Bible Concordance
Creation (35 Occurrences)Matthew 13:35 in fulfilment of the saying of the Prophet, "I will open my mouth in figurative language, I will utter things kept hidden since the creation of all things."
(WEY NIV)
Matthew 19:28 "I solemnly tell you," replied Jesus, "that in the New Creation, when the Son of Man has taken His seat on His glorious throne, all of you who have followed me shall also sit on twelve thrones and judge the twelve tribes of Israel.
(WEY)
Matthew 25:34 "Then the King will say to those at His right, "'Come, my Father's blessed ones, receive your inheritance of the Kingdom which has been divinely intended for you ever since the creation of the world.
(WEY NIV)
Mark 10:6 But from the beginning of the creation, God made them male and female.
(WEB KJV WEY ASV DBY WBS YLT NAS RSV NIV)
Mark 13:19 For in those days there will be oppression, such as there has not been the like from the beginning of the creation which God created until now, and never will be.
(WEB KJV WEY ASV DBY WBS YLT NAS RSV)
Mark 16:15 He said to them, "Go into all the world, and preach the Good News to the whole creation.
(WEB ASV DBY YLT NAS RSV NIV)
Luke 11:50 so that the blood of all the Prophets, that is being shed from the creation of the world onwards, may be required from the present generation.
(WEY)
John 17:24 "Father, those whom Thou hast given me--I desire that where I am they also may be with me, that they may see the glory--my glory--my gift from Thee, which Thou hast given me because Thou didst love me before the creation of the world.
(WEY NIV)
Romans 1:20 For the invisible things of him since the creation of the world are clearly seen, being perceived through the things that are made, even his everlasting power and divinity; that they may be without excuse.
(WEB KJV WEY ASV DBY WBS YLT NAS RSV NIV)
Romans 8:19 For the creation waits with eager expectation for the children of God to be revealed.
(WEB WEY ASV YLT NAS RSV NIV)
Romans 8:20 For the creation was subjected to vanity, not of its own will, but because of him who subjected it, in hope
(WEB WEY ASV YLT NAS RSV NIV)
Romans 8:21 that the creation itself also will be delivered from the bondage of decay into the liberty of the glory of the children of God.
(WEB WEY ASV YLT NAS RSV NIV)
Romans 8:22 For we know that the whole creation groans and travails in pain together until now.
(WEB KJV WEY ASV DBY WBS YLT NAS RSV NIV)
Romans 8:23 Not only so, but ourselves also, who have the first fruits of the Spirit, even we ourselves groan within ourselves, waiting for adoption, the redemption of our body.
(See RSV)
Romans 8:39 nor things about to be, nor height, nor depth, nor any other created thing, shall be able to separate us from the love of god, that 'is' in Christ Jesus our Lord.
(See RSV NIV)
1 Corinthians 4:9 God, it seems to me, has exhibited us Apostles last of all, as men condemned to death; for we have come to be a spectacle to all creation--alike to angels and to men.
(WEY)
2 Corinthians 5:17 Therefore if anyone is in Christ, he is a new creation. The old things have passed away. Behold, all things have become new.
(WEB DBY RSV NIV)
Galatians 6:15 For in Christ Jesus neither is circumcision anything, nor uncircumcision, but a new creation.
(WEB DBY YLT NAS RSV NIV)
Ephesians 1:4 even as, in His love, He chose us as His own in Christ before the creation of the world, that we might be holy and without blemish in His presence.
(WEY NIV)
Ephesians 1:10 for the government of the world when the times are ripe for it--the purpose which He has cherished in His own mind of restoring the whole creation to find its one Head in Christ; yes, things in Heaven and things on earth, to find their one Head in Him.
(WEY)
Colossians 1:15 who is the image of the invisible God, the firstborn of all creation.
(WEB WEY ASV DBY YLT NAS RSV NIV)
Colossians 1:23 if it is so that you continue in the faith, grounded and steadfast, and not moved away from the hope of the Good News which you heard, which is being proclaimed in all creation under heaven; of which I, Paul, was made a servant.
(WEB WEY ASV DBY YLT NAS)
Colossians 3:11 In that new creation there is neither Greek nor Jew, circumcision nor uncircumcision, barbarian, Scythian, slave nor free man, but Christ is everything and is in all of us.
(WEY)
Hebrews 4:3 We who have believed are soon to be admitted to the true rest; as He has said, "As I swore in My anger, they shall not be admitted to My rest," although God's works had been going on ever since the creation of the world.
(WEY NIV)
Hebrews 4:13 and there is not a created thing not manifest before Him, but all things 'are' naked and open to His eyes -- with whom is our reckoning.
(See NIV)
Hebrews 9:11 But Christ having come as a high priest of the coming good things, through the greater and more perfect tabernacle, not made with hands, that is to say, not of this creation,
(WEB WEY ASV DBY YLT NAS RSV NIV)
Hebrews 9:26 In that case Christ would have needed to suffer many times, from the creation of the world onwards; but as a matter of fact He has appeared once for all, at the Close of the Ages, in order to do away with sin by the sacrifice of Himself.
(WEY NIV)
1 Peter 1:20 He was pre-destined indeed to this work, even before the creation of the world, but has been plainly manifested in these last days for the sake of you who, through Him,
(WEY NIV)
1 Peter 2:13 Be subject, then, to every human creation, because of the Lord, whether to a king, as the highest,
(YLT)
2 Peter 3:4 and saying, "Where is the promise of his coming? For, from the day that the fathers fell asleep, all things continue as they were from the beginning of the creation."
(WEB KJV WEY ASV DBY WBS YLT NAS RSV NIV)
Revelation 3:14 "To the angel of the assembly in Laodicea write: "The Amen, the Faithful and True Witness, the Head of God's creation, says these things:
(WEB KJV WEY ASV DBY WBS YLT NAS RSV NIV)
Revelation 13:8 And all the inhabitants of the earth will be found to be worshipping him: every one whose name is not recorded in the Book of Life--the Book of the Lamb who has been offered in sacrifice ever since the creation of the world.
(WEY NIV)
Revelation 17:8 "The Wild Beast which you have seen was, and is not, and yet is destined to re-ascend, before long, out of the bottomless pit and go his way into perdition. And the inhabitants of the earth will be filled with amazement--all whose names are not in the Book of Life, having been recorded there ever since the creation of the world--when they see the Wild Beast: because he was, and is not, and yet is to come.
(WEY NIV)
Genesis 2:3 And God blessed the seventh day, and hallowed it; because that in it He rested from all His work which God in creating had made.
(See RSV)
Habakkuk 2:18 "What value does the engraved image have, that its maker has engraved it; the molten image, even the teacher of lies, that he who fashions its form trusts in it, to make mute idols?
(See RSV NIV)
Thesaurus
Creation (35 Occurrences)... The work of
creation is attributed (1) to the Godhead (Genesis 1:1, 26); (2) to
the Father (1 Corinthians 8:6); (3) to the Son (John 1:3; Colossians 1:16, 17
.../c/creation.htm - 34kCreature (73 Occurrences)
... Denotes the whole creation in Romans 8:39; Colossians 1:15; Revelation 5:13; the
whole human race in Mark 16:15; Romans 8:19-22. ... See OWL; CREATION. ...
/c/creature.htm - 36k
Newness (2 Occurrences)
... Aramaic (Ezra 6:4); Tari, "fresh" (Judges 15:15, the Revised Version (British and
American) "a fresh jawbone of an ass"); beri'ah, a "creation" (Numbers 16:30 ...
/n/newness.htm - 14k
Nature (80 Occurrences)
... Noah Webster's Dictionary 1. (n.) The existing system of things; the world
of matter, or of matter and mind; the creation; the universe. ...
/n/nature.htm - 35k
Creator (19 Occurrences)
... 2. Purpose in Creation: God's free creative action is destined to realize archetypal
ends and ideals, which are peculiar to Himself. ... See CREATION. ...
/c/creator.htm - 15k
Firstbegotten (1 Occurrence)
... Philo applies the word to the Logos as the archetypal and governing idea
of creation. Similarly Christ, as "the firstborn of all ...
/f/firstbegotten.htm - 10k
First-begotten (2 Occurrences)
... Philo applies the word to the Logos as the archetypal and governing idea
of creation. Similarly Christ, as "the firstborn of all ...
/f/first-begotten.htm - 10k
Eve (5 Occurrences)
... Easton's Bible Dictionary Life; living, the name given by Adam to his wife (Genesis
3:20; 4:1). The account of her creation is given in Genesis 2:21, 22. ...
/e/eve.htm - 16k
Anthropology
... ANTHROPOLOGY. an-thro-pol'-o-ji: I. TERMS EMPLOYED II. NATURE OF MAN BIBLICAL
CONCEPTION III. ORIGIN OF MAN FROM SCRIPTURE ACCOUNT: NARRATIVES OF CREATION IV. ...
/a/anthropology.htm - 38k
Cosmological
... The wider sense of "all creation," or "universe" (see above on the Old Testament),
is expressed by such phrases as panta, "all things" (John 1:3), pasa he ...
/c/cosmological.htm - 33k
Condensed Biblical Cyclopedia
Creation- Date. The date of creation cannot be determined. The first Statement of the book of Genesis places the time in remote and Impenetrable antiquity.
- Creator. The writer of Genesis offers no proof of the existence Of Jehovah or of the fact that all things were made by Him. (Genesis 1:1,2; John 1:1-3; Colossians 1:15-17; Hebrews 1:10; Hebrews 11:3).
- Light. The process of creation had probably been going on for Ages before light was created by the fiat of Jehovah (Genesis 1:1,3; 2 1 1 Corinthians 4:4).
- Days of Creation. The fact that the creative work had been going On for unnumbered ages, leads the reverent student to the conclusion That the "days" were ordinary periods of twenty-four hours each, and That each product of Almighty power was finished and appointed to its Sphere on its designated day. The phrase "evening and morning" occurs Six times in the first account of creation, and it cannot be understood Except in the light of the above statement.
- Order of Creation.
- Light,
- Firmament,
- Vegetation,
- Sun, moon, and stars,
- Water animals and fowls,
- Land animals, man--woman.
Observe the steady march from the lower to the higher, from the Insensate to the intelligent, from the servitor to the sovereign. See The universe by God's hand touched to harmony; see the march of Creative power to its culmination in the making of the companion for Man, pure and innocent, the highest image of God, and hear the stars Sing together and the sons of God shout for joy over the completion of The mighty and glorious work!
Smith's Bible Dictionary
Creation(The creation of all things is ascribed in the Bible to God, and is the only reasonable account of the origin of the world. The method of creation is not stated in Genesis, and as far as the account there is concerned, each part of it may be, after the first acts of creation, by evolution, or by direct act of God's will. The word create (bara) is used but three times in the first chapter of Genesis-- (1) as to the origin of matter; (2) as to the origin of life; (3) as to the origin of man's soul; and science has always failed to do any of these acts thus ascribed to God. All other things are said to be made . The order of creation as given in Genesis is in close harmony with the order as revealed by geology, and the account there given, so long before the records of the rocks were read or the truth discoverable by man, is one of the strongest proofs that the Bible was inspired by God. --Ed.)
ATS Bible Dictionary
Creation(1.) the act by which God calls into existence things not previously in being-material or spiritual, visible or invisible, Psalm 148:5 Revelation 4:11;
(2.) the molding or reconstituting things, the elements of which previously existed; and
(3.) the things thus "created and made," 2 Peter 3:4 Revelation 3:14 5:13. It is probably in the first of these senses the word "created" is to be understood in Genesis 1:1, though some understand it in the second sense. In either case the idea of the eternity of matter is to be rejected, as contrary to sound reason and to the teachings of Scripture, Proverbs 8:22-31 John 1:1-3 Hebrews 11:3.
Creation is exclusively the work of God. The Father, the Son, and the Spirit are each in turn named as its author, Isaiah 40:28 Colossians 1:16 Genesis 2:2. It is a work the mysteries of which no finite mind can apprehend; and yet, as it reveals to us the invisible things of God, Romans 1:20, we may and ought to learn what he reveals respecting it not only in revelation, but in his works. These two volumes are from the same divine hand, and cannot but harmonize with each other. The Bible opens with an account of the creation unspeakably majestic and sublime. The six days there spoken of have usually been taken for our present natural days; but modern geological researches have given rise to the idea that "day" here denotes a longer period. The different rocks of our globe lie in distinct layers, the comparative age of which is supposed to have been ascertained. Only the most recent have been found to contain human remains. Older layers present in turn different fossil remains of animals and plants, many of them supposed to be now extinct. These layers are deeply imbedded beneath the present soil, and yet appear to be formed of matter washed into the bed of some primeval sea, and hardened into rock. Above this may lie numerous other strata of different materials, but which appear to have been deposited in the same manner, in the slow lapse of time. These layers are also thrown up and penetrated all over the world by rocks of still earlier formations, apparently once in a melted state.
There are several modes of reconciling these geological discoveries with the statements of Scripture: First, that the six days of Gen 1...1-31 denote six long epochs-periods of alternate progressive formation and revolution on the surface of the earth. To the Lord "a thousand years are as one day," Psalm 90:2,4 2 Peter 3:5-10 Revelation 20:1 15. Secondly, that the long epochs indicated in the geological structure of the globe occurred before the Bible account commences, or rather in the interval between the first and second verses of Genesis 1:1-31. According to this interpretation, Genesis 1:2 describes the state of the earth at the close of the last revolution it experienced, preparatory to God's fitting it up for the abode of man as described in the verses following. Thirdly, that God compressed the work of those untold ages into six short days, and created the world as he did Adam, in a state of maturity, embodying in its rocks and fossils those rudimental forms of animal and vegetable life which seem naturally to lead up to the existing forms.
The "Creature" and "the whole creation," in Romans 8:19-22, may denote the irrational and inferior creation, which shall be released from the curse, and share in the glorious liberty of the sons of God, Isaiah 11:6 35:1 2Pe 3:7-13. The bodies of believers, now subject to vanity, are secure of full deliverance at the resurrection-"the redemption of our body," Romans 8:23.
Easton's Bible Dictionary
"In the beginning" God created, i.e., called into being, all things out of nothing. This creative act on the part of God was absolutely free, and for infinitely wise reasons. The cause of all things exists only in the will of God. The work of creation is attributed (1) to the Godhead (
Genesis 1:1, 26); (2) to the Father (
1 Corinthians 8:6); (3) to the Son (
John 1:3;
Colossians 1:16, 17); (4) to the Holy Spirit (
Genesis 1:2;
Job 26:13;
Psalm 104:30). The fact that he is the Creator distinguishes Jehovah as the true God (
Isaiah 37:16;
40:12, 13;
54:5;
Psalm 96:5;
Jeremiah 10:11, 12). The one great end in the work of creation is the manifestation of the glory of the Creator (
Colossians 1:16;
Revelation 4:11;
Romans 11:36). God's works, equally with God's word, are a revelation from him; and between the teachings of the one and those of the other, when rightly understood, there can be no contradiction.
Traditions of the creation, disfigured by corruptions, are found among the records of ancient Eastern nations. (see ACCAD.) A peculiar interest belongs to the traditions of the Accadians, the primitive inhabitants of the plains of Lower Mesopotamia. These within the last few years have been brought to light in the tablets and cylinders which have been rescued from the long-buried palaces and temples of Assyria. They bear a remarkable resemblance to the record of Genesis.
Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary
1. (
n.) The act of creating or causing to exist. Specifically, the act of bringing the universe or this world into existence.
2. (n.) That which is created; that which is produced or caused to exist, as the world or some original work of art or of the imagination; nature.
3. (n.) The act of constituting or investing with a new character; appointment; formation.
International Standard Bible Encyclopedia
CREATIONkre-a'-shun (bara' "to create"; ktisis, "that which is created," "creature"):
1. Creation as Abiding
2. Mistaken Ideas
3. True Conception
4. The Genesis Cosmogony
5. Matter not Eternal
6. "Wisdom" in Creation
7. A Free, Personal Act
8. Creation and Evolution
9. Is Creation Eternal?
10. Creation ex nihilo
11. From God's Will
12. Error of Pantheism
13. First Cause a Necessary Presupposition
14. The End-the Divine Glory
LITERATURE
1. Creation as Abiding:
Much negative ground has been cleared away for any modern discussion of the doctrine of creation. No idea of creation can now be taken as complete which does not include, besides the world as at first constituted, all that to this day is in and of creation. For God creates not being that can exist independently of Him, His preserving agency being inseparably connected with His creative power. We have long ceased to think of God's creation as a machine left, completely made, to its own automatic working. With such a doctrine of creation, a theistic evolution would be quite incompatible.
2. Mistaken Ideas:
Just as little do we think of God's creative agency, as merely that of a First Cause, linked to the universe from the outside by innumerable sequences of causes and effects. Nature in her entirety is as much His creation today as she ever was. The dynamic ubiquity of God, as efficient energy, is to be affirmed. God is still All and in All, but this in a way sharply distinguished from pantheistic views, whether of the universe as God, or of God as the universe. Of His own freedom He creates, so that Gnostic theories of natural and necessary emanation are left far behind. Not only have the "carpenter" and the "gardener" theories-with, of course, the architect or world-builder theory of Plato-been dismissed; not only has the conception of evolution been proved harmonious with creative end, plan, purpose, ordering, guidance; but evolutionary science may itself be said to have given the thought of theistic evolution its best base or grounding. The theistic conception is, that the world-that all cosmic existences, substances, events-depend upon God.
3. True Conception:
The doctrine of creation-of the origin and persistence, of all finite existences-as the work of God, is a necessary postulation of the religious consciousness. Such consciousness is marked by deeper insight than belongs to science. The underlying truth is the anti-patheistic one, that the energy and wisdom-by which that, which was not, became-were, in kind, other than its own. For science can but trace the continuity of sequences in all Nature, while in creation, in its primary sense, this law of continuity must be transcended, and the world viewed solely as product of Divine Intelligence, immanent in its evolution. For God is the Absolute Reason, always immanent in the developing universe. Apart from the cosmogonic attempts at the beginning of Genesis, which are clearly religious and ethical in scope and character, the Old Testament furnishes no theoretic account of the manner and order in which creative process is carried on.
4. The Genesis Cosmogony:
The early chapters of Genesis were, of course, not given to reveal the truths of physical science, but they recognize creation as marked by order, continuity, law, plastic power of productiveness in the different kingdoms, unity of the world and progressive advance. The Genesis cosmogony teaches a process of becoming, as well as a creation (see EVOLUTION). That cosmogony has been recognized by Haeckel as meritoriously marked by the two great ideas of separation or differentiation, and of progressive development or perfecting of the originally simple matter. The Old Testament presents the conception of time-worlds or successive ages, but its real emphasis is on the energy of the Divine Word, bringing into being things that did not exist.
5. Matter not Eternal:
The Old Testament and the New Testament, in their doctrine of creation, recognize no eternal matter before creation. We cannot say that the origin of matter is excluded from the Genesis account of creation, and this quite apart from the use of bard', as admitting of material and means in creation. But it seems unwise to build upon Genesis passages that afford no more than a basis which has proved exegetically insecure. The New Testament seems to favor the derivation of matter from the non-existent-that is to say, the time-worlds were due to the effluent Divine Word or originative Will, rather than to being built out of God's own invisible essence. So the best exegesis interprets Hebrews 11:3.
6. "Wisdom" in Creation:
In Old Testament books, as the Psalms, Proverbs, and Jeremiah, the creation is expressly declared to be the work of Wisdom-a Wisdom not disjoined from Goodness, as is yet more fully brought out in the Book of Job. The heavens declare the glory of God, the world manifests or reveals Him to our experience, as taken up and interpreted by the religious consciousness. The primary fact of the beginning of the time-worlds-the basal fact that the worlds came into being by the Word of God-is something apprehensible only by the power of religious faith, as the only principle applicable to the case (Hebrews 11:3). Such intuitive faith is really an application of first principles in the highest-and a truly rational one (see LOGOS). In creation, God is but expressing or acting out the conscious Godhood that is in Him. In it the thought of His absolute Wisdom is realized by the action of His perfect Love. It is philosophically necessary to maintain that God, as the Absolute Being, must find the end of creation in Himself. If the end were external to, and independent of, Him, then would He be conditioned thereby.
7. A Free, Personal Act:
What the religious consciousness is concerned to maintain is, the absolute freedom of God in the production of the universe, and the fact that He is so much greater than the universe that existence has been by Him bestowed on all things that do exist. The Scriptures are, from first to last, shot through with this truth. Neither Kant nor Spencer, from data of self-consciousness or sense-perception, can rise to the conception of creation, for they both fail to reach the idea of Divine Personality. The inconceivability of creation has been pressed by Spencer, the idea of a self-existent Creator, through whose agency it has been made, being to him unthinkable. As if it were not a transparent sophism, which Spencer's own scientific practice refuted, that a hypothesis may not have philosophical or scientific valuee, because it is what we call unthinkable or inconceivable. As if a true and sufficient cause were not enough, or a Divine act of will were not a vera causa. Dependent existence inevitably leads thought to demand existence that is not dependent.
8. Creation and Evolution:
Creation is certainly not disproved by evolution, which does not explain the origin of the homogeneous stuff itself, and does not account for the beginning of motion within it. Of the original creative action, lying beyond mortal ken or human observation, science-as concerned only with the manner of the process-is obviously in no position to speak. Creation may, in an important sense, be said not to have taken place in time, since time cannot be posited prior to the existence of the world. The difficulties of the ordinary hypothesis of a creation in time can never be surmounted, so long as we continue to make eternity mean simply indefinitely prolonged time. Augustine was, no doubt, right when, from the human standpoint, he declared that the world was not made in time, but with time. Time is itself a creation simultaneous with, and conditioned by, world-creation and movement. To say, in the ordinary fashion, that God created in time, is apt to make time appear independent of God, or God dependent upon time. Yet the time-forms enter into all our psychological experience, and a concrete beginning is unthinkable to us.
9. Is Creation Eternal?:
The time-conditions can be transcended only by some deeper intuition than mere logical insight can supply-by such intuitive endeavor, in fact, as is realized in the necessary belief in the self-existent God If such an eternal Being acts or creates, He may be said to act or create in eternity; and it is legitimate enough, in such wise, to speak of His creative act as eternal. This seems preferable to the position of Origen, who speculatively assumed an eternal or unbeginning activity for God as Creator, because the Divine Nature must be eternally self-determined to create in order to the manifestation of its perfections. Clearly did Aquinas perceive that we cannot affirm an eternal creation impossible, the creative act not falling within our categories of time and space. The question is purely one of God's free volition, in which-and not in "nothing"-the Source of the world is found.
10. Creation ex nihilo:
This brings us to notice the frequently pressed objection that creation cannot be out of nothing, since out of nothing comes nothing. This would mean that matter is eternal. But the eternity of matter, as something other than God, means its independence of God, and its power to limit or condition Him. We have, of course, no direct knowledge of the origin of matter, and the conception of its necessary self-existence is fraught with hopeless difficulties and absurdities. The axiom, that out of nothing nothing comes, is not contradicted in the case of creation. The universe comes from God; it does not come from nothing. But the axiom does not really apply to the world's creation, but only to the succession of its phenomena. Entity does not spring from non-entity. But there is an opposite and positive truth, that something presupposes something, in this case rather some One-aliquis rather than aliquid.
11. From God's Will:
It is enough to know that God has in Himself the powers and resources adequate for creating, without being able to define the ways in which creation is effected by Him. It is a sheer necessity of rational faith or spiritual reason that the something which conditions the world is neither hule, nor elemental matter, but personal Spirit or originative Will. We have no right to suppose the world made out of nothing, and then to identify, as Erigena did, this "nothing" with God's own essence. What we have a right to maintain is, that what God creates or calls into being owes its existence to nothing save His will alone, Ground of all actualities. Preexistent Personality is the ground and the condition of the world's beginning.
12. Error of Pantheism:
In this sense, its beginning may be said to be relative rather than absolute. God is always antecedent to the universe-its prius, Cause and Creator. It remains an effect, and sustains a relation of causal dependence upon Him. If we say, like Cousin, that God of necessity creates eternally, we run risk of falling into Spinozistic pantheism, identifying God, in excluding from Him absolute freedom in creation, with the impersonal and unconscious substance of the universe. Or if, with Schelling, we posit in God something which is not God-a dark, irrational background, which original ground is also the ground of the Divine Existence-we may try to find a basis for the matter of the universe, but we are in danger of being merged-by conceptions tinged with corporeity-in that form of pantheism to which God is but the soul of the universe.
The universe, we feel sure, has been caused; its existence must have some ground; even if we held a philosophy so idealistic as to make the scheme of created things one grand illusion, an illusion so vast would still call for some explanatory Cause. Even if we are not content with the conception of a First Cause, acting on the world from without and antecedently in time, we are not yet freed from the necessity of asserting a Cause. An underlying and determining Cause of the universe would still need to be postulated as its Ground.
13. First Cause a Necessary Presupposition:
Even a universe held to be eternal would need to be accounted for-we should still have to ask how such a universe came to be. Its endless movement must have direction and character imparted to it from some immanent ground or underlying cause. Such a self-existent and eternal World-Ground or First Cause is, by an inexorable law of thought, the necessary correlate of the finitude, or contingent character of the world. God and the world are not to be taken simply as cause and effect, for modern metaphysical thought is not content with such a mere ens extra-mundanum for the Ground of all possible experience. God, self-existent Cause of the ever-present world and its phenomena, is the ultimate Ground of the possibility of all that is.
14. The End-the Divine Glory:
Such a Deity, as causa sui, creatively bringing forth the world out of His own potence, cannot be allowed to be an arbitrary resting-place, but a truly rational Ground, of hidest thought. Nor can His Creation be allowed to be an aimless and mechanical universe: it is shot through with end or purpose that tends to reflect the glory of the eternal and personal God, who is its Creator in a full and real sense. But the Divine. action is not dramatic: of His working we can truly say, with Isaiah 45:15, "Verily thou art a God that thyself." As creation becomes progressively disclosed to us, its glory, as revealing God, ought to excite within us an always deeper sense of the sentiment of Psalm 8:1, 9, "O Yahweh our Lord, how excellent is thy name in all the earth!"
See also ANTHROPOLOGY; EARTH; WORLD.
LITERATURE.
James Orr, Christian View of God and the World, 1st edition, 1893; J. Iverach, Christianity and Evolution, 1894; S. Harris, God the Creator and Lord of All, 1897; A. L. Moore, Science and the Faith, 1889; B. P. Bowne, Studies in Theism, new edition, 1902; G. P. Fisher, Grounds of Theistic and Christian Belief, new edition, 1902; J. Lindsay, Recent Advances in Theistic Philosophy of Religion, 1897; A. Dorner, Religionsphilosophie, 1903; J. Lindsay, Studies in European Philosophy, 1909; O. Dykes, The Divine Worker in Creation and Providence, 1909; J. Lindsay, The Fundamental Problems of Metaphysics, 1910.
James Lindsay
Greek
2937. ktisis -- creation (the act or the product) ... creation (the act or the product). Part of Speech: Noun, Feminine Transliteration:
ktisis Phonetic Spelling: (ktis'-is) Short Definition:
creation, creature
... //strongsnumbers.com/greek2/2937.htm - 7k2889. kosmos -- order, the world
... the world; adornment. 2889 (literally, "something ") -- properly, an "
system" (like the universe, creation); the . [The English ...
//strongsnumbers.com/greek2/2889.htm - 7k
1012. boule -- counsel
... It always also includes the Lord's in them -- and hence arranging all the physical
scenes of history before creation (Ps 139:16; Jn 1:3).]. ...
//strongsnumbers.com/greek2/1012.htm - 7k
979. bios -- life, living
... of life; livelihood. 979 -- properly, God's gift of life, animating all
creation "to live and move and have its being" (cf. Ac 17 ...
//strongsnumbers.com/greek2/979.htm - 7k
4309. proorizo -- to predetermine, foreordain
... Since the root (3724 ) already means "establish boundaries," the added prefix (,
"before") makes 4309 () "to -establish boundaries," ie creation.]. ...
//strongsnumbers.com/greek2/4309.htm - 7k
935. basileus -- a king
... As King, Jesus Christ has unqualified jurisdiction over all creation --
also being God the Creator. (cf. Jn 1:1-3,49). See 932 (). ...
//strongsnumbers.com/greek2/935.htm - 7k
Topical Bible Verses
Genesis 1:1-31In the beginning God created the heaven and the earth.
Topicalbible.orgGenesis 1:1
In the beginning God created the heaven and the earth.
Topicalbible.org
Genesis 2:1-25
Thus the heavens and the earth were finished, and all the host of them.
Topicalbible.org
Genesis 2:7
And the LORD God formed man of the dust of the ground, and breathed into his nostrils the breath of life; and man became a living soul.
Topicalbible.org
Colossians 1:16
For by him were all things created, that are in heaven, and that are in earth, visible and invisible, whether they be thrones, or dominions, or principalities, or powers: all things were created by him, and for him:
Topicalbible.org
Revelation 4:11
You are worthy, O Lord, to receive glory and honor and power: for you have created all things, and for your pleasure they are and were created.
Topicalbible.org
Exodus 20:11
For in six days the LORD made heaven and earth, the sea, and all that in them is, and rested the seventh day: why the LORD blessed the sabbath day, and hallowed it.
Topicalbible.org
Genesis 1:26
And God said, Let us make man in our image, after our likeness: and let them have dominion over the fish of the sea, and over the fowl of the air, and over the cattle, and over all the earth, and over every creeping thing that creeps on the earth.
Topicalbible.org
Genesis 1:24
And God said, Let the earth bring forth the living creature after his kind, cattle, and creeping thing, and beast of the earth after his kind: and it was so.
Topicalbible.org
Genesis 1:20
And God said, Let the waters bring forth abundantly the moving creature that has life, and fowl that may fly above the earth in the open firmament of heaven.
Topicalbible.org
Strong's Hebrew
1278. beriah -- a creation, thing created... 1277, 1278. beriah. 1279 . a
creation, thing created. Transliteration: beriah
Phonetic Spelling: (ber-ee-aw') Short Definition: thing.
... /hebrew/1278.htm - 6k 7075. qinyan -- something gotten or acquired, acquisition
... From qanah; creation, ie (concretely) creatures; also acquisition, purchase, wealth --
getting, goods, X with money, riches, substance. see HEBREW qanah. ...
/hebrew/7075.htm - 6k
Library
The vision of Creation
... GENESIS THE VISION OF CREATION. ... 2. The record is as emphatic and as unique
in its teaching as to the mode of creation: 'God said ... ...
/.../maclaren/expositions of holy scripture k/the vision of creation.htm
The Creation
... 3. God and his creation 13. The Creation. Q-7: WHAT ARE THE DECREES OF GOD? ...
Q-9: The next question is, WHAT 1S THE WORK OF CREATION? ...
//christianbookshelf.org/watson/a body of divinity/13 the creation.htm
The New Creation.
... EXPOSITION OF THE APOCALYPSE. The New Creation. "And I saw a new heaven
and a new earth: for the first heaven and the first earth ...
/.../bliss/a brief commentary on the apocalypse/the new creation.htm
A New Creation
... A New Creation. A Sermon (No.3467). Published on Thursday, July 15th, 1915. ... Observe
the text speaks of:". I. A NEW CREATION. "I make." That is a divine word. ...
/.../spurgeon/spurgeons sermons volume 61 1915/a new creation.htm
On Creation
... Lesson 4 ON CREATION. This lesson treats of God bringing everything into existence.
The ... angels. All these are the works of God's creation. ...
/.../kinkead/baltimore catechism no 4/lesson 4 on creation.htm
The Creation in Christ.
... THE CREATION IN CHRIST. All things were made by him, and without him was
not anything made that was made. In him was life, and the ...
//christianbookshelf.org/macdonald/unspoken sermons/the creation in christ.htm
The Millennium in Relation to Creation.
... Chapter Ten The Consummation Of The Redeemer's Return 6. The Millennium in relation
to Creation. ... Creation is not to remain in bondage for ever. ...
/.../pink/the redeemers return/6 the millennium in relation.htm
Whether Creation is Anything in the Creature?
... THE MODE OF EMANATION OF THINGS FROM THE FIRST PRINCIPLE (EIGHT ARTICLES)
Whether creation is anything in the creature? Objection ...
/.../aquinas/summa theologica/whether creation is anything in.htm
On Creation
... DISPUTATION XXIV ON CREATION. We have treated on God, who is the first object
of the Christian religion. And we would now treat on ...
/.../arminius/the works of james arminius vol 2/disputation xxiv on creation.htm
Whether the Creation of Things was in the Beginning of Time?
... OF THE BEGINNING OF THE DURATION OF CREATURES (THREE ARTICLES) Whether the
creation of things was in the beginning of time? Objection ...
/.../aquinas/summa theologica/whether the creation of things.htm
Subtopics
Creation
Creation by Faith we Believe, to be God's Work
Creation Groans
Creation: A Subject of Joy to Angels
Creation: Approved of by God
Creation: Beginning of
Creation: Daily Renewal of Saints
Creation: Effected by Christ
Creation: Effected by God
Creation: Effected by the Command of God
Creation: Effected by the Holy Spirit
Creation: Effected for Christ
Creation: Effected for God's Pleasure
Creation: Effected in Six Normal Days
Creation: Effected in the Beginning
Creation: Effected: According to God's Purpose
Creation: Exhibits: God As the Sole Object of Worship
Creation: Exhibits: The Deity of God
Creation: Exhibits: The Glory and Handiwork of God
Creation: Exhibits: The Goodness of God
Creation: Exhibits: The Power of God
Creation: Exhibits: The Wisdom of God
Creation: Glorifies God
Creation: God Rested From, on the Seventh Day
Creation: God to be Praised For
Creation: Groans Because of Sin
Creation: History of
Creation: Insignificance of Man Seen From
Creation: Leads to Confidence
Creation: Order of Fifth Day, Making Birds, Insects, and Fishes
Creation: Order of First Day, Making Light and Dividing It from Darkness
Creation: Order of Fourth Day, Placing the Sun, Moon, and Stars to Give Light,
Creation: Order of Second Day, Making the Firmament or Atmosphere,
Creation: Order of Sixth Day, Making Beasts of the Earth, and Man
Creation: Order of Third Day, Separating the Land from the Water, and Making
Creation: Renewal of the Earth
Creation: The Formation of Things Which had No Previous Existence
Creation: The New Birth
Creationism
Related Terms
Creature (73 Occurrences)
Newness (2 Occurrences)
Nature (80 Occurrences)
Creator (19 Occurrences)
Firstbegotten (1 Occurrence)
First-begotten (2 Occurrences)
Eve (5 Occurrences)
Anthropology
Cosmological
Providence (3 Occurrences)
Light (2869 Occurrences)
Psychology
Genesis
Living (3112 Occurrences)
Image (126 Occurrences)
World (2829 Occurrences)
Revelation (52 Occurrences)
Earth (10501 Occurrences)
Heavens (548 Occurrences)
Evolution
Vanity (100 Occurrences)
Visible (12 Occurrences)
Onwards (9 Occurrences)
Omniscience
Libraries
Invisible (5 Occurrences)
Inhabitants (254 Occurrences)
Recorded (141 Occurrences)
Destined (25 Occurrences)
Make (12882 Occurrences)
Maker (55 Occurrences)
Plainly (25 Occurrences)
Praise (487 Occurrences)
Succoth-benoth (1 Occurrence)
Succothbenoth (1 Occurrence)
Groan (32 Occurrences)
Creeds
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Colossians (1 Occurrence)
Logos
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Woman (4043 Occurrences)
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Creating (7 Occurrences)
Cosmogony
Shinar (8 Occurrences)
Adam (29 Occurrences)
Natural (49 Occurrences)
Creed
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Regeneration (2 Occurrences)
Continue (144 Occurrences)
Astronomy
Philosophy (1 Occurrence)
Mediation
Redeemer (42 Occurrences)
Mediator (7 Occurrences)
Redemption (46 Occurrences)
Persian (4 Occurrences)
Mouth (534 Occurrences)
Ethics
Day (17670 Occurrences)
Yoke-fellow (1 Occurrence)
Yokefellow
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