"In the beginning God
created the heaven and the earth. And the earth was waste and
void; and darkness was upon the face of the deep; and the spirit
of God moved upon the face of the waters. And God said, Let there
be light: and there was light" (Genesis 1:1-3).
"I beheld the earth,
and, lo, it was waste and void; and the heavens, and they had no
light. I beheld the mountains, and, lo, they trembled, and all
the hills moved to and fro. I beheld, and, lo, there was no man,
and all the birds of the heavens were fled. I beheld, and, lo,
the fruitful field was a wilderness, and all the cities thereof
were broken down at the presence of the Lord, and before his
fierce anger. For thus saith the Lord, The whole land shall be a
desolation; yet will I not make a full end" (Jeremiah
4:23-27).
'In the beginning, God...' And
everyone will say, That is right; that is the place that He ought
to occupy. And so, with these words, so familiar to us, the whole
Bible is introduced. From this keynote, the whole Bible runs, and
becomes a harmony - God. Here, God, the subject of the whole
Bible, is introduced. 'In the beginning, God...' And when
God is in His place, which is first and primary, there is always
a new beginning. This is a point of departure, and a point which
marks a new prospect. It is always like that when the Lord has
His place.
Characteristics of God
I
want to dwell for a few minutes upon the kind of God that is
introduced with these words. These early verses of the Bible
contain in principle the great truths as to what God is like; the
kind of God that He is. We open this Book, and are at once
confronted with a state that is wholly negative. Everything about
that condition is negative: there was not this,
and there was not that; that is the mark
of it. And God, introduced against the background of a negative
condition, is immediately shown to be a God who is positive; a
God who is not negative, and a God who cannot bear anything that
is negative. He is the great 'Yea' God, the Almighty Yes, and
whenever God comes to His place, there will be a change from a
negative to a positive character, some meaningfulness. With God
all that is negative will just begin to go out.
We
shall, in fact, find that, whatever His activities may be - and
His activities are many indeed, and sometimes they seem to be
working in a negative way - the truth is, that, whatever He is
doing, He is doing it with a positive object and a positive mind;
His end is not going to be negative. "I will not make a full
end", we have just read in Jeremiah. However it may appear
that things are being brought to an end, He will not make a full
end. It is all with a positive purpose in view. The very first
thing about this God, who is the subject of this whole mighty
Book, is that He is a positive God, who is set against any
negative condition. Take that as a great truth in your
relationship with the Lord, in your apprehension of the Lord.
These are the foundations of everything.
Purpose
The
next thing is: "And God created..." Put
that in another way: 'God got to work'. God is a God
of purpose, and not passive, inactive. He is a God actuated by
positive purpose. We know from the rest of the story how true
that is. How much there is in the Bible that just comes back to
this truth. God is not an inactive God, a stand-off God, just a
spectator, somewhere amidst the shadows. He is right on the
scene; He is right in things. As Paul says, He is 'working
in all things' (1 Cor. 12:6). He is not a
purposeless God, and He cannot endure a state of things that has
no purpose. He cannot look upon this 'without form, and empty'.
God is not going to tolerate that; He is introduced to us as One
who will not bear any kind of purposeless state, and who will do
all in His power to turn things to positive purpose. He is the
God of purpose; He is not a passive God.
Order
"Without
form". He comes in as set against anything
that is formless, or without order. He is a God of order. It is a
beautiful story of an order being introduced, evolved, where
there was no order. Disorder is always weakness, disorder is
always loss. A disorderly person wastes much time and energy, and
throws away a great deal of vital value. Disorderliness in our
person; disorderliness in our home, or in any sphere;
disorderliness in the Church - it all means weakness and loss.
God is a God of order. So, when the Scripture says that the earth
was "without form", God is introduced as One who is not
going to allow that to continue. His activity is to bring about
an order - not merely for its own sake, not because He is
fastidious or pernickety, but because, as we all know, economy is
always bound up with being orderly, being systematic. And that is
the kind of God He is, who does not want to see all the loss that
is associated with a lack of heavenly order.
Fulness
"Without
form, and void". The
Hebrew word would be better translated by the English word
'empty' - 'without form and empty' or 'desolate', 'barren'. God
is not a God like that. If there is one thing that the Bible says
about the Lord, all the way through, it is that He is a God who
believes in fulness; His thoughts are full thoughts; His ends are
full ends. The great end that He has in view is when "the
earth shall be filled with" - shall
be full of - "the knowledge of the glory of the Lord"
(Hab. 2:14). He is working toward that. He cannot bear to have a
condition that is not full; He just cannot. He does not like
people to be empty; He does not even like us to be partially
full: He wants us to know His fulness - to 'receive of His
fulness, grace upon grace' (John 1:16). God cannot bear vacuums,
for a vacuum is always a dangerous thing. He acts against that.
Light
"And
God said, Let there be light". God cannot bear
a state of darkness. He is the God of light, the God of
illumination; and His desire is that there shall be light
everywhere, fulness of light. That is the kind of God that is
introduced with this word, "In the beginning God..."
God's Second Movements: 'I
Will Plant Again'
There
are those that believe that the state here described was the
result of judgment upon a former creation. Whether that is so or
not, the rest of the Bible does show, again and again, that God
had to act in relation to a state of things that had missed the
purpose of its existence, to break it down, destroy it, throw it
into disruption and desolation. When a thing which He raised up
for a purpose, had lost that purpose, He did that again and
again. But whenever He did it, He moved again. The Bible is just
full of the second movements of God, in lives, in a people, in
places. Think of some of the double movements of God that the
Bible contains. How thankful Jonah was that the Lord did not
leave him in the depths of the sea in his misery! The word is:
"And the word of the Lord came unto Jonah the second
time..." Thank God for that second time! How glad Peter
would be that the Lord came a second time into his life, after
the chaos, after the blinding darkness of his failure. The Lord
came again to Peter. The Bible is full of such examples. "I
will not make a full end". In other words, 'I will come back
again, whatever I have to do.'
Sometimes
the Lord does seem to be on that line of pulling down. I read
recently in that shortest chapter in Jeremiah, chapter 45, the
tremendous statement of the Lord through Jeremiah to Baruch. He
says: "That which I have planted I will pluck up... Seekest
thou great things for thyself? seek them not" (Jer. 45:4,5).
But we know that, while the Lord pulled up, rooted up that people
from the land because they failed to fulfil their Divine purpose,
He planted them again. Through the prophet, He says: 'I will
plant again; I will plant again' (cf. Jer. 32:41, etc.). And He
did. Sometimes there does seem to be the pulling up or pulling
down business going on; the destroying, the bringing about of a
state of chaos and desolation. If it seems like that, may it not
be only another aspect of the Lord's positive line of action? If
the Bible says anything at all, it says that even His judgments,
in time, are intended to be to His glory, and not to final
desolation.
We
could take many illustrations or instances in the Bible of the
working of this principle, as showing what kind of God He is.
There was the chaos and desolation, the barrenness and
unfruitfulness and darkness of Israel in Egypt; a condition in
the nation, in the people, very similar to what we have here at
the beginning of Genesis. It might well be said of Israel in
Egypt during those four hundred years: 'Without form and void...
and darkness'. The Lord moved into that formlessness, emptiness,
purposelessness; and in the wilderness, what a beautiful order He
established. From a rabble He created a nation; from a
purposeless people, He brought out a people with a wonderful
prospect, from the chaos in which they were living, He produced
that marvellous system of worship in the Tabernacle. How ordered
it all is, to the last detail! He is the God of order. Israel in
Babylon was in a similar condition - "without form and
void... and darkness". The Lord moves against that. What
about the disciples after the Cross? We could say: "without
form and void... and darkness over the face of the deep" -
awful chaos and desolation. But see the Creator at work after His
resurrection, recovering! We know the end of that story.
The Spiritual Counterpart in
the New Creation
What
I want to say alongside of this is the great thing, of course.
All this is true as to what kind of God this is that is
introduced with the Bible. The great thing is what Paul says
about it, that 'all things were created for... unto... and by
Jesus Christ.' What does that mean? It means that all this, of
which we have spoken so imperfectly, becomes spiritually true in
the Lord Jesus. As it is true in creation, in nature, at the
beginning, in the new creation in Christ Jesus it becomes
spiritually true for every member of that new creation, every one
truly born anew.
Purpose
We
know how every true child of God, who comes into this
relationship with the Lord Jesus, immediately assumes a new sense
of positiveness in life. Before that, it is all so negative, is
it not? Even the positives of this world - things in which the
world glories or finds its pleasure - are all negative, and
everybody knows they are. They must have, and have, and have, in
order to try to overcome this negative element that is in
everything. In Christ that negative gives way to a positive. Most
of us can testify that union with the Lord Jesus has given to
life a positiveness and a purposefulness. That comes in at once.
When anyone is saved, born again, you see them assuming a sense
of purpose in life; a new meaning to things has been introduced.
"Called according to His purpose" - a sense of mighty
Divine purpose comes in with Christ, it is found in Him.
Order
Then
the life begins to take on a new order. All that uncoordinated
state, where everything was as it were disintegrated and
unrelated, begins to give place to a co-ordinating purpose; the
life becomes united, and united by something quite positive. It
is a new order that is brought into life in Christ, a heavenly
order, a Divine order.
Fulness
The
same is true of this matter of fulness: how empty after all life
is until we find the Lord Jesus! I can never understand really
the phrase: 'an aching void'! What is an aching void? A void is a
void, and it is void of even an ache! But it is an expression; we
know what it means - an emptiness, an ache for something to fill
life. That is answered, is it not, in the Lord Jesus. We begin to
know something of that when we begin the true Christian life; we
know we are on the way to something rich and full. And it goes on
and on; there is no end to this fulness. John said: 'Of His
fulness have we all received' - of it!
not 'it'; we have not received His entire fulness; but of
His fulness have all we received. And the end is
'unto the measure of the stature of the fulness of Christ' (Eph.
4:13) - 'the fulness of Him that filleth all in all' (Eph. 1:23)
- the fulness of God. That is what we are introduced into. God is
that kind of God, but He is now made all that to us in Christ.
There should be no vacuum in the Christian life, no emptiness.
Light
And
again, is it not true that in Christ there is the true
illumination, the true light? He is the light. Paul, as we know
well, linked this first chapter of Genesis, these very first
phrases, with his own spiritual experience, and said: "It is
God, that said, Light shall shine out of darkness, who shined in
our hearts, to give the light of the knowledge of the glory of
God in the face of Jesus Christ" (2 Cor. 4:6). The new
creation is a new illumination; the light begins to shine.
Now
that we have it - imperfectly, it is true; a little, and more,
and more - the measure of light, the measure of understanding of
Divine things, will entirely depend upon two considerations.
On
the one side, it will depend on how prepared we are to subject our
wisdom to the wisdom of God. You know, our heads are usually the
hindrance to spiritual illumination. We are wanting to get it all
through our heads, through our reason to understand with our
natural minds; we are struggling and struggling, and we don't get
very far; and we have to say: I can't understand! Well, we never
shall that way. Just as the will has to be subjected to the will
of God, so the mind has to be subjected to the mind of God. We
come up against something that is God's revealed mind, and it
does not accord with our minds, and our minds do not accord with
it; we therefore put our minds in the way, and say: But... but... but... There light is
arrested; there understanding is arrested. 'Your thoughts are not
My thoughts', saith the Lord. 'As high as the heaven is above the
earth, so are My thoughts above your thoughts' (Is. 55:8,9). So
you have got to surrender your own mental activities to the Lord,
and perhaps be crucified in that tremendous reasoning faculty
that you have, in humble acceptance of what God says. The light
will break then.
That is one side. The other
side is this. The Holy Spirit is the Spirit of illumination, of
revelation, and we must have the Spirit for spiritual
understanding. 'The Spirit of God brooded over the face of the
waters'. He it was who was the agent in transforming this scene,
and bringing in this light, which made all the difference. The
Spirit of God does this. It is a simple word perhaps for
beginners in the Christian life. It is a wonderful thing how, if
we surrender, on the one side, mind, as well as heart and will,
to the Lord, the Lord can get on with His new creation so much
more quickly than if we are all the time arguing, or reserving,
or holding back, or contradicting. When the Holy Spirit really
gets His place in us, how quick the change is; how wonderful the
transformation.
But my point is this. All this
that comes in by way of illustration (I am not saying it is only
illustration and parable, history or not history - that does not
really matter for the moment) - all this is God's way of leading
us on to His Son. He is saying: What is true in the natural order
of creation, under the hand of God, has its superior counterpart
in the spiritual, heavenly, new creation in Christ. And this is
what we find, or should find, in Christ. This kind of thing: God
working against what is negative, to bring about the positive;
against what is empty, to bring about the full; against what is
disorderly, to bring in the order; against what is dark, to bring
in the light. That is the nature of the Christian life; that is
what is made true in Christ, in the new creation.
First published in "A Witness and A
Testimony" magazine, Jul-Aug 1961, Vol 39-4