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How Do I Know God Loves Me? God’s Love in Genesis預覽

How Do I Know God Loves Me? God’s Love in Genesis

3 天中的第 1 天

Origin stories aren’t just for superheroes.

Most of us equate “origin stories” with superheroes. When normal humans survive catastrophic events and emerge with special powers. As Christians, our origin story—the record of how God created the world—is told in Genesis 1-3, but I'm getting ahead of myself...

“Every culture tells of creation,
legend to the map of their expectation
of how we came to be,
why we are here,
if there is a God and if so,
how divine interactions will go.” (Jen Weaver, "Origin Stories" in A Beckoning to Wonder)

Let's take a quick look at few origin stories from other cultures and time periods:

One story of the Egyptian sun god Ra says that his eye separated from him and resisted returning. In the struggle, the eye shed tears from which humans were born.

The Lenape Tribe told of a tortoise who rose out of the water. Dry ground formed, then a tree, which sprouted humans from its roots.

The Babylonian epic told of gods giving birth to younger gods, who all ended up in a shameful war. As they died, their corpses became aspects of creation. One defeated deity paid for his crime with his life, and the first man came from that god’s guilty blood.

Ancient Greeks tell a similar anger-filled story. It ends with what seems an accidental creation of the first man. This guy just sprung up from the soil by himself.

Creation stories abound because deep questions about worth are hidden in each of our hearts.

Beliefs about creation lay the foundation for a culture’s identity and worldview. These stories impart lessons to guide norms and values, including how we think of God.

Based on what we believe about our origin...

Is God present and active? Angry and detached? Are we alone? Do humans come from love or sadness? Are we intended for war or peace?

We then repeat the story a zillion different times, in the ways a culture establishes itself, interacts with the world, and goes about daily life. This is still true for us today, even thought most people don't realize it.

What story do you believe about who you are?

The story you believe about yourself matters, and it begins with what you believe about your origin. What we read in Genesis is true.

“God’s story
is not
fiction or fantasy
it is
remembrance.” (Jen Weaver, “Believing in Living” in A Beckoning to Wonder)

There was only black, inky void.

But in perfect unity and love, our three-in-one God generously brought order and design.

Humans were loved from before we even began. And that love still continues.

With word and breath and action, God was intentional about our creation.

In provision, He placed Adam and Eve in the Garden of Eden, which means Pleasure or Delight.

But if we jump ahead to Adam and Eve, we’ll miss the extravagant beauty of our origin story. We’ll marvel at that next.

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How Do I Know God Loves Me? God’s Love in Genesis

God has loved you since before the world began. Explore our wondrous origin story in Genesis to experience God’s tender love for you in a powerful new way. Find comfort and courage as you see how intentional God was in creation, through this 3-day plan from poet and Bible teacher Jen Weaver. Discover your cherished existence and God-given identity. God loves you and it shows!

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