Saturday, June 29, 2013

Genesis 1:14

"And God said, 'Let there be lights in the expanse of the sky to separate the day from the night, and let them serve as signs to mark seasons and days and years,'"  Genesis 1:14 (NIV)

The QBible has "lights" translated as "luminous bodies."  That makes sense because God created light back in verse 3 during the first day.  So he's not creating light again, just sources for light.  And these lights are going to serve as a calendar, they are the way to tell time.

The NIV clearly states that these lights will serve to mark time, but the QBible doesn't seem so clear.  It translates the end of the verse:  "and let them be for signs, and for seasons, and for days, and years."  So this makes it sound like two different purposes.  Not only will these tell time, but they are also for signs.  What kind of signs?  Now we have billboards for advertisements, street signs to give directions, historical markers to give information about the past, and I'm sure there are even more that I can't think of right now.  So what purpose do these signs in verse 14 serve?

The Biblecommenter has several different commentaries that speak on their understanding of the verse.  One commentator simply believes these are road map signs:  even today sailors use the stars to navigate.  Another claims them as proof of God's power and love for man, that studying the science behind the stars and other heavenly bodies will show how exact God's creation is that if even one tiny thing had been out of place life would not exist.  And another commentary goes along with the NIV's translation that it's signs to tell time by and to tell weather by.  Still another that these signs are "partly as portents of extraordinary events and divine judgments."  The previous ideas make sense, but this last one is more difficult, it almost sounds like fortune-telling. 

Of course, if we saw a huge meteor coming at the earth, scientists could make educated guesses of what the consequences of that impact would be, but is that what this is referring to?  Or is it something more?  Can we divine future events from the stars?  Is there any good from astrology?

We tend to think that the witchcraft that the Bible condemns includes not only conjuring dead spirits and casting spells and making deals with demons, but also interpreting meanings from the stars.  I don't know if these should be in the same category.  At this point in the Bible, the issue of sin has not even been addressed.  All we really know is that God is creating the universe and several of his creations are to serve specific purposes.  At this point I believe it would be wise of me to stay away from astrology and trying to interpret future events from the stars.  Besides that even if in the future I come to understand that there's nothing sinful about it, I'm most definitely not qualified for that job anyway.

Saturday, June 22, 2013

Genesis 1:13

"And there was evening, and there was morning-the third day."  Genesis 1:13 (NIV)

The third day of creation has completed.  This is pretty straight forward, with no arguments about the way this verse is translated.  The only question is the same as the first two days.  Is this a literal 24 hour day?  If God is all-powerful I don't see why it couldn't be.  Why use the word "day" if you don't mean it was a day? 

Either way, it doesn't deny what God created.  It's not something that we should allow to divide us-it's not a salvation issue.  None of us are going to be 100% correct on every issue.  Things that I get wrong, someone else will get right, but we've got to discern which issues are important enough to argue over and which one's we can let go of and allow room for differences. 

Having gone off on my little rant, I do believe that this was a 24 hour day, that just shows God's power.  Not only did he create something from nothing, but he created it in only a 24 hour time span.  However, as I've heard others put so well, if when I get to heaven and God corrects me on my errors, I'm not going to refuse to go in.

Friday, June 14, 2013

Genesis 1:12

"The land produced vegetation:  plants bearing seed according to their kinds and trees bearing fruit with seed in it according to their kinds.  And God saw that it was good."  Genesis 1:12

Again, what God has said he was going to do, happened.  God is speaking the universe into existence.

Saturday, June 8, 2013

Genesis 1:11

"Then God said, 'Let the land produce vegetation:  seed-bearing plants and trees on the land that bear fruit with seed in it, according to their various kinds.'  And it was so."  Genesis 1:11 (NIV)

The QBible translates this verse a little differently, but the basic meanings seem to be the same.  "And God said, 'Let the earth sprout, green (herb) yielding seed, and the fruit tree yielding fruit after his species (kind), whose seed is in itself, upon the earth.'  And it was so."  I see no arguments about the meaning of this verse.  Again God said, "Let's do it this way."  And then he did.

So now we have light and darkness, atmosphere and the waters, land and sea, and now all types of plants.

Saturday, June 1, 2013

Genesis 1:10

"God called the dry ground 'land,' and the gathered waters he called 'seas.'  And God saw that it was good." Genesis 1:10 (NIV)

The QBible actually has that first phrase translated as God calling the dry part earth.  Earth, land, and ground are all words that are pretty interchangeable in the English language.  So God created them in verse 9 and is now naming them here.  Again he looks at what he's created so far and sees that he likes it.