God created the heavens and the earth while humans were not yet present. The most important lesson of the biblical stories of the beginnings is a lesson on grace. We will be intrigued about the purpose of the tree of the knowledge of good and evil and about its connection with the tree of life. We will ponder God’s act of creating humans in His image, and out of the dust too. As we study this week, we will understand better the profound meaning of the seventh-day Sabbath. The two Creation texts in Genesis 1-2 contain lessons about God and humanity. This truth also implies that the Genesis Creation story has the same historical veracity as other events of human and biblical history. This fact is very important because it means that our creation marks the beginning of human and biblical history. The book of Genesis and, hence, the whole Bible begins with God’s acts of Creation. Memory Text: “In the beginning God created the heavens and the earth” (Genesis 1:1, NKJV). Doukhan, DHL, ThD, is emeritus professor of Hebrew and Old Testament exegesis in the SDA Theological Seminary, Andrews University. As we follow the various characters across the pages of Genesis, we will discover that - regardless of how different the time, place, culture, and circumstance - often their stories are, in many ways, ours, as well. Meanwhile, the geographical movements of the book - from Eden to Babel, to the Promised Land, to Egypt, to the prospect of the Promised Land - remind us of our nomadic journeys and nurture our hope for the real Promised Land, the new heaven and the new earth. It is also an instruction book with lessons on ethics (Cain, Babel), on faith (Abraham, Jacob), and on the hope and promise of redemption (crushing of the serpent, Promised Land).ĭuring this quarter, we will not only read and study the book of Genesis - we will enjoy its beautiful stories and learn to walk better with the Lord of Creation, the God of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob. But Genesis is also a book with moving human stories of love (Jacob and Rachel), of hatred (Jacob and Esau), of birth (Isaac, Jacob, Jacob’s sons), of death (Sarah, Rachel, Jacob, Joseph), of murder (Cain, Simeon, and Levi), and forgiveness (Esau and Jacob, Joseph and his brothers). With its dramatic stories of miracles (creation, births, rainbow) and judgments (the Flood, Sodom, and Gomorrah) witnessing to God’s holy presence, Genesis is awe-inspiring. Genesis, however, also comforts us with God’s promise of salvation in a world that, in and of itself, offers us nothing but suffering and death. Genesis also explains the Fall that is, why our world is no longer perfect and why we as humans aren’t, as well. Genesis, however, reveals to us our true origin, that we are beings purposely and perfectly made in the image of God in a perfect world. Or, as one physicist put it, we humans are “organized mud,” (which is to some degree true, though for him the laws of nature alone organized it!). Genesis is important because it is the book that, more than any other work, anywhere, helps us understand just who we are as human beings, a truth especially important now, in a day when we humans are deemed as nothing but accidents, chance creations of a purely materialistic universe. Because it is first, and so foundational to all that comes after, Genesis is probably the most quoted or referred to book in the rest of the Scriptures. Genesis gives us the foundation, the base, upon which all the following Scriptures rest. The English word Genesis is derived from the Greek genesis, which means “beginning,” itself derived from the Hebrew bere’shit, “in the beginning” - the first word of the book (hence, the first word of the entire Bible!). Here, in this book, is the world’s only “official” account of our origins. And the book of Genesis is the first story in Scripture of both this creation and the redemption of this creation. All creation - from galaxies hurling across the cosmos in staggering pinwheels of fire and light to the meticulous DNA woven miraculously into the cell to quantum waves - Jesus created and sustains it all. What did John write here? “In the beginning” all things that were made, all things that once didn’t exist, came into existence - by Jesus. In Him was life, and the life was the light of men” (John 1:1-4, NKJV). All things were made through Him, and without Him nothing was made that was made. Writing millennia after the Genesis text itself had been penned by Moses, and reaching back across those ages to the patriarch’s very words, the apostle John reveals Jesus in the Creation account: “In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and the Word was God. Genesis is about Jesus: Jesus our Creator, Jesus our Sustainer, Jesus our Redeemer. Bible Study Guide - 2nd Quarter 2022 Genesis THE BOOK OF THE BEGINNING
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