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Youngs
Literal Translation
King
James Version
The 1599
Geneva
Study Bible
American Standard ASV-1901
Historical Book
Flavius Josephus
Philip Schaff
History
of the
Christian Church
8 Vol.
Keil & Delitzsch
OT Commentary
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What We Believe
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Sola Scriptura: The
Scripture Alone is the Standard
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Glory of God Alone
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Work Alone are We Saved
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"It is enough for good
people to do nothing, for evil people to succeed."
12 Little Things Every Filipino Can Do To Help Our Country
by Alexander L. Lacson
Keil & Delitzsch
Commentary on the Old Testament
(Genesis 1)
Genesis 1 -
The Creation of the World - Genesis 1:1-2:3
The account of the creation, its commencement,
progress, and completion, bears the marks, both in form and substance, of
a historical document in which it is intended that we should accept as
actual truth, not only the assertion that God created the heavens, and the
earth, and all that lives and moves in the world, but also the description
of the creation itself in all its several stages. If we look merely at the
form of this document, its place at the beginning of the book of
Genesis is sufficient to warrant the expectation that it will give us
history, and not fiction, or human speculation. As the development of the
human family has been from the first a historical fact, and as man really
occupies that place in the world which this record assigns him, the
creation of man, as well as that of the earth on which, and the heaven for
which, he is to live, must also be a work of God, i.e., a fact of
objective truth and reality. The grand simplicity of the account is in
perfect harmony with the fact. “The whole narrative is sober, definite,
clear, and concrete. The historical events described contain a rich
treasury of speculative thoughts and poetical glory; but they themselves
are free from the influence of human invention and human philosophizing” (Delitzsch).
This is also true of the arrangement of the whole. The work of creation
does not fall, as Herder and others maintain, into two triads of
days, with the work of the second answering to that of the first. For
although the creation of the light on the first day seems to correspond to
that of the light-bearing stars on the fourth, there is no reality in the
parallelism which some discover between the second and third days on the
one hand, and the third and fourth on the other. On the second day the
firmament or atmosphere is formed; on the fifth, the fish and fowl. On the
third, after the sea and land are separated, the plants are formed; on the
sixth, the animals of the dry land and man. Now, if the creation of the
fowls which fill the air answers to that of the firmament, the formation
of the fish as the inhabitants of the waters ought to be assigned to the
sixth day, and not to the fifth, as being parallel to the creation of the
seas. The creation of the fish and fowl on the same day is an evident
proof that a parallelism between the first three days of creation and the
last three is not intended, and does not exist. Moreover, if the division
of the work of creation into so many days had been the result of human
reflection; the creation of man, who was appointed lord of the earth,
would certainly not have been assigned to the same day as that of the
beasts and reptiles, but would have been kept distinct from the creation
of the beasts, and allotted to the seventh day, in which the creation was
completed - a meaning which Richers and Keerl have actually
tried to force upon the text of the Bible. In the different acts of
creation we perceive indeed an evident progress from the general to the
particular, from the lower to the higher orders of creatures, or rather a
steady advance towards more and more concrete forms. But on the fourth day
this progress is interrupted in a way which we cannot explain. In the
transition from the creation of the plants to that of sun, moon, and
stars, it is impossible to discover either a “well-arranged and constant
progress,” or “a genetic advance,” since the stars are not intermediate
links between plants and animals, and, in fact, have no place at all in
the scale of earthly creatures.
If we pass on to the contents of our account of
the creation, they differ as widely from all other cosmogonies as truth
from fiction. Those of heathen nations are either hylozoistical, deducing
the origin of life and living beings from some primeval matter; or
pantheistical, regarding the whole world as emanating from a common divine
substance; or mythological, tracing both gods and men to a chaos or
world-egg. They do not even rise to the notion of a creation, much less to
the knowledge of an almighty God, as the Creator of all things.
(Note: According to Berosus and Syncellus,
the Chaldean myth represents the “All” as consisting of darkness and
water, filled with monstrous creatures, and ruled by a woman, Markaya,
or
̔Ομόρωκα
(? Ocean). Bel divided the darkness, and cut the woman into two halves,
of which he formed the heaven and the earth; he then cut off his own
head, and from the drops of blood men were formed. - According to the
Phoenician myth of Sanchuniathon, the beginning of the All was a
movement of dark air, and a dark, turbid chaos. By the union of the
spirit with the All,
Μώτ,
i.e., slime, was formed, from which every seed of creation and the
universe was developed; and the heavens were made in the form of an egg,
from which the sun and moon, the stars and constellations, sprang. By
the heating of the earth and sea there arose winds, clouds and rain,
lightning and thunder, the roaring of which wakened up sensitive beings,
so that living creatures of both sexes moved in the waters and upon the
earth. In another passage Sanchuniathon represents
Κολπία
(probably
פִּיח
קֹול,
the moaning of the wind) and his wife
Βάαυ
(bohu) as producing
Αὶών
and
πρωτόγονος, two
mortal men, from whom sprang
Γένος
and
Γενεά, the
inhabitants of Phoenicia. - It is well known from Hesiod's theogony
how the Grecian myth represents the gods as coming into existence at the
same time as the world. The numerous inventions of the Indians, again,
all agree in this, that they picture the origin of the world as an
emanation from the absolute, through Brahma's thinking, or through the
contemplation of a primeval being called Tad (it). - Buddhism
also acknowledges no God as creator of the world, teaches no creation,
but simply describes the origin of the world and the beings that inhabit
it as the necessary consequence of former acts performed by these beings
themselves.)
Even in the Etruscan and Persian myths, which
correspond so remarkably to the biblical account that they must have been
derived from it, the successive acts of creation are arranged according to
the suggestions of human probability and adaptation.
(Note: According to the Etruscan saga, which
Suidas quotes from a historian, who was a “ παῤαὐτοῖς
(the Tyrrhenians)
ἔμπειρος
ἀνήρ
(therefore not a native),” God created the world in six periods of one
thousand years each: in the first, the heavens and the earth; in the
second, the firmament; in the third, the sea and other waters of the
earth; in the fourth, sun moon, and stars; in the fifth, the beasts of
the air, the water, and the land; in the sixth, men. The world will last
twelve thousand years, the human race six thousand. - According to the
saga of the Zend in Avesta, the supreme Being Ormuzd created the visible
world by his word in six periods or thousands of years: (1) the heaven,
with the stars; (2) the water on the earth, with the clouds; (3) the
earth, with the mountain Alborj and the other mountains; (4) the trees;
(5) the beasts, which sprang from the primeval beast; (6) men, the first
of whom was Kajomorts. Every one of these separate creations is
celebrated by a festival. The world will last twelve thousand years.)
In contrast with all these mythical inventions, the
biblical account shines out in the clear light of truth, and proves itself
by its contents to be an integral part of the revealed history, of which
it is accepted as the pedestal throughout the whole of the sacred
Scriptures. This is not the case with the Old Testament only; but in the
New Testament also it is accepted and taught by Christ and the apostles as
the basis of the divine revelation. The select only a few from the many
passages of the Old and New Testaments, in which God is referred to as the
Creator of the heavens and the earth, and the almighty operations of the
living God in the world are based upon the fact of its creation: In
Exo_20:9-11;
Exo_31:12-17,
the command to keep the Sabbath is founded upon the fact that God rested
on the seventh day, when the work of creation was complete; and in
Psa_8:1-9 and
104, the creation is depicted as a work of divine omnipotence in close
adherence to the narrative before us. From the creation of man, as
described in Gen_1:27
and Gen_2:24,
Christ demonstrates the indissoluble character of marriage as a divine
ordinance (Mat_19:4-6);
Peter speaks of the earth as standing out of the water and in the water by
the word of God (2Pe_3:5);
and the author of the Epistle to the Hebrews, “starting from
Gen_2:2,
describes it as the motive principle of all history, that the Sabbath of
God is to become the Sabbath of the creature” (Delitzsch).
The biblical account of the creation can also vindicate
its claim to be true and actual history, in the presence of the doctrines
of philosophy and the established results of natural science. So long,
indeed, as philosophy undertakes to construct the universe from general
ideas, it will be utterly unable to comprehend the creation; but ideas
will never explain the existence of things. Creation is an act of the
personal God, not a process of nature, the development of which can be
traced to the laws of birth and decay that prevail in the created world.
But the work of God, as described in the history of creation, is in
perfect harmony with the correct notions of divine omnipotence, wisdom and
goodness. The assertion, so frequently made, that the course of the
creation takes its form from the Hebrew week, which was already in
existence, and the idea of God's resting on the seventh day, from the
institution of the Hebrew Sabbath, is entirely without foundation. There
is no allusion in Gen_2:2-3
to the Sabbath of the Israelites; and the week of seven days is older than
the Sabbath of the Jewish covenant. Natural research, again, will never
explain the origin of the universe, or even of the earth; for the creation
lies beyond the limits of the territory within its reach. By all modest
naturalists, therefore, it is assumed that the origin of matter, or of the
original material of the world, was due to an act of divine creation. But
there is no firm ground for the conclusion which they draw, on the basis
of this assumption, with regard to the formation or development of the
world from its first chaotic condition into a fit abode for man. All the
theories which have been adopted, from Descartes to the present
day, are not the simple and well-established inductions of natural science
founded upon careful observation, but combinations of partial discoveries
empirically made, with speculative ideas of very questionable worth. The
periods of creation, which modern geology maintains with such confidence,
that not a few theologians have accepted them as undoubted and sought to
bring them into harmony with the scriptural account of the creation, if
not to deduce them from the Bible itself, are inferences partly from the
successive strata which compose the crust of the earth, and partly from
the various fossil remains of plants and animals to be found in those
strata. The former are regarded as proofs of successive formation; and
from the difference between the plants and animals found in a fossil state
and those in existence now, the conclusion is drawn, that their creation
must have preceded the present formation, which either accompanied or was
closed by the advent of man. But it is not difficult to see that the
former of these conclusions could only be regarded as fully established,
if the process by which the different strata were formed were clearly and
fully known, or if the different formations were always found lying in the
same order, and could be readily distinguished from one another. But with
regard to the origin of the different species of rock, geologists, as is
well known, are divided into two contending schools: the Neptunists, who
attribute all the mountain formations to deposit in water; and the
Plutonists, who trace all the non-fossiliferous rocks to the action of
heat. According to the Neptunists, the crystalline rocks are the earliest
or primary formations; according to the Plutonists, the granite burst
through the transition and stratified rocks, and were driven up from
within the earth, so that they are of later date. But neither theory is
sufficient to account in this mechanical way for all the phenomena
connected with the relative position of the rocks; consequently, a third
theory, which supposes the rocks to be the result of chemical processes,
is steadily gaining ground. Now if the rocks, both crystalline and
stratified, were formed, not in any mechanical way, but by chemical
processes, in which, besides fire and water, electricity, galvanism,
magnetism, and possibly other forces at present unknown to physical
science were at work; the different formations may have been produced
contemporaneously and laid one upon another. Till natural science has
advanced beyond mere opinion and conjecture, with regard to the mode in
which the rocks were formed and their positions determined; there can be
no ground for assuming that conclusions drawn from the successive order of
the various strata, with regard to the periods of their formation, must of
necessity be true. This is the more apparent, when we consider, on the one
hand, that even the principal formations (the primary, transitional,
stratified, and tertiary), not to mention the subdivisions of which each
of these is composed, do not always occur in the order laid down in the
system, but in not a few instances the order is reversed, crystalline
primary rocks lying upon transitional, stratified, and tertiary formations
(granite, syenite, gneiss, etc., above both Jura-limestone and chalk);
and, on the other hand, that not only do the different leading formations
and their various subdivisions frequently shade off into one another so
imperceptibly, that no boundary line can be drawn between them and the
species distinguished by oryctognosis are not sharply and clearly
defined in nature, but that, instead of surrounding the entire globe, they
are all met with in certain localities only, whilst whole series of
intermediate links are frequently missing, the tertiary formations
especially being universally admitted to be only partial.
The second of these conclusions also stands or falls
with the assumptions on which they are founded, viz., with the three
propositions: (1) that each of the fossiliferous formations contains an
order of plants and animals peculiar to itself; (2) that these are so
totally different from the existing plants and animals, that the latter
could not have sprung from them; (3) that no fossil remains of man exist
of the same antiquity as the fossil remains of animals. Not one of these
can be regarded as an established truth, or as the unanimously accepted
result of geognosis. The assertion so often made as an established fact,
that the transition rocks contain none but fossils of the lower orders of
plants and animals, that mammalia are first met with in the Trias, Jura,
and chalk formations, and warm-blooded animals in the tertiary rocks, has
not been confirmed by continued geognostic researches, but is more and
more regarded as untenable. Even the frequently expressed opinion, that in
the different forms of plants and animals of the successive rocks there is
a gradual and to a certain extent progressive development of the animal
and vegetable world, has not commanded universal acceptance. Numerous
instances are known, in which the remains of one and the same species
occur not only in two, but in several successive formations, and there are
some types that occur in nearly all. And the widely spread notion, that
the fossil types are altogether different from the existing families of
plants and animals, is one of the unscientific exaggerations of actual
facts. All the fossil plants and animals can be arranged in the orders and
classes of the existing flora and fauna. Even with regard to the genera
there is no essential difference, although many of the existing types are
far inferior in size to the forms of the old world. It is only the species
that can be shown to differ, either entirely or in the vast majority of
cases, from species in existence now. But even if all the species
differed, which can by no means be proved, this would be no valid evidence
that the existing plants and animals had not sprung from those that have
passed away, so long as natural science is unable to obtain any clear
insight into the origin and formation of species, and the question as to
the extinction of a species or its transition into another has met with no
satisfactory solution. Lastly, even now the occurrence of fossil human
bones among those of animals that perished at least before the historic
age, can no longer be disputed, although Central Asia, the cradle of the
human race, has not yet been thoroughly explored by palaeontologists.
If then the premises from which the geological periods
have been deduced are of such a nature that not one of them is firmly
established, the different theories as to the formation of the earth also
rest upon two questionable assumptions, viz., (1) that the immediate
working of God in the creation was restricted to the production of the
chaotic matter, and that the formation of this primary matter into a world
peopled by innumerable organisms and living beings proceeded according to
the laws of nature, which have been discovered by science as in force in
the existing world; and (2) that all the changes, which the world and its
inhabitants have undergone since the creation was finished, may be
measured by the standard of changes observed in modern times, and still
occurring from time to time. But the Bible actually mentions two events of
the primeval age, whose effect upon the form of the earth and the animal
and vegetable world no natural science can explain. We refer to the curse
pronounced upon the earth in consequence of the fall of the progenitors of
our race, by which even the animal world was made subject to
φθοπά
(Gen_3:17,
and Rom_8:20);
and the flood, by which the earth was submerged even to the tops of the
highest mountains, and all the living beings on the dry land perished,
with the exception of those preserved by Noah in the ark. Hence, even if
geological doctrines do contradict the account of the creation contained
in Genesis, they cannot shake the credibility of the Scriptures.
But if the biblical account of the creation has full
claim to be regarded as historical truth, the question arises, whence it
was obtained. The opinion that the Israelites drew it from the cosmogony
of this or the other ancient people, and altered it according to their own
religious ideas, will need no further refutation, after what we have said
respecting the cosmogonies of other nations. Whence then did Israel obtain
a pure knowledge of God, such as we cannot find in any heathen nation, or
in the most celebrated of the wise men of antiquity, if not from divine
revelation? This is the source from which the biblical account of the
creation springs. God revealed it to men - not first to Moses or Abraham,
but undoubtedly to the first men, since without this revelation they could
not have understood either their relation to God or their true position in
the world. The account contained in Genesis does not lie, as Hoffmann
says, “within that sphere which was open to man through his historical
nature, so that it may be regarded as the utterance of the knowledge
possessed by the first man of things which preceded his own existence, and
which he might possess, without needing any special revelation, if only
the present condition of the world lay clear and transparent before him.”
By simple intuition the first man might discern what nature had effected,
viz., the existing condition of the world, and possibly also its
causality, but not the fact that it was created in six days, or the
successive acts of creation, and the sanctification of the seventh day.
Our record contains not merely religious truth transformed into history,
but the true and actual history of a work of God, which preceded the
existence of man, and to which he owes his existence. Of this work he
could only have obtained his knowledge through divine revelation, by the
direct instruction of God. Nor could he have obtained it by means of a
vision. The seven days' works are not so many “prophetico-historical
tableaux,” which were spread before the mental eye of the seer, whether of
the historian or the first man. The account before us does not contain the
slightest marks of a vision, is no picture of creation, in which every
line betrays the pencil of a painter rather than the pen of a historian,
but is obviously a historical narrative, which we could no more transform
into a vision than the account of paradise or of the fall. As God revealed
Himself to the first man not in visions, but by coming to him in a visible
form, teaching him His will, and then after his fall announcing the
punishment ( Gen_2:16-17;
Gen_3:9.);
as He talked with Moses “face to face, as a man with his friend,” “mouth
to mouth,” not in vision or dream: so does the written account of the Old
Testament revelation commence, not with visions, but with actual history.
The manner in which God instructed the first men with reference to the
creation must be judged according to the intercourse carried on by Him, as
Creator and Father, with these His creatures and children. What God
revealed to them upon this subject, they transmitted to their children and
descendants, together with everything of significance and worth that they
had experienced and discovered for themselves. This tradition was kept in
faithful remembrance by the family of the godly; and even in the confusion
of tongues it was not changed in its substance, but simply transferred
into the new form of the language spoken by the Semitic tribes, and thus
handed down from generation to generation along with the knowledge and
worship of the true God, until it became through Abraham the spiritual
inheritance of the chosen race. Nothing certain can be decided as to the
period when it was committed to writing; probably some time before Moses,
who inserted it as a written record in the Thorah of Israel.
Gen 1:1 -
“In the beginning God created the heaven and the
earth.” - Heaven and earth have not existed from all eternity, but had
a beginning; nor did they arise by emanation from an absolute substance,
but were created by God. This sentence, which stands at the head of the
records of revelation, is not a mere heading, nor a summary of the history
of the creation, but a declaration of the primeval act of God, by which
the universe was called into being. That this verse is not a heading
merely, is evident from the fact that the following account of the course
of the creation commences with w (and), which connects the
different acts of creation with the fact expressed in
Gen_1:1, as
the primary foundation upon which they rest.
בְּרשִׁיח
(in the beginning) is used absolutely, like
ἐν
ἀρχῇ
in Joh_1:1,
and
מֵרֵאשִׁיח in
Isa_46:10. The following clause cannot be
treated as subordinate, either by rendering it, “in the beginning when God
created ..., the earth was,” etc., or “in the beginning when God
created...(but the earth was then a chaos, etc.), God said, Let there be
light” (Ewald and Bunsen). The first is opposed to the
grammar of the language, which would require
Gen_1:2 to
commence with
הָאָרֶץ
וַתְּהִי;
the second to the simplicity of style which pervades the whole chapter,
and to which so involved a sentence would be intolerable, apart altogether
from the fact that this construction is invented for the simple purpose of
getting rid of the doctrine of a creatio ex nihilo, which is so
repulsive to modern Pantheism.
רֵאשִׁיח
in itself is a relative notion, indicating the commencement of a series of
things or events; but here the context gives it the meaning of the very
first beginning, the commencement of the world, when time itself began.
The statement, that in the beginning God created the heaven and the earth,
not only precludes the idea of the eternity of the world a parte ante,
but shows that the creation of the heaven and the earth was the actual
beginning of all things. The verb
בָּרָא,
indeed, to judge from its use in
Jos_17:15,
Jos_17:18,
where it occurs in the Piel (to hew out), means literally “to cut,
or new,” but in Kal it always means to create, and is only
applied to a divine creation, the production of that which had no
existence before. It is never joined with an accusative of the material,
although it does not exclude a pre-existent material unconditionally, but
is used for the creation of man (Gen_1:27;
Gen_5:1-2),
and of everything new that God creates, whether in the kingdom of nature (Num_16:30)
or of that of grace (Exo_34:10;
Psa_51:10,
etc.). In this verse, however, the existence of any primeval material is
precluded by the object created: “the heaven and the earth.” This
expression is frequently employed to denote the world, or universe, for
which there was no single word in the Hebrew language; the universe
consisting of a twofold whole, and the distinction between heaven and
earth being essentially connected with the notion of the world, the
fundamental condition of its historical development (vid.,
Gen_14:19,
Gen_14:22;
Exo_31:17).
In the earthly creation this division is repeated in the distinction
between spirit and nature; and in man, as the microcosm, in that between
spirit and body. Through sin this distinction was changed into an actual
opposition between heaven and earth, flesh and spirit; but with the
complete removal of sin, this opposition will cease again, though the
distinction between heaven and earth, spirit and body, will remain, in
such a way, however, that the earthly and corporeal will be completely
pervaded by the heavenly and spiritual, the new Jerusalem coming down from
heaven to earth, and the earthly body being transfigured into a spiritual
body (Rev_21:1-2;
1Co_15:35.).
Hence, if in the beginning God created the heaven and the earth, “there is
nothing belonging to the composition of the universe, either in material
or form, which had an existence out of God prior to this divine act in the
beginning” (Delitzsch). This is also shown in the connection
between our verse and the one which follows: “and the earth was without
form and void,” not before, but when, or after God created it. From
this it is evident that the void and formless state of the earth was not
uncreated, or without beginning. At the same time it is obvious from the
creative acts which follow (vv. 3-18), that the heaven and earth, as God
created them in the beginning, were not the well-ordered universe, but the
world in its elementary form; just as Euripides applies the
expression
οὐρανὸς
καὶ
γαῖα
to the undivided mass (οπφὴμία),
which was afterwards formed into heaven and earth.
Gen 1:2-5 -
The First Day. - Though treating of the creation of the
heaven and the earth, the writer, both here and in what follows, describes
with minuteness the original condition and progressive formation of the
earth alone, and says nothing more respecting the heaven than is actually
requisite in order to show its connection with the earth. He is writing
for inhabitants of the earth, and for religious ends; not to gratify
curiosity, but to strengthen faith in God, the Creator of the universe.
What is said in Gen_1:2
of the chaotic condition of the earth, is equally applicable to the
heaven, “for the heaven proceeds from the same chaos as the earth.”
“And the earth was (not became) waste and
void.” The alliterative nouns
tohu vabohu,
the etymology of which is lost, signify waste and empty (barren), but not
laying waste and desolating. Whenever they are used together in other
places (Isa_34:11;
Jer_4:23),
they are taken from this passage; but
tohu
alone is frequently employed as synonymous with
אַיִך,
non-existence, and
הֶבֶל,
nothingness (Isa_40:17,
Isa_40:23;
Isa_49:4).
The coming earth was at first waste and desolate, a formless, lifeless
mass, rudis indigestaque moles,
ὕληἄμορφος
(Wis. 11:17) or
χάος.
“And darkness was upon the face of the deep.”
תְּהוֹם,
from
הוּם, to roar, to rage, denotes the raging waters,
the roaring waves (Psa_42:7)
or flood (Exo_15:5;
Deu_8:7);
and hence the depths of the sea (Job_28:14;
Job_38:16),
and even the abyss of the earth (Psa_71:20).
As an old traditional word, it is construed like a proper name without an
article (Ewald, Gramm.). The chaotic mass in which the earth and
the firmament were still undistinguished, unformed, and as it were unborn,
was a heaving deep, an abyss of waters (ἄβυσσος,
lxx), and this deep was wrapped in darkness. But it was in process of
formation, for the Spirit of God moved upon the waters,
רוּחַ
(breath) denotes wind and spirit, like
πνεῦνα
from
πνέω.
Ruach Elohim
is not a breath of wind caused by God (Theodoret, etc.), for the
verb does not suit this meaning, but the creative Spirit of God, the
principle of all life (Psa_33:6;
Psa_104:30),
which worked upon the formless, lifeless mass, separating, quickening, and
preparing the living forms, which were called into being by the creative
words that followed.
רחף
in the Piel is applied to the hovering and brooding of a bird over
its young, to warm them, and develop their vital powers (Deu_32:11).
In such a way as this the Spirit of God moved upon the deep, which had
received at its creation the germs of all life, to fill them with vital
energy by His breath of life. The three statements in our verse are
parallel; the substantive and participial construction of the second and
third clauses rests upon the
והיחה
of the first. All three describe the condition of the earth immediately
after the creation of the universe. This suffices to prove that the
theosophic speculation of those who “make a gap between the first two
verses, and fill it with a wild horde of evil spirits and their demoniacal
works, is an arbitrary interpolation” (Ziegler).
Gen_1:3
The word of God then went forth to the primary material
of the world, now filled with creative powers of vitality, to call into
being, out of the germs of organization and life which it contained, and
in the order pre-ordained by His wisdom, those creatures of the world,
which proclaim, as they live and move, the glory of their Creator ( Psa_8:1-9).
The work of creation commences with the words, “and God said.” The
words which God speaks are existing things. “He speaks, and it is done; He
commands, and it stands fast.” These words are deeds of the essential
Word, the
λόγος,
by which “all things were made.” Speaking is the revelation of thought;
the creation, the realization of the thoughts of God, a freely
accomplished act of the absolute Spirit, and not an emanation of creatures
from the divine essence. The first thing created by the divine Word was “light,”
the elementary light, or light-material, in distinction from the “lights,”
or light-bearers, bodies of light, as the sun, moon, and stars, created on
the fourth day, are called. It is now a generally accepted truth of
natural science, that the light does not spring from the sun and stars,
but that the sun itself is a dark body, and the light proceeds from an
atmosphere which surrounds it. Light was the first thing called forth, and
separated from the dark chaos by the creative mandate, “Let there be,”
- the first radiation of the life breathed into it by the Spirit of God,
inasmuch as it is the fundamental condition of all organic life in the
world, and without light and the warmth which flows from it no plant or
animal could thrive.
Gen_1:4
The expression in
Gen_1:4, “God
saw the light that it was good,” for “God saw that the light was
good,” according to a frequently recurring antiptosis (cf.
Gen_6:2;
Gen_12:14;
Gen_13:10),
is not an anthropomorphism at variance with enlightened thoughts of God;
for man's seeing has its type in God's, and God's seeing is not a mere
expression of the delight of the eye or of pleasure in His work, but is of
the deepest significance to every created thing, being the seal of the
perfection which God has impressed upon it, and by which its continuance
before God and through God is determined. The creation of light, however,
was no annihilation of darkness, no transformation of the dark material of
the world into pure light, but a separation of the light from the primary
matter, a separation which established and determined that interchange of
light and darkness, which produces the distinction between day and night.
Gen_1:5
Hence it is said in
Gen_1:5, “God
called the light Day, and the darkness Night;” for, as Augustine
observes, “all light is not day, nor all darkness night; but light and
darkness alternating in a regular order constitute day and night.” None
but superficial thinkers can take offence at the idea of created things
receiving names from God. The name of a thing is the expression of its
nature. If the name be given by man, it fixes in a word the impression
which it makes upon the human mind; but when given by God, it expresses
the reality, what the thing is in God's creation, and the place assigned
it there by the side of other things.
“Thus evening was and morning was one day.”
אֶחָד
(one), like
εἷς
and unus, is used at the commencement of a numerical series for the
ordinal primus (cf. Gen_2:11;
Gen_4:19;
Gen_8:5,
Gen_8:15).
Like the numbers of the days which follow, it is without the article, to
show that the different days arose from the constant recurrence of evening
and morning. It is not till the sixth and last day that the article is
employed (Gen_1:31),
to indicate the termination of the work of creation upon that day. It is
to be observed, that the days of creation are bounded by the coming of
evening and morning. The first day did not consist of the primeval
darkness and the origination of light, but was formed after the creation
of the light by the first interchange of evening and morning. The first
evening was not the gloom, which possibly preceded the full burst of light
as it came forth from the primary darkness, and intervened between the
darkness and full, broad daylight. It was not till after the light had
been created, and the separation of the light from the darkness had taken
place, that evening came, and after the evening the morning; and this
coming of evening (lit., the obscure) and morning (the breaking) formed
one, or the first day. It follows from this, that the days of creation are
not reckoned from evening to evening, but from morning to morning. The
first day does not fully terminate till the light returns after the
darkness of night; it is not till the break of the new morning that the
first interchange of light and darkness is completed, and a
ἡερονύκτιον
has passed. The rendering, “out of evening and morning there came one
day,” is at variance with grammar, as well as with the actual fact. With
grammar, because such a thought would require 'echaad
אֶחָד
לְיוֹם;
and with fact, because the time from evening to morning does not
constitute a day, but the close of a day. The first day commenced at the
moment when God caused the light to break forth from the darkness; but
this light did not become a day, until the evening had come, and the
darkness which set in with the evening had given place the next morning to
the break of day. Again, neither the words
ערב
ויהי
בקר
ויהי,
nor the expression
בקר
ערב,
evening-morning (= day), in
Dan_8:14, corresponds to the Greek
νυχθη̈́̀ερον,
for morning is not equivalent to day, nor evening to night. The reckoning
of days from evening to evening in the Mosaic law (Lev_23:32),
and by many ancient tribes (the pre-Mohammedan Arabs, the Athenians, Gauls,
and Germans), arose not from the days of creation, but from the custom of
regulating seasons by the changes of the moon. But if the days of creation
are regulated by the recurring interchange of light and darkness, they
must be regarded not as periods of time of incalculable duration, of years
or thousands of years, but as simple earthly days. It is true the morning
and evening of the first three days were not produced by the rising and
setting of the sun, since the sun was not yet created; but the constantly
recurring interchange of light and darkness, which produced day and night
upon the earth, cannot for a moment be understood as denoting that the
light called forth from the darkness of chaos returned to that darkness
again, and thus periodically burst forth and disappeared. The only way in
which we can represent it to ourselves, is by supposing that the light
called forth by the creative mandate, “Let there be,” was separated from
the dark mass of the earth, and concentrated outside or above the globe,
so that the interchange of light and darkness took place as soon as the
dark chaotic mass began to rotate, and to assume in the process of
creation the form of a spherical body. The time occupied in the first
rotations of the earth upon its axis cannot, indeed, be measured by our
hour-glass; but even if they were slower at first, and did not attain
their present velocity till the completion of our solar system, this would
make no essential difference between the first three days and the last
three, which were regulated by the rising and setting of the sun.
(Note: Exegesis must insist upon this, and not allow
itself to alter the plain sense of the words of the Bible, from
irrelevant and untimely regard to the so-called certain inductions of
natural science. Irrelevant we call such considerations, as make
interpretation dependent upon natural science, because the creation lies
outside the limits of empirical and speculative research, and, as an act
of the omnipotent God, belongs rather to the sphere of miracles and
mysteries, which can only be received by faith ( Heb_11:3);
and untimely, because natural science has supplied no certain
conclusions as to the origin of the earth, and geology especially, even
at the present time, is in a chaotic state of fermentation, the issue of
which it is impossible to foresee.)
Gen 1:6-8 -
The Second Day. - When the light had been separated
from the darkness, and day and night had been created, there followed upon
a second fiat of the Creator, the division of the chaotic mass of waters
through the formation of the firmament, which was placed as a wall of
separation ( מַבְדִּיל)
in the midst of the waters, and divided them into upper and lower waters.
רָקִיעַ
.s, from
רָקַע
to stretch, spread out, then beat or tread out, means expansum, the
spreading out of the air, which surrounds the earth as an atmosphere.
According to optical appearance, it is described as a carpet spread out
above the earth (Psa_54:2),
a curtain (Isa_40:22),
a transparent work of sapphire (Exo_24:10),
or a molten looking-glass (Job_37:18);
but there is nothing in these poetical similes to warrant the idea that
the heavens were regarded as a solid mass, a
σιδήρεον,
or
χάλκεον or
πολύχαλκον,
such as Greek poets describe. The
רָקִיעַ
(rendered Veste by Luther, after the
στερέωα
of the lxx and firmamentum of the Vulgate) is called heaven
in Gen_1:8,
i.e., the vault of heaven, which stretches out above the earth. The waters
under the firmament are the waters upon the globe itself; those
above are not ethereal waters
(Note: There is no proof of the existence of such
“ethereal waters” to be found in such passages as
Rev_4:6;
Rev_15:2;
Rev_22:1;
for what the holy seer there beholds before the throne as “a sea of
glass like unto crystal mingled with fire,” and “a river of living
water, clear as crystal,” flowing from the throne of God into the
streets of the heavenly Jerusalem, are wide as the poles from any fluid
or material substance from which the stars were made upon the fourth
day. Of such a fluid the Scriptures know quite as little, as of the
nebular theory of La Place, which, notwithstanding the bright
spots in Mars and the inferior density of Jupiter, Saturn, and other
planets, is still enveloped in a mist which no astronomy will ever
disperse. If the waters above the firmament were the elementary matter
of which the stars were made, the waters beneath must be the elementary
matter of which the earth was formed; for the waters were one and the
same before the creation of the firmament.) But the earth was not formed
from the waters beneath; on the contrary, these waters were merely
spread upon the earth and then gathered together into one place, and
this place is called Sea. The earth, which appeared as dry land after
the accumulation of the waters in the sea, was created in the beginning
along with the heavens; but until the separation of land and water on
the third day, it was so completely enveloped in water, that nothing
could be seen but “the deep,” or “the waters” (Gen_1:2).
If, therefore, in the course of the work of creation, the heaven with
its stars, and the earth with its vegetation and living creatures, came
forth from this deep, or, to speak more correctly, if they appeared as
well-ordered, and in a certain sense as finished worlds; it would be a
complete misunderstanding of the account of the creation to suppose it
to teach, that the water formed the elementary matter, out of which the
heaven and the earth were made with all their hosts. Had this been the
meaning of the writer, he would have mentioned water as the first
creation, and not the heaven and the earth. How irreconcilable the idea
of the waters above the firmament being ethereal waters is with the
biblical representation of the opening of the windows of heaven when it
rains, is evident from the way in which Keerl, the latest
supporter of this theory, sets aside this difficulty, viz., by the bold
assertion, that the mass of water which came through the windows of
heaven at the flood was different from the rain which falls from the
clouds; in direct opposition to the text of the Scriptures, which speaks
of it not merely as rain (Gen_7:12),
but as the water of the clouds. Vid.,
Gen_9:12.,
where it is said that when God brings a cloud over the earth, He will
set the rainbow in the cloud, as a sign that the water (of the clouds
collected above the earth) shall not become a flood to destroy the earth
again.)
beyond the limits of the terrestrial atmosphere, but
the waters which float in the atmosphere, and are separated by it from
those upon the earth, the waters which accumulate in clouds, and then
bursting these their bottles, pour down as rain upon the earth. For,
according to the Old Testament representation, whenever it rains heavily,
the doors or windows of heaven are opened ( Gen_7:11-12;
Psa_78:23,
cf. 2Ki_7:2,
2Ki_7:19;
Isa_24:18).
It is in (or with) the upper waters that God layeth the beams of His
chambers, from which He watereth the hills (Psa_104:13),
and the clouds are His tabernacle (Job_36:29).
If, therefore, according to this conception, looking from an earthly point
of view, the mass of water which flows upon the earth in showers of rain
is shut up in heaven (cf. Gen_8:2),
it is evident that it must be regarded as above the vault which spans the
earth, or, according to the words of
Psa_148:4,
“above the heavens.”
(Note: In
Gen_1:8 the lxx interpolates
καὶ
εἶδεν
ὁ
Θεὸς
ὅτι
καλόν
(and God saw that it was good), and transfers the words “and it was so”
from the end of
Gen_1:7
to the close of
Gen_1:6
: two apparent improvements, but in reality two arbitrary changes. The
transposition is copied from
Gen_1:9,
Gen_1:15,
Gen_1:24;
and in making the interpolation, the author of the gloss has not
observed that the division of the waters was not complete till the
separation of the dry land from the water had taken place, and therefore
the proper place for the expression of approval is at the close of the
work of the third day.)
Gen 1:9-13 -
The Third Day. - The work of this day was twofold, yet
closely connected. At first the waters beneath the heavens, i.e., those
upon the surface of the earth, were gathered together, so that the dry ( הַיַּבָּשָׁה,
the solid ground) appeared. In what way the gathering of the earthly
waters in the sea and the appearance of the dry land were effected,
whether by the sinking or deepening of places in the body of the globe,
into which the water was drawn off, or by the elevation of the solid
ground, the record does not inform us, since it never describes the
process by which effects are produced. It is probable, however, that the
separation was caused both by depression and elevation. With the dry land
the mountains naturally arose as the headlands of the mainland. But of
this we have no physical explanations, either in the account before us, or
in the poetical description of the creation in
Psa_54:1-7.
Even if we render Ps. 54:8, “the mountains arise, and they (the waters)
descend into the valleys, to the place which Thou (Jehovah) hast
founded for them,” we have no proof, in this poetical account, of the
elevation-theory of geology, since the psalmist is not speaking as a
naturalist, but as a sacred poet describing the creation on the basis of
Gen 1. “The dry” God called Earth, and “the gathering of
the waters,” i.e., the place into which the waters were collected, He
called Sea.
יַמִּים,
an intensive rather than a numerical plural, is the great ocean, which
surrounds the mainland on all sides, so that the earth appears to be
founded upon seas (Psa_24:2).
Earth and sea are the two constituents of the globe, by the separation of
which its formation was completed. The “seas” include the rivers which
flow into the ocean, and the lakes which are as it were “detached
fragments” of the ocean, though they are not specially mentioned here. By
the divine act of naming the two constituents of the globe, and the divine
approval which follows, this work is stamped with permanency; and the
second act of the third day, the clothing of the earth with vegetation, is
immediately connected with it. At the command of God “the earth brought
forth green (דִּשֶׁא),
seed yielding herb (עֵשֶׂב(
breh ), and fruit-bearing fruit-trees (פְּרִי
עֵץ).”
These three classes embrace all the productions of the vegetable kingdom.
דֶּשֵׁא,
lit., the young, tender green, which shoots up after rain and covers the
meadows and downs (2Sa_23:4;
Job_38:27;
Joe_2:22;
Psa_23:2),
is a generic name for all grasses and cryptogamous plants.
עֵשֶׂב,
with the epithet
זֶרַע
מַזְרִיעַ,
yielding or forming seed, is used as a generic term for all herbaceous
plants, corn, vegetables, and other plants by which seed-pods are formed.
פרי
עץ:
not only fruit-trees, but all trees and shrubs, bearing fruit in which
there is a seed according to its kind, i.e., fruit with kernels.
הָאָרֶץ
עַל
(upon the earth) is not to be joined to “fruit-tree,” as though indicating
the superior size of the trees which bear seed above the earth, in
distinction from vegetables which propagate their species upon or in the
ground; for even the latter bear their seed above the earth. It is
appended to
תַּדְשֵׁא,
as a more minute explanation: the earth is to bring forth grass, herb, and
trees, upon or above the ground, as an ornament or covering for it.
לְמִיגֹו
(after its kind), from
מִין
species, which is not only repeated in
Gen_1:12 in
its old form
לְמִיגֵהוּ
in the case of the fruit-tree, but is also appended to the herb. It
indicates that the herbs and trees sprang out of the earth according to
their kinds, and received, together with power to bear seed and fruit, the
capacity to propagate and multiply their own kind. In the case of the
grass there is no reference either to different kinds, or to the
production of seed, inasmuch as in the young green grass neither the one
nor the other is apparent to the eye. Moreover, we must not picture the
work of creation as consisting of the production of the first tender germs
which were gradually developed into herbs, shrubs, and trees; on the
contrary, we must regard it as one element in the miracle of creation
itself, that at the word of God not only tender grasses, but herbs,
shrubs, and trees, sprang out of the earth, each ripe for the formation of
blossom and the bearing of seed and fruit, without the necessity of
waiting for years before the vegetation created was ready to blossom and
bear fruit. Even if the earth was employed as a medium in the creation of
the plants, since it was God who caused it to bring them forth, they were
not the product of the powers of nature, generatio aequivoca in the
ordinary sense of the word, but a work of divine omnipotence, by which the
trees came into existence before their seed, and their fruit was produced
in full development, without expanding gradually under the influence of
sunshine and rain.
Gen 1:14-19 -
The Fourth Day. - After the earth had been clothed with
vegetation, and fitted to be the abode of living beings, there were
created on the fourth day the sun, moon, and stars, heavenly bodies in
which the elementary light was concentrated, in order that its influence
upon the earthly globe might be sufficiently modified and regulated for
living beings to exist and thrive beneath its rays, in the water, in the
air, and upon the dry land. At the creative word of God the bodies of
light came into existence in the firmament, as lamps. On
יְהִי,
the singular of the predicate before the plural of the subject, in
Gen_1:14;
Gen_5:23;
Gen_9:29,
etc., vid., Gesenius, Heb. Gr. §147.
מְאוֹרֹת,
bodies of light, light-bearers, then lamps. These bodies of light
received a threefold appointment: (1) They were “to divide between the
day and the night,” of, according to
Gen_1:18,
between the light and the darkness, in other words, to regulate from that
time forward the difference, which had existed ever since the creation of
light, between the night and the day. (2) They were to be (or
serve:
וְהָיוּ after an imperative has the force of a
command) - (a) for signs (sc., for the earth), partly as
portents of extraordinary events (Mat_2:2;
Luk_21:25)
and divine judgments (Joe_2:30;
Jer_10:2;
Mat_24:29),
partly as showing the different quarters of the heavens, and as
prognosticating the changes in the weather; - (b) for seasons,
or for fixed, definite times (מֹועֲדִים,
from יעד
to fix, establish), - not for festal seasons merely, but “to regulate
definite points and periods of time, by virtue of their periodical
influence upon agriculture, navigation, and other human occupations, as
well as upon the course of human, animal, and vegetable life (e.g., the
breeding time of animals, and the migrations of birds,
Jer_8:7,
etc.); - (c) for days and years, i.e., for the division and
calculation of days and years. The grammatical construction will not allow
the clause to be rendered as a Hendiadys, viz., “as signs for
definite times and for days and years,” or as signs both for the times and
also for days and years. (3) They were to serve as lamps upon the earth,
i.e., to pour out their light, which is indispensable to the growth and
health of every creature. That this, the primary object of the lights,
should be mentioned last, is correctly explained by Delitzsch:
“From the astrological and chronological utility of the heavenly bodies,
the record ascends to their universal utility which arises from the
necessity of light for the growth and continuance of everything earthly.”
This applies especially to the two great lights which were created by God
and placed in the firmament; the greater to rule the day, the lesser to
rule the night. “The great” and “the small” in correlative
clauses are to be understood as used comparatively (cf. Gesenius,
§119, 1). That the sun and moon were intended, was too obvious to need to
be specially mentioned. It might appear strange, however, that these
lights should not receive names from God, like the works of the first
three days. This cannot be attributed to forgetfulness on the part of the
author, as Tuch supposes. As a rule, the names were given by God
only to the greater sections into which the universe was divided, and not
to individual bodies (either plants or animals). The man and the woman are
the only exceptions (Gen_5:2).
The sun and moon are called great, not in comparison with the earth, but
in contrast with the stars, according to the amount of light which shines
from them upon the earth and determines their rule over the day and night;
not so much with reference to the fact, that the stronger light of the sun
produces the daylight, and the weaker light of the moon illumines the
night, as to the influence which their light exerts by day and night upon
all nature, both organic and inorganic-an influence generally admitted,
but by no means fully understood. In this respect the sun and moon are the
two great lights, the stars small bodies of light; the former exerting
great, the latter but little, influence upon the earth and its
inhabitants.
This truth, which arises from the relative magnitude of
the heavenly bodies, or rather their apparent size as seen from the earth,
is not affected by the fact that from the standpoint of natural science
many of the stars far surpass both sun and moon in magnitude. Nor does the
fact, that in our account, which was written for inhabitants of the earth
and for religious purposes, it is only the utility of the sun, moon, and
stars to the inhabitants of the earth that is mentioned, preclude the
possibility of each by itself, and all combined, fulfilling other purposes
in the universe of God. And not only is our record silent, but God Himself
made no direct revelation to man on this subject; because astronomy and
physical science, generally, neither lead to godliness, nor promise peace
and salvation to the soul. Belief in the truth of this account as a divine
revelation could only be shaken, if the facts which science has discovered
as indisputably true, with regard to the number, size, and movements of
the heavenly bodies, were irreconcilable with the biblical account of the
creation. But neither the innumerable host nor the immeasurable size of
many of the heavenly bodies, nor the almost infinite distance of the fixed
stars from our earth and the solar system, warrants any such assumption.
Who can set bounds to the divine omnipotence, and determine what and how
much it can create in a moment? The objection, that the creation of the
innumerable and immeasurably great and distant heavenly bodies in one day,
is so disproportioned to the creation of this one little globe in six
days, as to be irreconcilable with our notions of divine omnipotence and
wisdom, does not affect the Bible, but shows that the account of the
creation has been misunderstood. We are not taught here that on one
day, viz., the fourth, God created all the heavenly bodies out of nothing,
and in a perfect condition; on the contrary, we are told that in the
beginning God created the heaven and the earth, and on the fourth
day that He made the sun, the moon, and the stars (planets, comets, and
fixed stars) in the firmament, to be lights for the earth. According to
these distinct words, the primary material, not only of the earth, but
also of the heaven and the heavenly bodies, was created in the beginning.
If, therefore, the heavenly bodies were first made or created on the
fourth day, as lights for the earth, in the firmament of heaven; the words
can have no other meaning than that their creation was completed on the
fourth day, just as the creative formation of our globe was finished on
the third; that the creation of the heavenly bodies therefore proceeded
side by side, and probably by similar stages, with that of the earth, so
that the heaven with its stars was completed on the fourth day. Is this
representation of the work of creation, which follows in the simplest way
from the word of God, at variance with correct ideas of the omnipotence
and wisdom of God? Could not the Almighty create the innumerable host of
heaven at the same time as the earthly globe? Or would Omnipotence require
more time for the creation of the moon, the planets, and the sun, or of
Orion, Sirius, the Pleiades, and other heavenly bodies whose magnitude has
not yet been ascertained, than for the creation of the earth itself? Let
us beware of measuring the works of Divine Omnipotence by the standard of
human power. The fact, that in our account the gradual formation of the
heavenly bodies is not described with the same minuteness as that of the
earth; but that, after the general statement in
Gen_1:1 as to
the creation of the heavens, all that is mentioned is their completion on
the fourth day, when for the first time they assumed, or were placed in,
such a position with regard to the earth as to influence its development;
may be explained on the simple ground that it was the intention of the
sacred historian to describe the work of creation from the standpoint of
the globe: in other words, as it would have appeared to an observer from
the earth, if there had been one in existence at the time. For only from
such a standpoint could this work of God be made intelligible to all men,
uneducated as well as learned, and the account of it be made subservient
to the religious wants of all.
(Note: Most of the objections to the historical
character of our account, which have been founded upon the work of the
fourth day, rest upon a misconception of the proper point of view from
which it should be studied. And, in addition to that, the conjectures of
astronomers as to the immeasurable distance of most of the fixed stars,
and the time which a ray of light would require to reach the earth, are
accepted as indisputable mathematical proof; whereas these approximative
estimates of distance rest upon the unsubstantiated supposition, that
everything which has been ascertained with regard to the nature and
motion of light in our solar system, must be equally true of the light
of the fixed stars.)
Gen 1:20-23 -
The Fifth Day. - “God said: Let the waters swarm
with swarms, with living beings, and let birds fly above the earth in the
face (the front, i.e., the side turned towards the earth) of the
firmament.”
יִשְׁרְצוּ
and
יְעוֹפֵף are imperative. Earlier translators, on the
contrary, have rendered the latter as a relative clause, after the
πετεινὰ
πετόμενα of the lxx, “and with birds that fly;”
thus making the birds to spring out of the water, in opposition to
Gen_2:19. Even
with regard to the element out of which the water animals were created the
text is silent; for the assertion that
שׁרץ
is to be understood “with a causative colouring” is erroneous, and is not
sustained by Exo_8:3
or Psa_105:30.
The construction with the accusative is common to all verbs of multitude.
שֶׁרֶץ
and
שָׁרַץ, to creep and swarm, is applied, “without
regard to size, to those animals which congregate together in great
numbers, and move about among one another.”
חַיָּה
גֶפֶשׁ,
anima viva, living soul, animated beings (vid.,
Gen_2:7), is
in apposition to
שֶׁרֶץ,
“swarms consisting of living beings.” The expression applies not only to
fishes, but to all water animals from the greatest to the least, including
reptiles, etc. In carrying out His word, God created (Gen_1:21)
the great “tanninim,”
- lit., the long-stretched, from
תָּנַן,
to stretch-whales, crocodiles, and other sea-monsters; and “all moving
living beings with which the waters swarm after their kind, and all (every)
winged fowl after its kind.” That the water animals and birds of every
kind were created on the same day, and before the land animals, cannot be
explained on the ground assigned by early writers, that there is a
similarity between the air and the water, and a consequent correspondence
between the two classes of animals. For in the light of natural history
the birds are at all events quite as near to the mammalia as to the
fishes; and the supposed resemblance between the fins of fishes and the
wings of birds, is counterbalanced by the no less striking resemblance
between birds and land animals, viz., that both have feet. The real reason
is rather this, that the creation proceeds throughout from the lower to
the higher; and in this ascending scale the fishes occupy to a great
extent a lower place in the animal economy than birds, and both water
animals and birds a lower place than land animals, more especially the
mammalia. Again, it is not stated that only a single pair was created of
each kind; on the contrary, the words, “let the waters swarm with living
beings,” seem rather to indicate that the animals were created, not only
in a rich variety of genera and species, but in large numbers of
individuals. The fact that but one human being was created at first, by no
means warrants the conclusion that the animals were created singly also;
for the unity of the human race has a very different signification from
that of the so-called animal species. - (Gen_1:22).
As animated beings, the water animals and fowls are endowed, through the
divine blessing, with the power to be fruitful and multiply. The
word of blessing was the actual communication of the capacity to propagate
and increase in numbers.
Gen 1:24-31 -
The Sixth Day. - Sea and air are filled with living
creatures; and the word of God now goes forth to the earth, to produce
living beings after their kind. These are divided into three classes.
בְּהֵמָה,
cattle, from
בהם,
mutum, brutum esse, generally denotes the larger
domesticated quadrupeds (e.g.,
Gen_47:18;
Exo_13:12,
etc.), but occasionally the larger land animals as a whole.
רֶמֶשׂ
(the creeping) embraces the smaller land animals, which move either
without feet, or with feet that are scarcely perceptible, viz., reptiles,
insects, and worms. In Gen_1:25
they are distinguished from the race of water reptiles by the term
הָאֲדָמָה
אֶרֶץ
חַיְתֹו
(the old form of the construct state, for
הָאָרֶץ
חַיַּת),
the beast of the earth, i.e., the freely roving wild animals.
“After its kind:” this refers to all three
classes of living creatures, each of which had its peculiar species;
consequently in Gen_1:25,
where the word of God is fulfilled, it is repeated with every class. This
act of creation, too, like all that precede it, is shown by the divine
word “good” to be in accordance with the will of God. But the blessing
pronounced is omitted, the author hastening to the account of the creation
of man, in which the work of creation culminated. The creation of man does
not take place through a word addressed by God to the earth, but as the
result of the divine decree, “We will make man in Our image, after our
likeness,” which proclaims at the very outset the distinction and
pre-eminence of man above all the other creatures of the earth. The plural
“We” was regarded by the fathers and earlier theologians almost
unanimously as indicative of the Trinity: modern commentators, on the
contrary, regard it either as pluralis majestatis; or as an address
by God to Himself, the subject and object being identical; or as
communicative, an address to the spirits or angels who stand around
the Deity and constitute His council. The last is Philo's
explanation:
διαλέγεται
ὁ
τῶν
ὁ͂λων
πατὴρ
ταῖς
ἑαυτο͂υ
δυνάεσιν (δυνάμεις
= angels). But although such passages as
1Ki_22:19.,
Psa_89:8,
and Dan 10, show that God, as King and Judge of the world, is surrounded
by heavenly hosts, who stand around His throne and execute His commands,
the last interpretation founders upon this rock: either it assumes without
sufficient scriptural authority, and in fact in opposition to such
distinct passages as Gen_2:7,
Gen_2:22;
Isa_40:13
seq., Gen_44:24,
that the spirits took part in the creation of man; or it reduces the
plural to an empty phrase, inasmuch as God is made to summon the angels to
cooperate in the creation of man, and then, instead of employing them, is
represented as carrying out the work alone. Moreover, this view is
irreconcilable with the words “in our image, after our likeness;” since
man was created in the image of God alone (Gen_1:27;
Gen_5:1),
and not in the image of either the angels, or God and the angels. A
likeness to the angels cannot be inferred from
Heb_2:7, or
from Luk_20:36.
Just as little ground is there for regarding the plural here and in other
passages (Gen_3:22;
Gen_11:7;
Isa_6:8;
Isa_41:22)
as reflective, an appeal to self; since the singular is employed in such
cases as these, even where God Himself is preparing for any particular
work (cf. Gen_2:18;
Psa_12:5;
Isa_33:10).
No other explanation is left, therefore, than to regard it as pluralis
majestatis, - an interpretation which comprehends in its deepest and
most intensive form (God speaking of Himself and with Himself in the
plural number, not reverentiae causa, but with reference to the fullness
of the divine powers and essences which He possesses) the truth that lies
at the foundation of the trinitarian view, viz., that the potencies
concentrated in the absolute Divine Being are something more than powers
and attributes of God; that they are hypostases, which in the
further course of the revelation of God in His kingdom appeared with more
and more distinctness as persons of the Divine Being. On the words “in
our image, after our likeness” modern commentators have correctly
observed, that there is no foundation for the distinction drawn by the
Greek, and after them by many of the Latin Fathers, between
εἰκών
(imago) and
ὁμοίωσις
(similitudo), the former of which they supposed to represent the
physical aspect of the likeness to God, the latter the ethical; but that,
on the contrary, the older Lutheran theologians were correct in stating
that the two words are synonymous, and are merely combined to add
intensity to the thought: “an image which is like Us” (Luther);
since it is no more possible to discover a sharp or well-defined
distinction in the ordinary use of the words between
צֶלֶם
and
דְּמוּת, than between
בְּ
and כְּ.
צֶלֶם,
from צֵל,
lit., a shadow, hence sketch, outline, differs no more from
דְּמוּת,
likeness, portrait, copy, than the German words Umriss or Abriss
(outline or sketch) from Bild or Abbild (likeness, copy).
בְּ
and כְּ
are also equally interchangeable, as we may see from a comparison of this
verse with Gen_5:1
and Gen_5:3.
(Compare also Lev_6:4
with Lev_27:12,
and for the use of
בְּ
to denote a norm, or sample,
Exo_25:40;
Exo_30:32,
Exo_30:37,
etc.) There is more difficulty in deciding in what the likeness to God
consisted. Certainly not in the bodily form, the upright position, or
commanding aspect of the man, since God has no bodily form, and the man's
body was formed from the dust of the ground; nor in the dominion of man
over nature, for this is unquestionably ascribed to man simply as the
consequence or effluence of his likeness to God. Man is the image of God
by virtue of his spiritual nature. of the breath of God by which the
being, formed from the dust of the earth, became a living soul.
(Note: “The breath of God became the soul of man; the
soul of man therefore is nothing but the breath of God. The rest of the
world exists through the word of God; man through His own peculiar
breath. This breath is the seal and pledge of our relation to God, of
our godlike dignity; whereas the breath breathed into the animals is
nothing but the common breath, the life-wind of nature, which is moving
everywhere, and only appears in the animal fixed and bound into a
certain independence and individuality, so that the animal soul is
nothing but a nature-soul individualized into certain, though still
material spirituality.” - Ziegler.)
The image of God consists, therefore, in the spiritual
personality of man, though not merely in unity of self-consciousness and
self-determination, or in the fact that man was created a consciously free
Ego; for personality is merely the basis and form of the divine
likeness, not its real essence. This consists rather in the fact, that the
man endowed with free self-conscious personality possesses, in his
spiritual as well as corporeal nature, a creaturely copy of the holiness
and blessedness of the divine life. This concrete essence of the divine
likeness was shattered by sin; and it is only through Christ, the
brightness of the glory of God and the expression of His essence ( Heb_1:3),
that our nature is transformed into the image of God again (Col_3:10;
Eph_4:24).
“And they ( אָדָם,
a generic term for men) shall have dominion over the fish,”
etc. There is something striking in the introduction of the expression “and
over all the earth,” after the different races of animals have been
mentioned, especially as the list of races appears to be proceeded with
afterwards. If this appearance were actually the fact, it would be
impossible to escape the conclusion that the text is faulty, and that
חַיַּת
has fallen out; so that the reading should be, “and over all the wild
beasts of the earth,” as the Syriac has it. But as the identity of
“every creeping thing that creepeth upon the earth” (הארץ)
with “every thing that creepeth upon the ground” (האדמה)
in Gen_1:25
is not absolutely certain; on the contrary, the change in expression
indicates a difference of meaning; and as the Masoretic text is supported
by the oldest critical authorities (lxx, Sam., Onk.), the
Syriac rendering must be dismissed as nothing more than a conjecture, and
the Masoretic text be understood in the following manner. The author
passes on from the cattle to the entire earth, and embraces all the animal
creation in the expression, “every moving thing (כל־הרמשׂ)
that moveth upon the earth,” just as in
Gen_1:28,
“every living thing
הָרֹמֶשֶׂת
upon the earth.” According to this, God determined to give to the man
about to be created in His likeness the supremacy, not only over the
animal world, but over the earth itself; and this agrees with the blessing
in Gen_1:28,
where the newly created man is exhorted to replenish the earth and subdue
it; whereas, according to the conjecture of the Syriac, the subjugation of
the earth by man would be omitted from the divine decree. -
Gen_1:27. In
the account of the accomplishment of the divine purpose the words swell
into a jubilant song, so that we meet here for the first time with a
parallelismus membrorum, the creation of man being celebrated in three
parallel clauses. The distinction drawn between
אֹתֹו
(in the image of God created He him) and
אֹתָם
(as man and woman created He them) must not be overlooked. The word
אֹתָם,
which indicates that God created the man and woman as two human beings,
completely overthrows the idea that man was at first androgynous (cf.
Gen_2:18.).
By the blessing in Gen_1:28,
God not only confers upon man the power to multiply and fill the earth, as
upon the beasts in Gen_1:22,
but also gives him dominion over the earth and every beast. In conclusion,
the food of both man and beast is pointed out in
Gen_1:29,
Gen_1:30,
exclusively from the vegetable kingdom. Man is to eat of “every
seed-bearing herb on the face of all the earth, and every tree on which
there are fruits containing seed,” consequently of the productions of
both field and tree, in other words, of corn and fruit; the animals are to
eat of “every green herb,” i.e., of vegetables or green plants, and
grass.
From this it follows, that, according to the creative
will of God, men were not to slaughter animals for food, nor were animals
to prey upon one another; consequently, that the fact which now prevails
universally in nature and the order of the world, the violent and often
painful destruction of life, is not a primary law of nature, nor a divine
institution founded in the creation itself, but entered the world along
with death at the fall of man, and became a necessity of nature through
the curse of sin. It was not till after the flood, that men received
authority from God to employ the flesh of animals as well as the green
herb as food ( Gen_9:3);
and the fact that, according to the biblical view, no carnivorous animals
existed at the first, may be inferred from the prophetic announcements in
Isa_11:6-8;
Isa_65:25,
where the cessation of sin and the complete transformation of the world
into the kingdom of God are described as being accompanied by the
cessation of slaughter and the eating of flesh, even in the case of the
animal kingdom. With this the legends of the heathen world respecting the
golden age of the past, and its return at the end of time, also correspond
(cf. Gesenius on
Isa_11:6-8). It is true that objections have
been raised by natural historians to this testimony of Scripture, but
without scientific ground. For although at the present time man is fitted
by his teeth and alimentary canal for the combination of vegetable and
animal food; and although the law of mutual destruction so thoroughly
pervades the whole animal kingdom, that not only is the life of one
sustained by the death of another, but “as the graminivorous animals check
the overgrowth of the vegetable kingdom, so the excessive increase of the
former is restricted by the beasts of prey, and of these again by the
destructive implements of man;” and although, again, not only beasts of
prey, but evident symptoms of disease are met with among the fossil
remains of the aboriginal animals: all these facts furnish no proof that
the human and animal races were originally constituted for death and
destruction, or that disease and slaughter are older than the fall. For,
to reply to the last objection first, geology has offered no conclusive
evidence of its doctrine, that the fossil remains of beasts of prey and
bones with marks of disease belong to a pre-Adamite period, but has merely
inferred it from the hypothesis already mentioned of successive periods of
creation. Again, as even in the present order of nature the excessive
increase of the vegetable kingdom is restrained, not merely by the
graminivorous animals, but also by the death of the plants themselves
through the exhaustion of their vital powers; so the wisdom of the Creator
could easily have set bounds to the excessive increase of the animal
world, without requiring the help of huntsmen and beasts of prey, since
many animals even now lose their lives by natural means, without being
slain by men or eaten by beasts of prey. The teaching of Scripture, that
death entered the world through sin, merely proves that the human race was
created for eternal life, but by no means necessitates the assumption that
the animals were also created for endless existence. As the earth produced
them at the creative word of God, the different individuals and
generations would also have passed away and returned to the bosom of the
earth, without violent destruction by the claws of animals or the hand of
man, as soon as they had fulfilled the purpose of their existence. The
decay of animals is a law of nature established in the creation itself,
and not a consequence of sin, or an effect of the death brought into the
world by the sin of man. At the same time, it was so far involved in the
effects of the fall, that the natural decay of the different animals was
changed into a painful death or violent end. Although in the animal
kingdom, as it at present exists, many varieties are so organized that
they live exclusively upon the flesh of other animals, which they kill and
devour; this by no means necessitates the conclusion, that the carnivorous
beasts of prey were created after the fall, or the assumption that they
were originally intended to feed upon flesh, and organized accordingly.
If, in consequence of the curse pronounced upon the earth after the sin of
man, who was appointed head and lord of nature, the whole creation was
subjected to vanity and the bondage of corruption (Rom_8:20.);
this subjection might have been accompanied by a change in the
organization of the animals, though natural science, which is based upon
the observation and combination of things empirically discovered, could
neither demonstrate the fact nor explain the process. And if natural
science cannot boast that in any one of its many branches it has
discovered all the phenomena connected with the animal and human organism
of the existing world, how could it pretend to determine or limit the
changes through which this organism may have passed in the course of
thousands of years?
The creation of man and his installation as ruler on
the earth brought the creation of all earthly beings to a close ( Gen_1:31).
God saw His work, and behold it was all very good; i.e., everything
perfect in its kind, so that every creature might reach the goal appointed
by the Creator, and accomplish the purpose of its existence. By the
application of the term “good” to everything that God made, and the
repetition of the word with the emphasis “very” at the close of the whole
creation, the existence of anything evil in the creation of God is
absolutely denied, and the hypothesis entirely refuted, that the six days'
work merely subdued and fettered an ungodly, evil principle, which had
already forced its way into it. The sixth day, as being the last, is
distinguished above all the rest by the article -
הַשִּׁשִּׁי
יוֹם
“a day, the sixth” (Gesenius, §111, 2a).
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The name Bethel comes from the Hebrew beth,
meaning house,
and el, meaning God. Bethel means "The House of
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