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"That was a teaser. We need to back up to verse 2, okay? Follow along and I’ll illustrate something that all Christians can see for themselves. Verse 2 is so vitally important, and God gave us a message in it unique to any other verse in the entire Bible, except one - and for a reason. Are you ready to listen to God? Forget about me - listen to God’s word. “And the earth was without form, and void;…” God inspired those exact words for a very specific reason. They are used only one other place in the bible, and God inspired that particular usage for a reason. God isn’t stupid, and neither do we need to be. If we have the Spirit of Christ, then we have the mind of Christ. Jesus is the Word. 1 Corinthians 2:16 - For who hath known the mind of the Lord, that he may instruct him? but we have the mind of Christ. So, we don’t need to be stupid when it comes to God. Okay, here we go…
“The earth was without form and void…” Where else do we see that verse? Where else did God inspire those exact words to be written? In relation to a vision Jeremiah had. Let’s read it. Jeremiah 4:23-26 “I beheld the earth, and, lo, it was without form, and void; and the heavens, and they had no light. I beheld the mountains, and, lo, they trembled, and all the hills moved lightly. I beheld, and, lo, there was no man, and all the birds of the heavens were fled. I beheld, and, lo, the fruitful place was a wilderness, and all the cities thereof were broken down at the presence of the LORD, and by his fierce anger.” Jeremiah saw the earth without form and void, just like Genesis 1:2. He also saw the heavens had no light, just as in the implications of Genesis 1:3. But he sees the earth as desolate, in chaos, quaking and trembling just as the Hebrew word tohuw of Genesis 1:2 can be translated. Jeremiah is seeing in a vision the actual events of Genesis 1:2. I dare you to tell me that God inspired these two verses with only this particular usage nowhere else in the bible because He was befuddled or something. GOD HAS A PURPOSE IN WHAT HE DOES.
Jeremiah sees the earth of Genesis 1:2. What does he say? “I beheld, and, lo, there was no man…” You might say that of course there was no man because God hadn’t created man yet. Not so fast there, bucko. Jeremiah keeps talking and also says, “…and all the cities thereof were broken down…” Whoa! Hold on a minute! God inspires Genesis 1:2 to be written using a peculiar description, then inspires only one other usage of it where a prophet has a vision and there are “cities of men!?” Yep. Now it’s time to look at this all in context. Jeremiah is seeing an example of the Lord’s wrath. He doesn’t see Sodom and Gomorrah. He could easily have been given a vision of that. But no, it’s of a condition that only exists in Genesis 1:2. Jeremiah provides the answer to the burning question of Gen 1:2. What was God doing there? God was pissed! God was hovering over the face of the waters because He had just gotten done delivering His wrath!
What was He angry over? We aren’t told. But I can surmise that man had angered God in some way, and He came to end it.
Now wait just a minute! We’re only in verse 2 and God has destroyed man He hasn’t even made yet? BZZZT. Relax a minute. Just take a second to digest the implications of verse 2 and Jeremiah seeing it. Let me explain verse 3 in light of what was just revealed and then I’ll head on over to Adam. God was pissed and was just finished destroying everything when verse 2 is delivered. That is why he hovers over the face of the waters. His destruction caused mountains to tremble - volcanos? You can be sure that when God destroys something, it’s going to make a mess. Probably included a lot of atmospheric smoke and ash. Verse 3 has God saying “let there be light…” Atmospheric smoke and ash make for a very dark daytime. God could have simply spoke to clear some of the smoke away so that light was able to shine forth. Verse 3 does not say he made the sun. “Let there be…” is all one Hebrew word: hayah. Know what that word means in Hebrew? to happen, fall out, occur, take place, come about, come to pass or more specifically:
to come about, come to pass
to come into being, become
to arise, appear, come
to become
to become
to become like
to be instituted, be established
to be
to exist, be in existence
to abide, remain, continue (with word of place or time)
to stand, lie, be in, be at, be situated (with word of locality)
to accompany, be with
Do you see anywhere in there a creation verb? No, you don’t, do you? The implication there is that the light already existed, and God is simply calling for its illumination to show. The entire “creation” account of Genesis 1 becomes a RE-CREATION. More on that in a minute."