There is nothing “very good” about a futile creation.
By their nature, seeds are meant to be temporary. And I would say that a seed which gives rise to a perfect tree is “very good” even if the seed was never meant to last forever.
On a deeper level, though, I agree with you. I was going to touch on this point in my earlier post, but a forum like this is not a medium where it can be explained adequately, so I decided not to mention it.
There are many levels to be comprehended of the stories in the Bible, and a deep reading of the first creation story (Genesis 1:1-2:3) reveals that it is not (only) a description of events in the past, but is more accurately a description of events that are yet to come. That one story synthesizes the entire Torah, which describes the process of God creating the “spiritual body” described by Paul. So when we get closer to the
true meaning of the story, the use of “very good” in Genesis 1:31 is actually
not referring to the futile creation (which we live in now), but is in fact referring to the creation that is yet to come (still not perfected, but not futile either).
It is almost as if Moses wrote the “executive summary” at the beginning of the Torah, and then wrote the rest as commentary for those who needed further explanation.
I don’t expect you to believe me, and I’m not going to try to convince you. But I wanted to chime in to say that, on a deep level, you are right. I still think my response answers the original question
adequately, and it is
broadly correct, but I agree that it is “imperfect.” I knowingly chose a second-best response, because the first-best response, the one that
truly answers your question, was a bit too much to get into on this forum.
So I tried to do a bit of a sleight of hand, to see if I could satisfy you with a simpler answer, and you caught me. Well done.
