Synopses & Reviews
Synopsis
Excerpt from Teachers Handbook to Bible History: A Practical Commentary Upon the Principal Events of the Old and New Testament With Directions for Their Application in the Religious and Moral Training of Children
A. Preparation. - Many thousand years ago there was no earth, no sun, no moon, no star, no animal; not even man existed. God alone reigned supreme then as always. We shall now see how God created the earth, the sun, the moon, the stars, the animals upon the earth, the birds in the air, the fish in the sea, and last - the most perfect of creatures - man.
B. Narration. - Points: (I) The Creation of the World. (2) The Institution of the Sabbath.
C. Explanation. - (a) "In the beginning" - that is to say, before the world was formed, the time when nothing existed but God alone - "God created" - that is, by His divine power He called forth out of nothing - "heaven and earth" - heaven, the invisible world wherein the angels dwell; the earth, the visible world, the temporary abiding-place of man. This earth as first called forth was not beautiful as now, but a great waste of waters, a place desolate, empty, void - without animal or plant - it had not yet been prepared for man. Over the wide expanse of desolate waters, whose great depths covered vast precipices, the Spirit of God moved, that all might be brought from chaos to order and made into a habitable earth for the being man He was later to create.
"And God said: Be light made" - "Light" full, complete, independent light.
"And God said: Let there be a firmament" - "Firmament," that is, the atmosphere which surrounds the earth and which we generally call the heavens. It is that space which extends from the earth to the fixed stars. "The waters were divided from the waters;" that is, one portion of them became as vapor, and was elevated above the firmament in the form of clouds: these God called the waters above. The other portion He called the waters below the firmament; that is, the waters which were left upon the earth; this water He called the sea, and gathered it into the place He had prepared for it - the basin of the sea which surrounds the dry land.
Next, God made "the dry land to appear," to which He gave the name of earth, which means sterile.
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