Review Importance of Creation, Gen. 1
Unbelief and paganism is always trying to spin divine
viewpoint into its own frame of reference. Human viewpoint is constantly trying
to take the Word of God and just shift it, just twist it and slightly reshape
it into something that is acceptable to rebellious, autonomous man, rather than
dealing with the radical distinction that the Bible presents that God is the
God who created everything from nothing. This is what we see in the first
eleven chapters of Genesis and why they are the battleground. In divine
viewpoint God is the one who interprets for us creation. He tells us how to
understand His creation; we don’t generate it on our own through rationalism of
empiricism.
Origins and the study of origins are important. That
is why it is a battlefield; that is why it needs to be a battlefield in
education. How we view origins affects everything. The origination or beginning
of anything, any organization, any task, is directly related to its purpose and
meaning. So if we want to understand why a church exists we have to go back to
its founding, its origin. Why did Jesus Christ found the church? What is its
purpose? The purpose of any organization is directly related to its origins. So
when God intentionally executed and planned the creation of mankind it was for
a purpose, and He is the one who defines the meaning and purpose for creation,
in contrast to human viewpoint and all the various views of origins that man
has generated. Ultimately in every system man is just the product of time plus
chance if you push it back far enough. And ultimately the meaning for man is
derived from something in creation. For example, in Marxism the ultimate purpose
for man is derived from society itself and how man functions in society as a
worker and his role in relationship to the economy and society. In
existentialism meaning comes from the individual himself. You assign your own
meaning to life, there is no meaning assigned from God; meaning is determined
by what you want life to be. This ultimately is what happens in postmodernism:
meaning is whatever each culture determines the meaning is—there is no
absolute truth, it is relative to a culture. But the Bible says over against
all that is that man is created in the image of God and he has a purpose in
resolving the angelic conflict. So one’s view of origins, then, becomes the
foundation for everything in society. This is why there is such a radical
battle over what is taught in public schools.
We have seen that Genesis presents God as unique in
contrast to all the gods and goddesses of all the other ancient near eastern
religions. In Genesis chapter one the emphasis is on God’s majesty, His
power/omnipotence, that God creates everything. He has the omniscience to
create all of the different life systems on the planet so that everything works
together and is completely integrated. We see His sovereignty, that He is the
ruler over creation. He is the one who defines creation and man’s role in
creation. He stands, nevertheless, completely apart from creation and is the
one who rules creation and oversees the history of mankind. Psalm 89:11, “The
heavens are thine, the earth also is thine: as for the world and the fulness
thereof, thou hast founded them.” When we look at Genesis we see the emphasis
on God as creator, and the first thing we see is that God is distinguished from
the creation—the creator-creature distinction. 1 Chronicles 16:26, “For
all the gods of the people are idols: but the LORD made the heavens.” Nehemiah 9:6, “Thou, even thou,
art LORD alone;
thou hast made heaven, the heaven of heavens, with all their host, the earth,
and all things that are therein, the seas, and all that is therein, and thou
preservest them all; and the host of heaven worshippeth thee.”
We se that God reveals Himself to man. He is not only
the God of Israel but He is the God of all the people, the God who created
everything. He is the one who speaks and everything comes into existence. Psalm
33:6, “By the word of the LORD were the heavens made; and all the host of them by the breath of his
mouth.”
We see that it is God who restores life where there is
death. In Genesis 1:1 we note that there was an original creation, and then in
Genesis 1:2 there is darkness on the face of the deep, and the earth is without
form and void. Of course, this brings into focus a controversy and that is: is
there a gap between Genesis 1:1 and Genesis 1:2? There is an old view, the “old
gap” view. This view has been traced back at least as far back as the second
century AD in the
Targum of Johnathan, which recognizes that there is in Genesis 1:1 and 1:2 a
lapse of time during which the angels are created and there is the fall of
Lucifer. That view is also supported throughout the centuries until we get down
to the 19th century. In the 19th century there was a lot
of pressure from historical geology and from biology, from uniformitarianism.
Uniformitarianism is the underlying idea that all processes on the earth follow
a uniform decay process, and claims that if you can understand what that
process is today then you can extrapolate back into the past to see how old the
earth is. Historical geology in the 19th century was projecting an
age of the earth of about 50-60,000 years. In the early 19th century
some theologians came along and were trying to somehow fit the Bible into these
new discoveries in science, so they hi-jacked this old gap view and decided
that instead of having the angels and the fall of Lucifer in this period
between Genesis 1:1 and 1:2 they would ram, cram, and jamb all of the
historical ages in there so that the Bible could still fit with modern science
and the earth can be 50-60,000 years old. It is one thing to make the earth 50-60,000
years old but to come up with three or four billion years as is done today, or
ten billion years, is another story. This was all false. It was based on false
exegesis and a desire to make the Bible compatible with human viewpoint. So
once again we see how human viewpoint seeks to absorb the Bible and to put a
spin on the Bible so there is not a radical distinction between what the Bible
says and what is being taught in the secular classroom.
One of the basic problems with the
above view is that if you put all of the geological ages into this period
between Genesis 1:1 and 1:2 it results in a big problem, because you have a lot
of dead things. All the fossils that are found out there are dead things. The
Bible teaches in 1 Corinthians 15 that death came by Adam. The context isn’t
spiritual death; it is physical death because the context is talking about
physical, bodily resurrection. Obviously you can’t have physical death, which
is the result of Adam’s sin in all of creation until after Genesis 3. So you
can’t have dead things coming in between 1:1 and 1:2 because there hasn’t been
a fall yet. So this is a direct attack on the necessity of the cross. It is
also a desire to assimilate to the need to find lots and lots and lots of time.
The only reason people are coming up with time is because they want to somehow
assimilate all the dating mechanisms that modern biology, geology and physics
can come up with. We have seen that this is all built on the false assumption
of uniformitarianism, which is how they analyze everything with their dating
systems. We have to quit letting science and modern archaeology dictate how we
interpret the Scripture.
The old gap theory is often
challenged because people don’t like the new gap view, but the old gap view
doesn’t really have any major problems.