus says the LORD, who created the heavens (he is God), who formed the earth and made it, he established it; he did not create it empty, he formed it to be inhabited.” The verse weaves bārā’ and yāṣar and ‘āsâ to insist that creation takes aim at communion. An inhabited earth means an earth fit for worshipers.

Isaiah 57:19: “creating the fruit of the lips. Peace, peace, to the far and to the near, says the LORD, and I will heal him.” Creation language invades the sphere of reconciliation and worship. God alone can “create” the conditions of praise among a once-rebellious people.

Isaiah 65:17–18: “For behold, I create new heavens and a new earth, and the former things shall not be remembered or come into mind. But be glad and rejoice forever in that which I create.” The verb bārā’ seals the promise. The goal is joy in God within a renewed world, a world saturated with God’s presence and justice.

In Isaiah, then, bārā’ is the grammar of Biblical monotheism and the pledge of eschatological hope. Because the Lord alone creates, idols are nothings. Because the Lord alone creates, He can also recreate. The doctrine of creation is not a preface to be left behind. It is the persistent refrain that guarantees redemption.

Clarifying the Joshua Question: “Clear the Forest” and the Uniqueness of Divine Creation

As noted above, Joshua 17 employs a Piel stem of the root ברא for “clear.” “If you are a numerous people, go up by yourselves to the forest, and there clear ground for yourselves” (Joshua 17:15), with a parallel in verse 18. The semantic field is forestry, not cosmogony. Theologically, this distinction matters because it preserves the picture the Bible itself draws. Humans can “clear,” “make,” “form,” “build,” and “cultivate.” These are noble, priestly actions that fulfill the cultural mandate. But the Scriptural witness never applies the creative sense of bārā’ to human artisans or kings. The verb in its creative sense is the signature of God’s sovereign agency. The glory is His.

The Doctrine of Creation: Ex Nihilo, By the Word, Through the Spirit

While bārā’ does not lexically require the phrase “out of nothing,” the total canonical witness does. The God of Genesis 1 does not wrestle a rival deity, nor does He coax an eternal chaos into reluctant order. “By faith we understand that the word of God created the universe” (Hebrews 11:3). The Gospel of John joins the testimony: “All things were made through him, and without him was not any thing made that was made” (John 1:3). Although our focus is the Old Testament usage, the New Testament rightly reads Genesis Christologically, without forcing anachronism, because the same divine identity unveiled in Israel’s Scriptures is now fully revealed in the Son. Romans 4:17 extends creation grammar to soteriology, speaking of the God “who gives life to the dead and calls into existence the things that do not exist.” Creation by the Word is therefore the template for redemption. The Spirit who hovered over the waters renews the face of the earth and regenerates human hearts.

It follows that Christian worship and ethics rest on creation. Because only God creates, idolatry is irrational and destructive. Because only God creates, human life possesses derivative dignity grounded in the image of God. Because only God creates, history has a goal that is not subject to human manipulation. Creation teaches humility, trust, and hope.

Reading Genesis 1–2 with Attention to Verbal Texture

Returning to Genesis, several further observations aid theological understanding.

The Word as Efficient Cause: Each day begins with “And God said,” and the result follows. The Bible does not depict creation as the outgrowth of divine essence pouring into the world. God remains distinct from what He makes. The refrain “And God saw that it was good” is aesthetic and moral. Goodness here is suitability to purpose within the order God wills. That evaluation culminates in the sixth day’s “very good” when humankind arrives.

Sabbath as the Crown: The seventh day is prominent. “So God blessed the seventh day and made it holy, because on it God rested from all his work that he had done in creation” (Genesis 2:3). The clause behind “that he had done in creation” mirrors the Hebrew idiom “which God created to make,” a purposeful tautology that magnifies the dignity of God’s works and discloses the telos of creation, namely worshipful rest in God. Creation is a temple narrative. The world is the Creator’s sanctuary.

From Structure to Filling: Days one through three give structure to those uninhabitable conditions named in verse 2. Days four through six fill those structures with corresponding lights, creatures, and finally humanity. The narrative thereby answers tōhû with form and bōhû with fullness. The God who bārā’ will later “create” new hearts and a new world by the same logic. He brings form to chaos and fullness to emptiness.

Human Vocation and Blessing: As image-bearers, humans are blessed and sent. Their authority is functional and derivative. The verbs the Bible uses for human creative activity, such as ‘āsâ and yāṣar, reinforce this. The Bible honors human culture, artistry, and science as expressions of delegated rule. Yet it forbids confusing these noble works with bārā’. Confusion breeds either pride or despair. Distinction breeds worship and grateful industry.

Creation and Providence: Against Chance and Against Fate

To say “only God creates” is to reject two counterfeit stories. The first counterfeit is chaos by chance. Scripture does not trade in statistical fatalism. “For he spoke, and it came to be; he commanded, and it stood firm” (Psalm 33:9). The second counterfeit is determinism under impersonal fate. The Biblical God is personal and free. He blesses, judges, covenants, and saves. Because He is the Creator, “chance” cannot be a cause, and “fate” cannot be a god. The doctrine of creation produces both confidence in God’s wise governance and humility about creaturely comprehension. The Bible invites inquiry. It does not enthrone human mastery. “It is the glory of God to conceal a matter, but the glory of kings is to search out a matter” (Proverbs 25:2).

From Creation to New Creation: The Prophetic Horizon and the Gospel’s Fulfillment

Isaiah declares, “For behold, I create new heavens and a new earth” (Isaiah 65:17), and his language anticipates the eschatological hope that saturates the New Testament. The Resurrection of Jesus is the firstfruits of the new creation, which the Church proclaims as the Gospel. The Apostle Paul writes, “Therefore, if anyone is in Christ, he is a new creation” (2 Corinthians 5:17). The continuity of the verb’s theology is striking. The same God who “created” the heavens and the earth now “creates” a redeemed people whose existence is itself a sign of the coming world. The Spirit who hovered now indwells, sealing believers for the day when the promise of Isaiah becomes a visible world.

This continuity safeguards two errors. It prevents the Church from reducing salvation to mere moral improvement. Salvation is creation. It also prevents the Church from surrendering earthly hope. Because creation was good and is destined to be renewed, the people of God practice stewardship and justice now. The Biblical doctrine of creation is therefore not a speculative preface. It is the scaffolding of pastoral ministry and public discipleship.

Practical Theology of Bārā’: When Life Feels Tōhû wābōhû

The opening of Genesis provides a pastoral map for disorienting seasons. Many believers know what it is to feel “without form and void,” to sense “darkness over the face of the deep.” The text meets such experience with a reminder. The Spirit of God hovers. The hovering does not immediately remove the darkness. It anticipates a word. The Church therefore prays Scripture back to God. “Create in me a clean heart, O God” (Psalm 51:10). This prayer is not presumption. It is faith in the God whose creative power is directed to mercy.

Likewise, the daily separations of Genesis 1 become patterns of human stewardship. To separate light from darkness in personal life is to call things by their proper names, to reject moral confusion, and to cultivate holiness. To separate waters and to gather dry land is to make room for fruitfulness in one’s household, vocation, and Church. To name is to exercise patient, careful attention to the world God made. To bless is to rejoice in God’s generosity. These acts do not “create” in the divine sense. They do reflect the Creator.

Let this week therefore be one of renewed wonder. Attend to the “heavens and the earth” as theater of God’s glory. Hear again the goodness refrains in ordinary gifts. Observe the order etched into reality and the life that fills it. Receive anew your commission as an image-bearer. Put right what is broken where you can, and entrust to God what you cannot mend. Pray for the Spirit’s hovering presence, and listen for the Word who brings light where darkness seems to reign.

Summary Exegesis of Key Bārā’ Texts

A brief annotated survey will consolidate the exegetical picture.

Genesis 1:1: “In the beginning, God created the heavens and the earth.” As the first declarative sentence of Scripture, this line grounds all doctrine and duty in God’s sovereign act. The merism encompasses totality, and the verb bārā’ marks the unique, divine work. Believe this verse, and the rest of the Bible’s claims about providence and redemption stand on firm footing.

Genesis 1:21: “So God created the great sea creatures and every living creature that moves.” The sea, often emblematic of threat, is populated by God’s word. The “great sea creatures” are not rivals. They are creatures. The Creator’s sovereignty extends to the edges of ancient fear.

Genesis 1:27: “So God created man in his own image.” The threefold repetition of bārā’ highlights humanity’s unique role. Male and female together are the image. This guards against both misogyny and androgyny. It also secures the sanctity of life and the dignity of work.

Genesis 2:3–4: “God… rested from all his work that he had done in creation… when they were created.” The Sabbath frames creation as ordered toward holy rest. Worship is not an add-on. It is the telos of a world God bārā’.

Genesis 5:1–2: “When God created man, he made him in the likeness of God. Male and female he created them, and he blessed them and named them Man.” The language reiterates Genesis 1 and ties blessing and naming to creation. The imago Dei is not lost in the fall, though it is vandalized. Redemption restores image-bearing vocation in Christ.

Psalm 33:6, 9: Word and breath are the means of creation. The “breath” in parallel with the Lord’s word points toward the Spirit’s agency. This intertext deepens the reading of Genesis 1:2.

Psalm 51:10: The plea for a “clean heart” invokes God’s exclusive creative prerogative for moral re-creation. Pastoral practice should therefore center on prayer and proclamation rather than technique. Only the Creator can create.

Psalm 104:30: The Creator’s Spirit continually renews the earth. Providence is not deistic maintenance. It is creative generosity. Gratitude and ecological stewardship follow.

Isaiah 43:7: Creation “for my glory” sets worship at the heart of election. Israel’s story is framed by creation grace.

Isaiah 45:7, 18: Creation secures monotheism in history. God’s governance of light and darkness, well-being and calamity, and his intention to inhabit the earth oppose both dualism and nihilism.

Isaiah 65:17–18: New creation crowns prophetic hope. Joy is commanded because God will “create” a reality fit for unending communion.

Amos 4:13: “For behold, he who forms the mountains and creates the wind.” The prophet’s doxology ties creation to ethical urgency. Because God creates and knows, His call to repentance carries ultimate authority.

In each text, the unique subject of bārā’ is God. No king, no artisan, no priest, and no sage “create” in this sense. The Bible thereby sets a perimeter around worship and a foundation under human dignity.

The Creator and Human Culture: Distinction and Participation

If only God creates, what of human artistry, science, and society? The Bible’s answer is not to trivialize human culture but to situate it. Genesis 4 narrates the emergence of music, metallurgy, and pastoral arts within a fallen world. Exodus celebrates Spirit-gifted craftsmanship for the tabernacle. Proverbs commends skilled work and wise planning. These are not in competition with God’s bārā’. They are fruits of God’s blessing and venues of neighbor-love. To confuse human making with divine creating would inflate human pride and invite idolatry. To deny human making would despise a gift and shrink vocation. The Church honors human culture precisely by refusing to call it creation in the bārā’ sense.

This distinction has ethical traction. Because we do not create in the divine sense, we may not pretend to redefine the givenness of creation at will. The Creator’s design for life, embodied in the goodness of male and female, the Sabbath, work and rest, and the moral law, is not clay in our hands. It is the world in which we are called to flourish. The Church’s teaching on stewardship, justice, sexuality, and sabbath rest is therefore not an imposition but an invitation to live in harmony with the grain of creation.

Worship as the Right Response to the Creator

The only fitting response to the God who bārā’ is worship. Worship gathers adoration, confession, thanksgiving, and supplication into a single posture of dependence and delight. When the Church confesses the Creed’s first article, “I believe in God, the Father Almighty, maker of heaven and earth,” it is exegeting Genesis 1:1 in the key of praise. The Psalms summon the same posture. “Let all the earth fear the LORD; let all the inhabitants of the world stand in awe of him” (Psalm 33:8). Awe is not dread alone. It is glad recognition that the One who spoke light into being has set His love upon His people in covenant mercy.

Such worship fuels mission. The peoples are invited to turn from nothings to the living God who “made the heaven and the earth and the sea and all that is in them” and who “gives to all mankind life and breath and everything” (compare the Pauline proclamation in Acts 14:15 and 17:25, rendered here in the idiom of the ESV). To preach the Gospel is to announce that the Creator has drawn near in Jesus Christ, accomplishing redemption and inaugurating new creation.

Living as Image-Bearers of the Creator

Because God alone bārā’, believers may live with courage and tenderness in a world that is both beautiful and broken. When life feels shapeless, pray for the Spirit’s hovering and for the Word that speaks light. When life is filled with gifts, return thanks to the Giver and live as a steward. When confronted by injustice or disorder, remember that creation’s God loves order for the sake of life. Seek peace, mend what is broken, resist what dehumanizes, and honor the image of God in every person from conception to death. Practically, this means cultivating homes and congregations that mirror the Creator’s rhythm of work and rest, truth and love, justice and mercy.

Attend also to the ordinary signs of grace. The sound of wind across fields, the rhythm of the sea, the laughter of children, and the table fellowship of the Church are not random. They are creations and gifts that point back to the Creator. Receive them as sacraments of common grace, and let them tutor your hope for the promised new creation.

Confessing and Living the First Sentence

Genesis opens with a simple, factual declaration that resists reduction into myth or mechanism. “In the beginning, God created the heavens and the earth” (Genesis 1:1). Those who receive this word need not scorn empirical inquiry, nor need they fear historical contingency. The God who bārā’ governs the world by His wise providence, redeems sinners by His steadfast love, and promises a new creation by His unbreakable word. In the Bible’s lexicon, the verb that begins the story remains God’s alone. Creatures respond. They do not compete.

Let the Church therefore reclaim the good news that creation itself is grace. The world is not a closed system of impersonal forces. It is the theater of God’s glory. The Spirit still hovers. The Word still speaks. The Creator still creates, calling a people to Himself and pledging a renewed world where righteousness dwells. Trust Him. Pray with David, “Create in me a clean heart, O God” (Psalm 51:10). Hope with Isaiah, “Behold, I create new heavens and a new earth” (Isaiah 65:17). Live with gratitude under the blessing of the seventh day, until the Lord who “spoke, and it came to be” gathers all things in Christ and makes all things new.


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