Christ and Creation
Tonight I will begin teaching a study on the Gospel of John. It has been said of this Gospel that in it a child can wade and an elephant swim. This means it is a book that is at one and the same time simple and complex. Anyone who has ever studied John’s Gospel will know what I mean.
John begins his Gospel not with stories of Jesus’ birth, like Matthew and Luke, but with beautiful words that point to the preexistence of Christ. In words reminiscent of Genesis 1:1-2 he says, “In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and the Word was God. He was with God in the beginning.” Then in verse 3 he boldly proclaims, “Through him all things were made; without him nothing was made that has been made.” In this incredible text we are told not only that Jesus has always existed but that he was instrumental in the creation of the world.
John emphasized that the Word is responsible for everything that exists. He states this in a positive (“Through him all things were made”) and negative (“without him nothing was made that has been made”) manner. John’s teaching is consistent with what the apostle Paul wrote: “…yet for us there is but one God, the Father, from whom all things came and for whom we live; and there is but one Lord, Jesus Christ, through whom all things came and through whom we live.” (1 Cor. 8:6) God the Father and God the Son both play a vital role in Creation.
In John 1:3 there is an interesting change in verb tenses. Biblical scholar Leon Morris notes that “were made” regards Creation in its totality, as one act, but “has been made” conveys the thought of the continuing existence of created things. There are implications that come with the change in verb tenses. Morris says this means “What we see around us did not come into existence apart from the Word, any more than what appeared in the first day of creation.”
To me this is most significant when it comes to “seeing Creation.” It means that all around us Christ is at work in what he has made and is making, and that includes us as well. The story of Creation is not just an ancient one, it is an ongoing story—one that we participate in every day. We can actually witness the Creator’s work in progress! How awesome is that?!
–Chuck
(Both images above were taken this past Saturday at the Red River Gorge Geological Area in Kentucky.)