Friday, May 2, 2014
The story of redemption becomes even more
meaningful when one examines events that happened before Adam and Eve and the
Garden of Eden. Borrowing a definition
from Webster, the word ‘precursor’ as used in the title means ‘one that precedes
and indicates the approach of another’.
The first three words in the book of
Genesis are ‘In the beginning’ and the Hebrew base for ‘beginning’ also means
‘first’. Therefore, those initial three
words confirm there were events or happenings that preceded the events recorded
beginning with Genesis 1:2.
There are other phrases in the Bible that
confirm the existence of and the working of the mind of God prior to man’s
physical creation. For example the
phrases ‘before time began’ and ‘from the foundation of the world’ are also
found in the Bible.
The first three words in the New Testament
are exactly the same as the first three words in the Old Testament, i.e. ‘In
the beginning’. The Greek base for
beginning also means ‘first’ and ‘before anything’.
“In the
beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and the Word was God. He was in the beginning with God.” John 1:1
This verse clearly ascribes deity to
Jesus.
The Greek base for ‘Word’ means the
eternal expression of the divine intelligence and the disclosure of the divine
essence.
The Pharisees would not accept Jesus’
claim to deity. They boasted of their
status and security by claiming they were direct descendants of Abraham.
“Jesus said
to them, ‘Most assuredly, I say to you, before Abraham was, I AM.’” John 8:58
The term ‘I AM’ means ‘I have always been’.
The redemptive plan for man, particularly
for gentiles via the church through the God/man Jesus, was not fully revealed
until the New Testament. The Apostle
Paul taught that such a plan had been devised ‘in the beginning’ or ‘since the
world began’.
“Now to Him
who is able to establish you according to my gospel and the preaching of Jesus
Christ, according to the revelation of the mystery kept secret since the world
began, but now made manifest…” Romans 16:25-26a
The Greek base for ‘world began’ in the
present context is chronois aioniois which
means ‘before time began’.
The very next chapter in the Bible reveals
that the wisdom of God was/is embodied in Christ.
“…but
we preach Christ crucified, to the Jews a stumbling block and to the Greeks
foolishness, but to those who are called, both Jews and Greeks, Christ the
power of God and the wisdom of God.”
1 Corinthians 1:23-24
The Greek for wisdom in this verse means
divine wisdom, infinite skill, insight, and purity.
The Bible also reveals that wisdom was
with God in the beginning, or before the preparation of the earth to sustain Adam
and all mankind.
In the eighth chapter of Proverbs, wisdom
is personified.
“I have
been established from everlasting, from the beginning, before there was ever an
earth…While as yet He had not made the earth or the fields, or the primal dust
of the world, when He prepared the heavens, I was there…” Proverbs
8:23-24, 26-27a
These verses clearly reveal that wisdom,
which would be embodied in Christ, has always been with God.
Solomon then declares that wisdom’s greatest delight was to be with
God’s highest creation, i.e. those created in God’s own image.
“When
He marked out the foundations of the earth, then I was beside Him as a master
craftsman; and I was daily His delight, rejoicing always before Him, rejoicing
in His inhabited world, and my delight was with the sons of men.” Proverbs
8:29b-31
One cannot grasp the love that God has for
His Son and for those whom He would create in His own image. Such love can only be embraced as the anchor
of the soul.
There are other great Biblical truths that
tell of God’s detailed preparation and plan for those whom He was about to
create in His image and place on the earth.
God’s plan for man began long before the
dimension of time and the Garden of Eden and will last long after, when time will
be needed no more.
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