The journey begins…through the C. S. Lewis Bible in a year…four
chapters per day…fasten your seatbelt…here are my thoughts on today’s reading….
So much happens in the first four chapters of Genesis: the
creation of the universe, the creation of human beings, the fall of human
beings into sin, Cain killing Abel, and what happened with Cain’s descendants.
In all of it, I suppose, what stands out most to me is the powerfully beautiful
description of creation in Genesis 1. Though it may not be in the form of
Hebrew poetry, it is, nonetheless, poetic. One of my favorite lines is in
Genesis 1:16 where it says that God made the stars—almost as an afterthought.
It is as though the universe were a cake and God was the baker; then when it
came to icing the cake he thought he would throw in a few million stars for
decoration.
To me, the important thing is not the order of what happens
on each day of creation, or even the question of whether God created the
universe in six, twenty-four hour days. (I doubt that was the case, or that
this was the point of the author of Genesis 1.) I think the whole point of
Genesis 1 is to tell us about the WHO behind creation (God) not the HOW of
creation (which scientists can tell us more about than the author or authors of
Genesis ever imagined).
I also accept the idea of biblical scholars who tell us that
in Genesis we have two creation accounts, one in Genesis 1 and the other in
Genesis 2. That makes sense to me—the idea that the Israelites would have had
two, or maybe even more than two, creation stories, and that the person or
persons who edited the book of Genesis (perhaps as late as the time of the
Exile) brought these two stories together. Nor does it bother me to think that
the Israelites drew their creation myths from other surrounding cultures. The
important thing, again, is what they say about the person, the one God, behind
creation, the Creator himself. If, after reading Genesis 1 and 2, we can simply
say, “I believe in God the Father Almighty, maker of heaven and earth…” I think
that is enough.
I love in Genesis 2 the picture of harmony between humanity
and the animal kingdom. The idea of God bringing each animal to man to name
them is a poignantly beautiful one. Should there not be something in each of us
that cries out for a return to that original harmony? Will such harmony result
from the restoration of the universe accomplished by the second Adam, Jesus
Christ?
Of course the fall and its results, detailed in Genesis 3
and 4, are devastating after the beauty and harmony of creation depicted in
Genesis 1 and 2. However, it is even more startling when one realizes that this
fall was a result of what was, perhaps, God’s greatest creation: free will. As
C. S. Lewis says…
“God has made it a rule for Himself that He won’t alter
people’s character by force. He can and will alter them—but only if the people
will let Him. In that way He has really and truly limited His power. Sometimes
we wonder why He has done so, or even wish that He hadn’t But apparently He
thinks it worth doing. He would rather have a world of free beings, with all
its risks, than a world of people who did right like machines because they
couldn’t do anything else. The more we succeed in imagining what a world of
perfect automatic beings would be like, the more, I think, we shall see His
wisdom.” (“The Trouble with ‘X’”, God in
the Dock)
What are your thoughts?
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