“In the beginning,” the Bible begins, “God created the heavens and the earth (Genesis 1:1).” God’s message to us starts with this truth: The universe exists because he made it.
Out of Nothing at His Command
Nothing at all existed (except God himself, of course), and out of that nothingness, God made everything. As he worked, what was not began to be (Rom. 4:17). Latin-loving theologians call this creation ex nihilo—or “creation from nothing.” God created the universe and everything in it out of nothing.
And he made it all by simply calling things into existence. “By the word of the Lord the heavens were made,” the psalmist wrote, “and by the breath of his mouth all their host. For he spoke, and it came to be; he commanded, and it stood firm” (Ps. 33:6, 9). God said, “Let there be”—and there were. Theologians have a Latin term for this aspect of creation, too. They say God created by fiat, which simply means that he created “by command.” He commanded the universe to come into existence, and in response, the universe came.
If you can’t wrap your mind around something coming from nothing in answer to God’s call, you’re in good company. J. I. Packer writes, “To say that [God] created “out of nothing” is to confess the mystery, not explain it.”1 How could we explain it? We create—if we can call it that—by rearranging and reshaping material that already exists. We brush paint on canvas to make pictures, or cut fabric and sew it to make quilts, or saw wood and join it to make boxes or furniture. But we can’t create from nothing, nor can we create by commanding something to exist.
But God can and he did. He commanded and everything came to be—the heavens and all the heavenly bodies, and the earth with all its plants and creatures (Ps. 148:1–12).
Undergirding God’s creative act was his independent will (Revelation 4:11). He chose to make the world, not because of any need he had (Acts 17:25), but because he had a purpose to accomplish in it. He wanted to show his own glory through the things he made (Romans 11:36; Psalm 19:1).
One Triune Creator
The creation story leaves room for only one God—the God who created everything. What we don’t know from Genesis (although there are hints in the creation account), is that the one God who created the universe exists as Trinity. Later in scripture, we’ll learn that all three persons of the Trinity were active in creation. For instance, 1 Corinthians 8:6 teaches that all things exist from the Father and through the Lord Jesus Christ. And the Spirit? Job 33:4 says he made us and gave us life.
All three persons of the Trinity—Father, Son, and Spirit—worked together to create the universe. They were not independent from each other, but, writes Louis Berkhof, “the whole work … is ascribed to each one of the three persons.2 We don’t know exactly how this cooperation worked, but we can say that creation is from the Father, through the Son, and in the Spirit.3
He Rules the Universe
God created everything, so he owns everything. All creation and all creatures belong to him, and he rules over them. “[W]e should not be surprised to find [God] sovereign over what he has made,” says Mark Dever in a sermon on the book of Genesis. “The author of all has authority over all.4
One way God rules the universe is by unfolding its history according to his plan. He accomplishes his will through every event and every circumstance everywhere in creation throughout all time.
He also governs creation by sustaining it and providing for the creatures in it. The universe only continues to exist because God continues to uphold it (Hebrews 1:3). Creatures continue to eat only because God feeds them. Creation is completely dependent on God who created it.
And as the creator and ruler of the universe, God defines the things He made. He sets their limits, and assigns their duties. Creatures don’t define themselves, but are what God their creator, owner, and ruler says they are. He determines their proper place and their rightful purpose in His creation.
He Rules Us
Our proper place as human creatures is under God’s rule. Our rightful purpose is to glorify him by worshipping him alone and doing what he commands. Understanding and accepting our place and purpose as creatures keeps us setting ourselves up as our own rulers or gods, and makes us willing servants of the God who made us.
We can glorify God and fulfill our purpose as his creatures by
1Concise Theology: A Guide to Historic Christian Beliefs by J. I. Packer, p. 21.
2Systematic Theology by Louis Berkhof, p. 129.
3Berkhof, p. 129, although Berkhof uses the words out of instead of from in regards to the Father.
4The Message of the Old Testament by Mark Dever, page 71.
5The God Who Is There by D. A. Carson, p. 21.
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