Gen 1 God made the world from Nothing.
Nothing is a hard word to think about like it is lack off. God spoke
it into being. Note that God did not create Heaven so Heaven must be
outside of the created world.
App Know Heaven is real and outside
the earth and universe
Gen 2 Mist came up from the ground How
plants were growing in the perfect creation. This ended in the fall
2:8 A
“garden” (gan,
Heb.) is a sheltered, protected spot. This garden was named
“Eden,” perhaps meaning “delight.” God created the garden
as a haven where He and man might enjoy the creation together. The
description of the garden contains language similar to that used
to describe the tabernacle of Israel, indicating the presence of
God. The perfect garden contained all that man needed: (1) food
for sustenance (v.
9);
(2) work in caring for the garden (v.
15);
(3) creative leadership in the dominion over the animals (vv.
19, 20);
(4) limitation for developing the moral nature of man through the
forbidden tree (vv.
16, 17);
and (5) the gift of the woman as helper-companion (vv.
18-24).
The location of this garden is believed to have been in the
Mesopotamian area, i.e., modern-day Iraq.
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The tabernacle is a photo pf the
perfect earth?
“God
created the heavens and the earth” (Gen. 1:1). These words form one
of the Bible’s principal assertions about the material world—that
God created it all.
The
first two chapters of Genesis present two complementary accounts of
creation (Ps. 104 and Prov. 8 present two additional accounts).
Chapter 1 pictures God in sublime terms—grand and awesome. The
Hebrew term used for deity in this section (Elohim)
speaks of God’s majesty, sovereignty, and awesome power. With a
mere word, God spoke the entire universe into existence. When He
finished, He called every part of His creation “very good”
(1:31).
Chapter
2, on the other hand, presents a more personal picture of creation.
It focuses on the creation of man and woman—the only beings in
creation who reflect the very image of God. In this section, God’s
personal name (Yahweh, or Lord)
is used rather than His title, “God.” This is because God
personally shaped Adam from the dust of the earth, breathing life
into him, and forming Eve from Adam’s flesh and bone. Moreover, the
section depicts God placing Adam and Eve in a beautiful garden and
interacting with them.
Of
course, these two chapters are not written in terms of modern
science. But neither are they written in what would have passed for
science in ancient times. If the Bible had been written in the
“scientific” language of its day, it would be little more than a
relic today. Had it been written in the scientific language of the
Middle Ages, it would have been a mystery to its first readers and
nonsense to us. Had it been written in the scientific language of our
own day, it would have been unintelligible to prior generations—and
to be sure, a relic in future years.
These
first chapters of Genesis reveal God’s identity as Creator in
language that makes sense to every sort of audience. The chapters
spoke first to a people on the move, at the dawn of Hebrew history.
Over the ages, they have spoken to ancient and medieval peoples. And
today, they speak to people from all backgrounds. The modern person
sometimes wonders why the language is not more precise. Yet these
chapters do not aim at precision—their aim is clarity concerning
one certain truth: God
created the heavens and the earth.
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