What Does the Bible Say about Creation?

As you read through the Bible, pay attention to the story that is unfolding. But don’t imagine that you’re merely looking into the past when you read this story. This is a story that has yet to be finished. Though Revelation ties up the loose ends and tells us how the story will come to a close, we’re not there yet. The story continues, and each and every one of us has a role to play. But we won’t be able to play our part until we buy into the story so deeply that it shapes everything about our lives. In this video, David Platt and Francis Chan help us to see who God, the creator of heavens and the earth, is and what he is like

1. Who is God?
2. This is God’s World
3. In the Image of God
4. The Personal God of Genesis 2
5. Life in the Garden

Transcript

Francis Chan:

So this week you started diving into the Old Testament, and you start with creation, and I get so fired up about this topic because this is huge to me. So I’m going to go off for a little bit.

David Platt:

I’ll just sit here for a while, man. Go for it.

Francis Chan:

Because this is everything. I mean, you’re saying that there is a creator, and you could spend all day talking about the difference between a creator and a created being, and the implications of that.

So that means there’s someone else who made me. I mean, that’s at the base of everything. I mean, think about that. That means I wouldn’t even exist. So I wouldn’t be thinking, I wouldn’t be talking right now, we wouldn’t be studying, we wouldn’t be going through this material right now, if it wasn’t for Him.

And what does that mean? You could spend all day just talking about, “Okay, so what right does He have, versus the right that you have?” You may illustrate this, you may bring a lump of clay, just like scripture used that illustration, and go, “Okay, the difference between me and this lump of clay, that’s massive,” and to say God, and that’s where now the authority of scripture and everything else, everything changes, once you have a right view of what it means to be a created being.

God is the Author of Creation

David Platt:

No, author implies authority, and so He is the author of creation, and, therefore, He has all the rights over our lives. I mean, this is essential to understanding what it means to be a disciple of Jesus is realizing, “All right, my life is not my own. I belong to another, the one who sustains me at this moment, the one who gives me breath,” and so to really focus on with the people you’re discipling, the person you’re discipling, this is massive truth.

And we are so man-centered in our thinking and sort of really help give them, from the very beginning of this journey that’s going to walk through the story of scripture, a grand picture of God, maybe even to spend some time as you’re walking through the word with H in this session to say, “Man, let’s just stop and praise God, our creator. Let’s just exalt Him. Let’s lift Him up, let’s thank Him for things in creation, and praise Him for all that He has created.” We see that all over scripture, God is exalted in these ways, and so maybe even spending some devotional time along those lines would be really helpful.

Francis Chan:

Yeah, I would even say, okay, we don’t want to assume that everyone believes that they were created by God. I mean, that’s a big debate for a lot of people, and a lot of them depending on their upbringing. So, again, take some time on that if you know that this is something they struggle with, because, again, it’s foundational.

If they don’t believe they were created, that’s going to cause a problem in so many different areas. Colossians 1:16 says, “Everything was created by Him and for Him.”

It’s your whole worldview, your whole existence. I was made for Him. That’s huge, and so if they’re struggling, I would also have you consider Romans 1:20 says that ever since God created the world, his invisible qualities and his divine nature have been clearly seen through what has been made, and sometimes it’s easier to deny the existence of God, at least I’ve found, inside a classroom of drywall, and a chalkboard, or whatever else, but you get out into creation, what God created, and the Word says, when you look around, creation speaks for itself.

This couldn’t have just shown up. God’s showing His… So maybe you, this week go, “Hey, we’ll just go to a park, or we’ll maybe go backpacking,” and just get out into nature. There’s something about that environment where the distractions are gone. Leave your phones at home, leave everything, and just be in the presence of God.

We Can Have Intimacy with God

David Platt:

Just to recognize his transcendence, his greatness. And then the beauty is when we focus on this, then the wonder of His love towards us just takes on a whole new meaning, because we kind of jumped to, “Well, God loves you,” but let’s start with God. God, He is the one who loves us. Wow, and even in Genesis 1, He made us in his image, which sets us apart from everything else in all creation. We have the capacity to know God, to relate to God, and so this beautiful dynamic, balance, and tension blend, whatever you want to call it, between the greatness of God, and yet, the privilege we have of intimacy with God, there is so much to be explored.

Francis Chan:

Yeah, that’s just huge. I mean, even as you’re saying that right now, I’m just thinking, “Okay, so God made me to know Him, to find Him.” He created Adam and Eve differently, to commune with Him, and the thought that that’s why we’re here right now, and to get that in your disciple’s mind to understand He wants us to know Him.

David Platt:

Don’t gloss over that; just stay there, camp out there, and be blessed with that reality.

Discussion Questions

  1. Read Genesis 1–2. As you read, look for elements that will help orient you to the biblical story. Who are we introduced to in this section? What is being emphasized? What seems to be the point? After reading these two chapters, make some notes below.
  2. Take a minute to reflect on what you read in Genesis 1–2. What do God’s actions in this passage reveal about who He is?
  3. How should God’s eternality and power in the creation account affect the way we view and relate to Him?
  4. How should God’s power, authority, and ownership affect the way we view our place in this world?
  5. In your own words, describe why it is significant that God created us “in His image.” How should this affect the way we view ourselves and the people around us?
  6. What can we learn about human beings and their relationship with God and each other by reading Genesis 2?
  7. Take some time to consider the picture of the world presented in Genesis 1–2. Why is this picture so appealing? Which aspects of life in the garden of Eden should we long to see restored in our world?

Message Notes

The Bible tells a story.

We tend to view the Bible as a bunch of fragmented bits of history, poetry, and moral tales, but in reality, the Bible tells a story. And it’s a true story. It’s a story that gives meaning to our existence, our daily lives, and to every other story on earth.
As you read through the Bible, pay attention to the story that is unfolding.

But don’t imagine that you’re merely looking into the past when you read this story. This is a story that has yet to be finished. Though Revelation ties up the loose ends and tells us how the story will come to a close, we’re not there yet.

The story continues, and each and every one of us has a role to play. But we won’t be able to play our part until we buy into the story so deeply that it shapes everything about our lives.

Ultimately, this is a story about God, the world He created, and the incredible plan of redemption that unfolds as He creates a people for His own glory. As you walk through key points in the biblical story over the weeks ahead, make sure you place yourself within this story.

How do the actions, events, and truths presented in the story touch your life? How should you live now in light of this amazing story?

The passage you will consider in this session (Genesis 1–2) sets the stage for the rest of the Bible. In this section, we see the world as it should be. We see God crafting a world that is everything He desires it to be—no sin, no imperfection, everything glorifies God perfectly. Understanding this first part of the story will help us understand everything that follows.

Who Is God?

The story begins with familiar words: “In the beginning, God created the heavens and the earth.” With these words we are introduced to the most important character in the story. It’s interesting that although these are the first words in the entire Bible, the author doesn’t pause to tell us theologically or philosophically who God is.

There are many questions that we could ask at this point: Where did God come from? What was He doing before He created? Why is He creating in the first place?

But Genesis proceeds in a different manner. The author teaches us about God by simply telling us what He did: He created. We’re going to find out so much more about God as the story unfolds, and at points we will get specific theological answers to some of the questions we may have. But it’s important to let the story drive our understanding of who God is.

This Is God’s World

Perhaps the most obvious thing that we see in this passage is God’s absolute power and unrivaled glory. The story starts with Him alone. There is great significance to the fact that God is the only character in Genesis 1. He is the only eternal person or thing in the universe. This means that nothing else can be equated or even compared with Him.

Allow yourself to feel the weight of this for a minute. There was a time when our universe did not exist. Immediately before our world began, God existed—and that’s it! Then God began creating our world out of nothing simply by speaking. He told land to form and it obeyed.

He called light into being and it happened. Every single thing in our universe came into existence in obedience to God’s command.

Try to get a feel for the absolute difference between this all-powerful God who has always existed and the creation that He called forth through the repeated refrain: “Let there be _________.”

There is no person, force, or thing that can compete with God or claim any importance in comparison with Him. It is this absolute distinction between God and everything else that leads the angels in heaven to cry out, “Holy! Holy! Holy!”

We cannot read Genesis 1–2 without realizing that this world belongs to God. If we were to begin with our own perception of the world, we might get the sense that the world belongs to us, that we are the rightful rulers of this planet. But Genesis tells a different story.

God lovingly and powerfully created this world. No person or thing had any place in this world until God put it in its proper place. God alone can claim ownership of this world because He spoke it into existence.

This should lead us to great humility about our place in this world. We are not the center of the universe. God created this world and graciously placed us in the midst of it. But all ownership and authority belongs to God. As we will see, God does delegate a certain authority to us, but this is a derived authority, graciously given to us by God to be used in a specific manner.

Any attempt to claim power for ourselves independent of God is like a clay pot challenging the authority of the potter who formed it. (This is an image, by the way, which Scripture uses to describe the foolishness of challenging God—see Is. 29:15–16, 45:9–10, and Rom. 9:19–24.)

In the Image of God

After creating every detail of every aspect of the universe in which we live, God looked at everything He had made and declared it good. But in the midst of this episode of creation, God paused to confer with Himself:

Then God said, “Let us make man in our image, after our likeness. And let them have dominion over the fish of the sea and over the birds of the heavens and over the livestock and over all the earth and over every creeping thing that creeps on the earth” (Gen. 1:26).

There is something absolutely unique about humanity. On the one hand, we are utterly unlike God because, just like everything else in creation, He made us. But on the other hand, God specifically created us to be like Him. This is impossible to wrap our minds around, but God created us like Him in some respect and then set us in the midst of this world to represent Him!

There is a lot of debate about what exactly the “image of God” is. Everyone seems to agree that being created in God’s image is more than a physical resemblance—He is Spirit, after all (John 4:24).

Suggestions as to what God’s image in humanity consists of are varied: our ability to reason, our ability to make moral decisions, our personalities, and our capacity for relationships are all leading views. Others suggest that the image of God relates to the dominion over the rest of creation that God gave to man (this ties Gen. 1:26–27 to Gen. 1:28).

Perhaps it is best not to attach the image of God to any one faculty or attribute of humanity. In the New Testament, we are told that Jesus Christ is “the image of the invisible God” (Col. 1:15). Jesus is said to be “the radiance of the glory of God and the exact imprint of his nature” (Heb. 1:3).

It seems that being the “image of God” is about reflecting God in some way. Jesus did this perfectly, but humanity has also been given a responsibility to show God to the world—His handiwork, nature, and attributes are displayed in us in a way that they are not displayed in the rest of the creation. (Of course, this image has been tainted by sin, but that comes later in the story.)

In the ancient world, kings would set up an image of themselves as a visual announcement of who was in charge. It reminded the king’s own people and the surrounding nations that this land was under the king’s jurisdiction and authority.

Psalm 8 says that God placed human beings in a privileged position amid the universe He created—it says we are “crowned with glory and honor” and that we have been given dominion over the works of God’s hands (v. 5). It seems that God made people to humbly and graciously mediate His rule on the earth. Human beings stand as a reminder that God is the King of this world.

So rather than trying to identify the image of God with a specific aspect of the human condition, perhaps we should simply acknowledge that God made us to reflect Him to the world. We represent to the world its rightful King and we illustrate His workmanship, attributes, and characteristics.

The Personal God of Genesis 2

Something interesting happens when we move from Genesis 1 into Genesis 2. In chapter 1, God is referred to by the title “Elohim,” which simply means “God.” It’s a lot like referring to a person based on his or her title: “Doctor, Professor, President, King,” etc. But when we get to chapter 2, the name for God changes.

Now He is referred to as “Yahweh Elohim,” which combines the title “God” with a personal name: Yahweh. (For good but complicated reasons, most English translations render Yahweh as the LORD (notice it’s in all caps).)

This is significant because God tends to use His personal name, Yahweh, when He is relating to His people in a personal way. God uses the name Yahweh when He enters into a covenant with His people.

When God makes a covenant, He specifies what His relationship to His people will look like, makes them promises, and often charges them to be obedient in return. The personal name Yahweh is appropriate for this type of interaction.

Genesis 2 is a much more intimate account of the world’s origins than Genesis 1. Whereas Genesis 1 gives a broad overview of how the world was made, Genesis 2 takes that account for granted and tells the story in a much more specific way. It tells the story of humanity—created in God’s own image—and the privileges and responsibilities that God gave them.

We see God doing something unique with humanity. God first formed Adam out of the ground, then bent down and breathed life into his nostrils. This is a much more intimate form of creation than we saw in chapter 1, where God simply spoke the world into existence.

Notice also that God spoke directly with the man in chapter 2. He told Adam about the garden—in particular, He told Adam what he could and could not eat. Right away we see that humanity was made to communicate with God. Even in his perfect state (before sin entered the world), Adam was dependent on revelation from God in order to live in the world that God made.

And then notice that God did not want the man to be alone. This is the first time that God said something was “not good.” He created a “helper fit for Adam.” It’s easy to imagine God enjoying His relationship with Adam and lovingly watching Adam enjoy the perfect companion that God made for him.

While it is important to see the implications for marriage inherent in this passage, we should also see that God did not want man to live in isolation. God solved Adam’s loneliness by creating a wife for him, but keep in mind that Eve was not just a wife—she was another human being.

In other words, God designed human beings to live in relationship with other human beings. This will have major implications when we begin discussing the concept of the church in the New Testament.

Life in the Garden

Genesis 1–2 also gives us an amazing vision of what God originally intended the world to be. After creating the earth and everything in it, God took the time to plant a garden (2:8). God placed people in the midst of this garden and gave them the specific task of “working it and keeping it” (Gen. 2:15).

We sometimes think that work is the product of the fall, a punishment for sin. When humanity sinned, God cursed the ground, and labor became frustrating and painful (Gen. 3:17–19). But God’s original intention for people was that we would be actively involved in caring for the creation. God placed Adam in the garden (keep in mind that a garden is different from a wilderness or jungle in that it is tended, planned, and ordered) and gave him the specific task of working it.

God intended for humanity to have a caring relationship with the surrounding world. God gave people dominion over the creation, placing it under their feet (Gen. 1:28 and Ps. 8:5–8), not so that they could exploit and destroy the earth, but so that they could lovingly care for it as a good creation of God meant to be protected and enjoyed.

It is also fascinating to read the account of Adam naming the animals (2:18–20). Here we get another taste of the interaction between God and humanity in a perfect world. Surely God could have named the animals on His own, but He chose to give them names by working together with Adam. At this early point in the story, it is clear that God’s rule over the earth will be exercised in conjunction with His chief creation, Adam.

We cannot miss the peace, harmony, and perfect beauty described in Genesis 1–2. It gives us a picture of the world as it was meant to be. It is a world that we all long for. But this is only the beginning of the story.

As we will see in the next session (and as we all know from experience), something has gone tragically wrong. But this peaceful picture where everything works in perfect harmony with everything else will reappear. The paradise that we lost will eventually be regained—surpassed even—when Jesus returns to set the world to rights.

Francis Chan is an American preacher. He is the former teaching pastor of Cornerstone Community Church in Simi Valley, California, a church he and his wife started in 1994. He is also the Founder and Chancellor of Eternity Bible College and the author of Crazy Love.

David Platt serves as a pastor in metro Washington, D.C. He is the founder of Radical.

David received his Ph.D. from New Orleans Baptist Theological Seminary and is the author of Don’t Hold Back, Radical, Follow MeCounter CultureSomething Needs to ChangeBefore You Vote, as well as the multiple volumes of the Christ-Centered Exposition Commentary series.

Along with his wife and children, he lives in the Washington, D.C. metro area.

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