Sermon #1 Series: Pictures of Grace in
Genesis
Title: Creation - A Picture of Grace
Text: Genesis 1:1-31
Reading:
Subject:
Date: Sunday Morning - April 28, 1991
Tape #
Introduction:
Today
I am going to begin a series of messages on Pictures of Grace. We will be going through the Word of God
together, looking at many of the pictures of grace set before us in it. We will
begin at the beginning in Genesis 1. Our subject is, Creation - A Picture of Grace. In 2 Corinthians 5:17, the Apostle
Paul tells us, “If any man be in Christ,
he is a new creature.” And the work of God in the new creation of grace is
beautifully symbolized in the creation of the world.
Proposition:
As the creation of the world was the work of
God alone, so the making of men and women new creatures in Christ is the work
of God alone.
Divisions:
Let me show you three things in Genesis 1
about God’s creation. In these three things you will clearly see the work of
God in the new creation.
1. The creation of the world
(v. 1).
2. The confusion of God’s
creation (v. 2).
3. The restoration of God’s
creation (vv. 2-31).
I.
THE CREATION OF THE WORLD - “In the beginning God created the heaven and the earth” (v. 1).
Thus
opens the Word of God with a bare statement of fact. “In the beginning God created the heaven and the earth.” That is
all we are told concerning the original creation. No argument is given to prove
the existence of God. Instead, his existence is simply affirmed as a fact to be
believed. Nothing is given to gratify the curious minds of men. How long did it
take for God to create the world? We are not told. How old is this world? We
are not told. We are simply told, “In the
beginning God created.” The truth of God is simply stated as a fact to be
received and understood by unquestioning faith.
A. “In the beginning God” - This is the foundation of all truth.
All
true doctrine, all true theology, all true religion begins with this - “In the beginning God.” All human
religion and philosophy begin with man and work up to God. The Scriptures begin
with God and work down to man.
1. If we are to understand
salvation, we must begin with God.
In
the Garden of Eden, Adam sinned and brought in death. But God was not taken by
surprise. In the beginning, before ever the world was created, in anticipation
of the fall, God provided his Son as “the
Lamb slain from the foundation of the world” (Rev. 13:8), “who verily was foreordained before the
foundation of the world” (1 Pet. 1:20).
In
the new creation the sinner who is saved by grace repents, believes on the Lord
Jesus Christ and walks with him in the newness of life. But it began with God.
In the beginning God chose us in Christ (Eph. 1:4), and predestinated us to be
his children (Eph. 1:5), and today “we
love him, because he first loved us” (1 John 4;19). Everything begins with
God. Understand that and you will not stray far from the truth.
2. The Book of Genesis is the
Book of Beginnings.
In
fact, the word “genesis” means “beginning.” Someone said, “The Book of Genesis
is the seed plot of the Bible.” It contains in seed form all the great
doctrines and truths revealed more fully in the rest of the Volume. In the Book
of Genesis…
a.
God is revealed. He is
revealed as the Creator-God, the Covenant Keeping God, and the Almighty God, “the Most High, Possessor of Heaven and
Earth.” From the opening verse hints are given concerning the Blessed
Trinity, the plurality of Persons in the Godhead (Elohim - “Let us make man.).
NOTE: The creation of the world
was a work that involved all three Persons in the Holy Trinity, Father, Son,
and Holy Ghost, even as the works of redemption and providence involve all
three of the Divine Persons.
b.
The origin
and character of man is setforth - First, we see him as God’s creature, then as
a fallen sinner, then as one brought back to God, finding grace in his sight,
walking with God, and made the friend of God.
c.
Satan’s
devices are exposed - The arch-enemy of our souls, the tempter, the deceiver
seeks to ruin men by calling into question the Word of God, casting doubt upon
the goodness of God, and raising suspicions about the veracity of God.
d.
God’s
sovereign election is exhibited - God approves of Abel and rejects Cain. God
chooses Abram and passes by his idolatrous neighbors. God chooses Isaac and
rejects Ishmael. God loves Jacob and hates Esaw.
e.
Salvation
in Christ is typically displayed - Our fallen parents, Adam and Eve, were
sought and found by grace and clothed with the skins of innocent victims. In
order to clothe the fallen pair, blood must be shed, the innocent victim had to
die in the place of the guilty. As those innocent animals were slain for Adam
and Eve, so the Lord Jesus Christ was slain for sinners that we might be robed
forever in his perfect righteousnesss.
f.
Justification
by faith is revealed - Abraham believed God and it was counted unto him for
righeousness. Faith, by believing God’s testimony concerning his Son, receives
righteousness, the very righteousness of God in Christ.
g.
The
believer’s security is beautifully displayed - As the Lord brought Noah and his
family into the ark and shut them in, so every believer, being brought into
Christ by almighty grace is shut in him, sealed, preserved and kept secure by
the power of God. “They shall never
perish!”
The
incarnation of Christ is prophesied. The substitutionary death of Christ is
protrayed. The resurrecrtion and exaltation of Christ is symbolized. The
priesthood of Christ is anticipated. And the blessings of Christ upon the
Israel of God are declared. Genesis is the Book of Beginnings. And in this Book
of Beginnings everything speaks of Christ. Christ is the Tree of Life in the
midst of the Garden of God. Christ is the promised Seed of the woman, who
crushed the serpent’s head. Christ is the Lamb whose blood was represented in
Abel’s sacrifice. Christ is the One whom Enoch believed, by whom he pleased
God. Christ is the ark by which sinners are saved from the flood of God’s
wrath. Christ is the Seed of promise who came from Abraham’s loins, in whom all
the nations of the earth are blessed. Christ is the Lamb of sacrifice whom God
provided to die in the place of his chosen. Christ is the Ladder Jacob saw, by
whom the blessings of God come down to men, and by whom men ascend up to God.
Christ is that Priest after the order of Melchezedek, by whom God’s elect are
blessed. Christ is our Joseph, ruling over all things, in whom all things are,
from whom all things come. Christ is the Surety portrayed in Judah. And Christ
is the Lawgiver prophesied by Jacob. In the Book of Beginnings, “Christ is all, and in all.”
I have
deliberately strayed from my subject a little, because I want you to know
Christ who is the Beginning of the creation of God. All things were made by him
and for him. He is before all things. He is in all things. By him all things
consist. And all things point to him. The new creation, which is our subject,
begins with Christ. You must know the Lord Jesus Christ. he is the One who made
all things in the beginning. And he is the One who declares, “Behold, I make all things new” (Rev.
21:5).
B. Now look at verse 1 again - “In the beginning God created the heaven and the earth” - The
creation was a reflection of the Creator.
In verse 2
we read that the earth became “without
form and void.” But it certainly was not created that way (Read Isaiah 45:18).
In its pristine beauty the earth was perfect beyond imagination. Then something
happened. It became “without form and
void; and darkness was upon the face of the deep.”
·
No groans of suffering! No worms of corruption!
·
No darkness of iniquity! No shades of death!
·
God reigned supreme, without rival. But then the earth
became without form and void, filled with darkness.
II. Verse 2
describes THE RUIN AND CONFUSION OF
GOD’S CREATION.
The word
“was” in verse 2 really should be translated “became” (Strong’s Concordance).
God did not create the world in a state of confusion. Between verse 1 and 2,
some terrible catastrophe took place. Perhaps the castastrophe was the fall of
satan (Isa. 14:12-17; Ezek. 28:14-18). Whatever the catastrophe was, it left
the earth “without form and void,” a
desolate, uninhabitable, ruined mass of confusion.
NOTE: I have no interest in
trying to answer the quibbles of godless scientists and evolutionary
philosophers. But if it could be irrefutably established that the earth was many
thousands, or even millions of years old, that would be no contradiction to the
Scriptures. We have no indication of how long an interval there was between the
creation of the world in verse 2. It is certainly wide enough to embrace all
the prehistoric ages that may have existed! However, all that took place from
Genesis 1:3-31 transpired in six twenty-four hour days, less than six thousand
years ago.
“In six days the Lord made heaven and earth,
the sea, and all that in them is” (Ex. 20:11). There is a difference
between “creating” and “making”. In Genesis 1:1, God created the world out of
nothing. In Genesis 1:2, “the earth
became without form and void; and darkness was upon the face of the deep.” In
Genesis 1:3-31, God made the earth in six days, forming it and fashioning it
out of that which he had created.
“Out
of the chaos was brought the ‘cosmos’, which signifies order, arrangement,
beauty. Out of the waters emerged the earth. A scene of desolation, darkness,
and death, was transformed into one of light, life, and fertility, so that at
the end all was pronounced, ‘very good’” (A. W. Pinc).
As
this is a picture of the world’s history, it is also a picture of man’s
history. In the beginning of time, on the sixth day, God created man. What a
creature he was, created in the image and likeness of God, gloriously
reflecting the very character of God! God himself said man was “very good!” He
had no sinful heredity behind him, no sinful principle within him, no sinful
stain upon him, and no sinful environment around him. Man and woman walked
together with God in the bliss of perfection, contentment and mutual delight.
Man was delighted with God and God was delighted with man.
Then
a catastrophe! It is described in Genesis 3. Sin dared to raise its horrid head
against God. Man defied God’s right to be God. Sin entered into the world, and
death by sin. Man died. He was separated from God. The earth was cursed. It
began to bring forth thorns and thistles. God’s creature became without form
and void. The dark slime of the serpent has corrupted the race of mankind. This
great catastrophe, the fall, is verified in hearts of all Adam’s descendants.
·
Mn is fallen (Eccles. 7:9).
·
Man is alienated from God (Eph. 4:18).
·
Man is depraved (Jer. 17:9).
·
Man is spiritually dead (Rom. 5:12).
Genesis
1:2 describes the condition of fallen man. Like the earth after satan’s fall,
so man after Adam’s fall is in a state of disorder.
A. It is a state of confusion - “The earth became without form.” Nothing was
in harmony with God. Nothing was right. And fallen man is out of kelter.
Nothing in him is in harmony with God. Nothing in him is right or good.
B. It is a state of emptiness - “The earth was void,” utterly
empty, incapable of life and fruitfulness. And man without Christ is
spiritually void, empty and barren, incapable of life and fruitfulness toward
God.
C. It is a state of darkness - “Darkness was upon the face of the deep.” To be lost
is to be under the power of darkness, to be under the rule of satan, the prince
of darkness. There is not one ray of spiritual light in man by nature. No
knowledge!
III. Now, let me
show y ou how the rest of this chapter describes THE RESTORATION OF GOD’S CREATION (vv. 2-31).
Time
will not permit me to explain the meaning of every verse. But that is not my
purpose. I want to show you the spiritual significance of these verses. The
order followed by God in restoring the physical creation is the same order
followed by God in the new creation, in the restoration of fallen man by his
almighty grace. The work of God in the restoration of his creation corresponds
exactly to the experience of a believer. Here are seven works performed by God
in the restoration of his creation which pictures his work of grace in the
believer.
A. “And the
Spirit of God moved upon the face of the waters” (v. 2).
The
earth, no doubt, moved in its orbit and rotated upon its own axis, but its
motions could nto mend it. It had to be moved upon by the Spirit of God.
Otherwise, it would forever remain “without
form and void.”
Even so, regeneration
is not accomplished by the works of man or the emotions of the heart, but by
the working of God the Holy Spirit. The new birth is not an evolution, but a
creation. “It is not of him that willeth,
nor of him that runneth, but of God that showeth mercy” (Rom. 9:16). “It is the Spirit tht quickeneth; the flesh
profitteth nothing” (John 6:63).
The
new birth is not accomplished by man’s movement toward God, but by God’s
movement upon the heart of man.
B. “And God
said, Let there be light; and there was light” (v. 3).
Mark
this down - If the Spirit of God moves upon a man it is by the Word of God. No
less than ten times in this chapter we read these words, “and God said.” God will not work apart from his Word. Without
question, God could have refashioned and restored the earth without speaking a
word. But he did not. His purposes were worked out and his counsels were
fulfilled by his Word. Light came and was produced by the Word of God.
These
two things are inseparably joined together - The ministry of the Holy Spirit
and the ministry of the Word of God.
1.
The Word of
God is the power of God (Rom. 1:16).
2.
The Word of
God is the source of spiritual light (2 Cor. 4:6).
3.
The Word of
God is the seed of life (James 1:18; 1 Pet. 1:23-25).
4.
The Word of
God is the conveyor of faith (Rom. 10:17).
5.
The Word of
God is the means of grace and salvation (1 Cor. 1:23; 1 Tim. 4:16).
C. “And God
divided the light from the darkness” (v. 4).
As
God separated the light from the darkness in the old creation, so he separates
the light from the darkness in the new creation. “Ye are the children of light, and the children of the day: we are not
of the night, nor of darkness” (1 Thess. 5:5).
The
Word of God, by the power of the Holy Spirit working in the new man, divides
between the soul and the spirit, separates the spiritual from the carnal (2
Cor. 6:14-18).
·
Doctrinally.
·
Experimentally.
Note: Those who are born of God
know light from darkness. And they walk in the light as he is in the light (1
John 1:5-7).
D. “And God
said, Let the earth bring forth fruit” (v. 11).
Where
there is the work of the Spirit, the Word of God and the light of grace, there
will be fruit unto God (Gal. 5:22-23). This fruit is the result of a condition,
not an effort. It is the result of what we are, not of what we do. The fruit of
Christ in us is Christ likeness. Those who are born of God bear fruit after his
kind. The seed within bears fruit after its kind on the earth. Apples produce
apples. Grapes produce grapes. And grace produces grace. (Character and
conduct)
E. “And God
said, Let there be lights in the firmament of heaven…to give light upon the
earth” (vv. 14-15).
The
lights must be above the earth if they are to shine upon it. Now you who are
born of God have been raised above the earth. “Ye are the light of the world” (Matt. 5:14). As the moon reflects
the light of the sun, see that you reflect the light of Christ in this world
(Matt. 5:16). This is something we must do!
NOTE: Good works are the only
lights by which the world sees Christ in his people. Let us be careful to
maintain them (Eph. 2:10; Titl. 3:8).
1. Saved by
grace.
2. Works have
nothing to do with salvation.
3. Salvation
always produces good works.
F. “God
created man in his own image” (v. 27).
Here
is the climax of the Creator’s power. God made man in his own likeness. And he
made him out of the soil of the earth, even the earth which had become “without form and void!” But here is a
work even greater. In the new creation the God of all grace creates sinners new
in Christ! (2 Cor. 5:17; Gal. 6:15; Col. 3:10). God takes men and women who are
utterly “without form and void” spiritually
and makes them exact replicas of his Son!
·
By redemption!
·
By regeneration!
·
By resurrection!
G. And God blessed the man he had made and gave him
dominion over all his creation (vv. 29-31).
Those
who are born of God are blessed of God (Eph. 1:3). “All things are yours, for ye are Christ’s, and Christ is God’s.” and
one day soon God shall put all things under your feet even as he has put all
things under the feet of his dear Son (Heb. 2:6-9; Rom. 16:20). Then the
purpose of God shall be fulfilled. Then God shall be all in all! Then the
Sabbath!
Application:
Until you
are one with Christ you are out of harmony with God’s creation. Come to Christ.
Believe on the Lord Jesus Christ. If you do, I tell you upon the authority of
God’s Holy Word that you are a new creature in Christ!