Introduction
A.M. 1. — B.C. 4004.
We have three things in this
chapter.
(1,) A general idea of the work
of creation, Genesis 1:1-2.
(2,) A particular account of the
several days’ work, distinctly
and in order, Genesis 1:3-30.
(3,) The review and approbation
of the whole work, Genesis 1:31.
NOTES ON CHAPTER 1.
WITH a view to teach us the
knowledge of God and his will,
the only sure foundation of
genuine piety and virtue, and
therefore of infinite importance
to us, the Holy Scriptures
pursue that method, which, of
all others, is the most
convincing and instructive, and
the best calculated to answer
the end intended: they present
us with a history of his mighty
acts, and set before us the
displays which he has made of
his nature and attributes in his
wonderful works. In this way we
learn, not only what he is in
himself, but what he is to us,
and become acquainted, as well
with the various relations in
which he stands to us, and our
duty to him according to these
relations, as with his own
inherent and essential
perfections. And as his
sustaining the relation of a
Creator must, in the nature of
things, precede his bearing any
other, he is first exhibited to
us in that character. As we
proceed with the sacred
narrative, we behold him in his
providence, preserving,
superintending, and governing
the world he had made, and
giving law to the intelligent
part of his creatures, as also
predicting future events and
accomplishing his predictions.
We likewise view him in his
grace, redeeming and saving
fallen man; and, last of all, in
his justice, judging,
acquitting, or condemning,
rewarding, or punishing his
free, accountable, and immortal
offspring.
Verse 1
Genesis 1:1. In the beginning —
That is, of this material,
visible, and temporal world,
(which was not without
beginning, as many of the
ancient heathen philosophers
supposed,) and of time with
relation to all visible beings.
The creation of the spiritual,
invisible, and eternal world,
whether inhabited by the holy or
fallen angels, is not here
included or noticed. God — The
Hebrew word אלהים Elohim, here
and elsewhere translated God,
has been considered by many
learned men as signifying God in
covenant, being derived from the
word אלה Alah, he sware, or bound
himself by an oath. It is in the
plural number, and must often,
of necessity, be understood as
having a plural meaning in the
Holy Scriptures, being a name
sometimes given to the false
gods of the heathen, who were
many, and to angels and
magistrates, who are also
occasionally called elohim,
gods. When intended, as here, of
the one living and true God,
which it generally is, it has,
with great reason, been thought
by most Christian divines to
imply a plurality of persons or
subsistences in the Godhead, and
the rather, as many other parts
of the inspired writings attest
that there is such a plurality,
comprehending the Father, the
Word, or Son, and the Holy
Spirit, and that all these
divine persons equally concurred
in the creation of the world. Of
these things we shall meet with
abundant proof in going through
this sacred volume Created —
That is, brought into being,
gave existence to what had no
existence before, either as to
matter or form; both making the
substance of which the different
parts of the universe were
formed, and giving them the
particular forms which they at
present bear. How astonishing is
the power that could produce
such a world out of nothing!
What an object for adoration and
praise; and what a foundation
for confidence and hope have we
in this wonderful Being, who
thus calls things that are not
as though they were! The heaven
and the earth — Here named by
way of anticipation, and spoken
of more particularly afterward.
The aerial and starry heavens
can only be included here. For
what is termed by St. Paul the
third heaven, 2 Corinthians 12.,
the place where the pure in
heart shall see God, and which
is the peculiar residence of the
blessed angels, was evidently
formed before, (see Job 38:6-7,)
but how long before, who can
say? Verse 2
Genesis 1:2. The earth — When
first called into existence, was
without form and void: confusion
and emptiness, as the same
original words are rendered,
Isaiah 34:11. It was without
order, beauty, or even use, in
its present state, and was
surrounded on all sides with
thick darkness, through the
gloom of which there was not one
ray of light to penetrate not
even so much as to render the
darkness visible.
The Spirit of God moved, &c. —
To cherish, quicken, and dispose
them to the production of the
things afterward mentioned. The
Hebrew word here rendered moved,
is used, Deuteronomy 32:11, of
the eagle fluttering over her
young, and of fowls brooding
over their eggs and young ones,
to warm and cherish them: but,
we must remember, that the
expression, as here used, is
purely metaphorical, and must
not be considered as conveying
any ideas that are unworthy of
the infinite and spiritual
nature of the Holy Ghost.
Verse 3
Genesis 1:3. God said — Not by
an articulate voice; for to whom
should he speak? but in his own
eternal mind. He willed that the
effect here mentioned should be
produced, and it was produced.
This act of his almighty will is
termed, Hebrews 1:3, the word of
his power. Perhaps, however, his
substantial Word, his Son, by
whom he made the worlds, Hebrews
1:2, and Psalms 33:6; Psalms
33:9, is here intended, and whom
the ancient fathers of the
Christian Church thought to be
termed the Word, John 1:1,
chiefly for this reason. Let
there be light, &c. — The noted
critic, Longinus, in his
celebrated Treatise on the
Sublime, expresses his
admiration of this sentence, as
giving a most just and striking
idea of the power of God. In
bringing order out of confusion,
and forming the sundry parts of
the universe, God first gave
birth to those that are the most
simple, pure, active, and
powerful; which he, probably,
afterward used as agents or
instruments in forming some
other parts. Light is the great
beauty and blessing of the
universe; and as it was the
first of all visible things, so,
as the firstborn, it most
resembles its great parent in
purity and power, in brightness
and beneficence. Probably the
light was at first impressed on
some part of the heavens, or
collected in some lucid body,
the revolution of which
distinguished the three first
days. On the fourth it was
condensed, increased, perfected,
and placed in the body of the
sun and other luminaries.
Verse 4
Genesis 1:4. God saw the light,
&c. — He beheld it with
approbation, as being exactly
what he designed it to be,
pleasant and useful, and
perfectly adapted to answer its
intended end. God divided — Made
a separation between the light
and the darkness, as to time,
place, and use, that the one
should succeed and exclude the
other, and that by their
vicissitudes they should make
the day and the night. Though
the darkness was now scattered
by the light, it has its place,
because it has its use: for as
the light of the morning
befriends the business of the
day, so the shadows of the
evening befriend the repose of
the night. God has thus divided
between light and darkness,
because he would daily impress
upon our minds that this is a
world of mixture and changes. In
heaven there is perpetual light
and no darkness; in hell, utter
darkness and no light: but in
this world they are
counter-changed, and we pass
daily from the one to the other,
that we may expect the like
vicissitudes in the providence
of God. Verse 5
Genesis 1:5. God called, &c. —
God distinguished them from each
other by different names, as the
Lord of both. The day is thine,
the night also is thine. He is
the Lord of time, and will be so
till day and night shall come to
an end, and the stream of time
be swallowed up in the ocean of
eternity. The evening —
Including the following night,
and the morning, including the
succeeding day, were the first
natural day, of twenty-four
hours. Some, indeed, by evening
understand the foregoing day as
being then concluded, and by the
morning the preceding night: but
the Jews, who had the best
opportunity of understanding
Moses, who here declares the
mind of God in this matter,
began both their common and
sacred days in the evening, see
Leviticus 23:32. The darkness of
the evening, preceding the light
of the morning, sets it off and
makes it shine the brighter.
Verse 6
Genesis 1:6. Let there be a
firmament — This term, which is
an exact translation of the word
used by the Septuagint, or Greek
translation of the Old
Testament, by no means expresses
the sense of the word used by
Moses, רקיע, rakiang, which
merely means extension or
expansion. And as this extension
or expansion was to be in the
midst of the waters, and was to
divide the waters from the
waters, it chiefly, if not
solely, means the air or
atmosphere which separates the
water in the clouds from that
which is in and upon the earth.
Thus the second great production
of the Almighty was the element
which is next in simplicity,
purity, activity, and power, to
the light, and no doubt was also
used by him as an agent in
producing some subsequent
effects, especially in gathering
the waters into one place. It is
true, we afterward read of the
sun, moon, and stars being set
in the firmament of heaven: but
the meaning seems only to be
that they are so placed as only
to be visible to us through the
atmosphere. Verse 9-10
Genesis 1:9-10. God said, &c. —
From the production, or
separation from gross matter, of
light and air, and the assigning
them their proper places and
uses in the creation, God
proceeds, on the third day, to
separate, put in order, and
control the clement nearest to
them in quality and use, fluid
like them, comparatively simple,
and pure, and although not
elastic, yet of great power. Let
the waters be gathered into one
place — The abyss in the bowels
of the earth, Genesis 7:11, and
the hollows connected therewith.
Thus, instead of the confusion
which existed when the earth and
the water were mixed in one
great mass, there was now order;
and by such a separation, both
were rendered useful: the earth
was prepared for the habitation
and support of man, and various
orders of land animals, and the
waters for the still more
numerous tribes of living
creatures, formed to abide and
seek their sustenance in the
seas, lakes, and rivers.
Verse 11-12
Genesis 1:11-12. Let the earth
bring forth grass — Here we rise
to organized and vegetative
bodies. Thus, before God formed
any living creature to abide
upon the earth, he wisely
provided for its sustenance. The
herb yielding, seed, whose seed
is in itself; that is, in some
part of itself: either in the
root, or branch, or bud, or
fruit; which is sufficient in
itself for the propagation of
its kind, from generation to
generation, as long as the world
shall endure, without any new
creation. How astonishing the
wisdom and power that could
effect this! O God! how
wonderful art thou in counsel,
and how excellent in working!
God saw that it was good — “This
clause is so often added,” says
Pool, “to show that all the
disorders, evil, and hurtful
qualities that are now in the
creatures, are not to be imputed
to God, who made all of them
good, but to man’s sin, which
hath corrupted their nature and
perverted their use.”
Verse 14-15
Genesis 1:14-15. Let there be
lights, &c. — God had said,
Genesis 1:3, Let there be light;
but that was, as it were a chaos
of light, scattered and
confused: now it was called and
formed into several luminaries,
and so rendered more glorious,
and more serviceable. Let them
be for signs,
“An horologe machinery divine!”
to mark and distinguish periods
of time, longer or shorter;
epochas, ages, years, months,
weeks, days, hours, minutes. For
seasons — By their motions and
influences, to produce and
distinguish the different
seasons of the year, mentioned
Genesis 8:22. To give light upon
the earth — That man, and other
creatures, might perform their
offices by its help, as the duty
of each day required; as well as
to call forth the moisture and
genial virtue of the earth, in
order to the production of
trees, plants, fruits, and
flowers, for the profit and
pleasure of both man and beast.
Verse 16
Genesis 1:16. Two great lights —
Or enlighteners, מארת, meoroth,
distinguishable from all the
rest, for their beauty and use.
Moses terms the moon a great
light, only according to its
appearance, and the use it is of
to us, and not according to the
strictness of philosophy. For
there is abundant proof that
most of the stars are much
greater than the moon; although
their immense distance makes
them appear so much smaller to
us. The greater light — Not only
greater, as it appears to us,
but incomparably greater in
itself; being abundantly larger
even than the earth; to rule the
day — By its rise and gradual
ascension in the heavens, to
cause and increase the light and
heat of the day; and by its
declining and setting to impair
and end the same: or to direct
men in their actions and affairs
during the day. To rule the
night — To measure the hours of
it, and give some, though a
lesser light. “The best and most
honourable way of ruling,” says
Henry, “is by giving light and
doing good.” Psalms
136:9, and Jeremiah 31:35, the
stars are mentioned as being
joined with the moon in ruling
the night. Verse 20
Genesis 1:20. The moving
creature that hath life — Endued
with self-motion and animal
life. — How much soever we may
be astonished at the stupendous
vastness and magnificence of
inanimate matter, the least
piece that is animated and has
life, is still more admirable.
But who can conceive the nature
of life? We see it daily around
us, but cannot comprehend it!
We observe that it enables
millions and millions of
creatures to act, as it were, of
themselves, and to seek and
obtain such enjoyments as give
them a sensible pleasure; but
how it does this surpasses all
understanding: and we can reach
no more of its nature, than that
it is such an amazing property,
as, if we think at all, must
carry up our thoughts to that
Almighty Being, who alone could
bestow such a wonderful
blessing, and who, in his
exuberant goodness, has
conferred it, not on one or a
few merely, but on innumerable
millions, and has inclined and
enabled them to communicate it
to millions and millions more of
the same species with
themselves, that shall succeed
one another till time shall be
no more! Thus in the work of
creation, after the formation of
light, air, water, and earth,
the originals of all things, he
proceeds from creatures less
excellent to those that are more
so: from vegetables to animals;
and then from animals less
perfect in their form to the
more perfect. Such was the
Creator’s progress in his work;
and, in imitation of him, we
should be continually advancing
to greater excellence and
perfection in our dispositions
and actions. Fish and fowl were
both formed out of the water:
there being a nearer alliance
and greater resemblance between
the form of the bodies in
general, and the motions of
creatures that swim and of those
that fly, than there is between
either of these and such as
creep or walk on the earth: and
their bodies being intended to
be lighter, and their motions
swifter, the wise Creator saw
fit to form them from a lighter
and fluid element.
The waters are said to produce
them abundantly; to signify the
prodigious and rapid
multiplication, especially of
all the various species of
fishes. The word in Hebrew,
which generally stands for fish,
also means multiplication; no
creatures, it seems, multiplying
so fast as they do.
Verse 21
Genesis 1:21. Great whales — The
Hebrew word here rendered whales
is sometimes put to signify
great dragons of the wilderness;
(see Jeremiah 9:11; Jeremiah
14:6; Malachi 1:3;) but it
undoubtedly here means some very
large inhabitants of the waters,
and probably what we call
whales, whose astonishing bulk
and prodigious strength are
amazing proofs of the power and
glory of the Creator.
Verse 22
Genesis 1:22. God blessed them —
Behold the cause of the
continuance in existence, and of
the fruitfulness and
multiplication, of the sundry
kinds of creatures! It is owing
to this word only that, though
thousands of years have rolled
away since their creation, not
one species of them, amid so
many, has been lost. Hence the
inclination in every creature to
propagate its species, and hence
the wonderful and tender care
they take of their young, till
they are able to provide for
themselves! So that,
notwithstanding the daily great
consumption of the creatures for
the food of man, there is still
such a succession of them, that
the innumerable multitudes
consumed for our use are not
even missed. How wonderful that
Being who is the author of this
fertility and plenteousness!
Verse 24-25
Genesis 1:24-25. Let the earth
bring forth — He that of stones
can raise children to Abraham,
and who called forth the
universe from nothing, could
easily produce animals from the
dull and sluggish earth,
although inanimate. Cattle —
Those tame beasts which do not
shun the society of men, and are
most useful to us for food,
clothing, or various services.
The beasts of the earth — The
Hebrew word חית, chaiath,
generally signifies the wild
beast, which is evidently its
meaning here.
Verse 26
Genesis 1:26. God said, Let us
make man — We have here another
and still more important part of
the sixth day’s work, the
creation of man. Having prepared
a fit habitation for man, and
furnished it with all things
necessary for his use and
comfort, God now proceeds to
create him. But this he does, as
it were, with deliberation, nay,
and consultation, using a
phraseology which he had not
used with regard to any other
creatures, thereby showing the
excellence of man above every
other being which he had made.
And it appears from hence, that
all the three hypostases, which
still bear witness in heaven,
the Father, the Word, and the
Holy Ghost, were peculiarly
concerned in the creation of
man. For God did not speak thus
to angels, who, although they
were present, and rejoiced at
the creation of the universe,
(Job 37:4; Job 37:7,) yet had no
hand therein, sundry passages of
Scripture testifying that it was
the work of God alone. In our
image, after our likeness — Two
words signifying the same thing.
Here again we see the excellence
of man above all other creatures
of this world, none of which are
said to be made after the image
or likeness of God. Indeed, his
pre-eminence above the brute
creatures, and his high
destination, are apparent in the
very form of his body, the erect
figure of which, set toward the
heavens, points him to his
origin and end. It is, however,
in the soul of man, that we must
look for the divine image. And
here we easily discern it. Like
God, man’s soul is a spirit,
immaterial, invisible, active,
intelligent, free, immortal,
and, when first created, endowed
with a high degree of divine
knowledge, and with holiness and
righteousness; in which
particulars, according to St.
Paul, Ephesians 4:24, Colossians
3:10, the image of God in man
chiefly consists. He was also
invested with an image of God’s
authority and dominion, and was
constituted the ruler, under
him, of all the inferior
creatures. For God said, And let
them — Male and female, (here
comprehended in the word man,)
with their posterity; have
dominion over the fish of the
sea, &c. — All the creatures,
both wild and tame, are here
included, over which our first
parents, while innocent, had
entire and perfect power and
dominion, as they had also over
the productions of the earth,
and over the earth itself, to
cultivate and manage it, as they
should see fit, for their
comfort and advantage.
Verse 27
Genesis 1:27. So God created man
in his own image — In his
natural, but especially in his
moral image, with an habitual
conformity of all his powers to
the will of God, his
understanding clearly
discerning, his judgment
entirely approving, his will
readily choosing, and his
affections cordially embracing
his chief good; without error in
his knowledge, disorder in his
passions, or irregularity or
inordinancy in his appetites;
his senses also being all inlets
to wisdom and enjoyment, and all
his faculties of body and mind
subservient to the glory of God
and his own felicity! But man
being in honour did not abide,
but became like the beasts that
perish! What cause we have for
thankfulness that this image of
God may be restored to our
souls, and how earnestly ought
we to pray for, and how
diligently to seek this most
important of all attainments!
Male and female created he them
— Not at once, or both together,
as some have unscripturally
taught, but first the man out of
the earth, and then the woman
out of the man.
They seem both, however, to have
been made on the sixth day, as
is here related, and as the
following words, promising they
should be fruitful, manifest:
but the particular history of
the woman’s creation is brought
in afterward by way of further
elucidation, and to introduce
the account of the institution
of marriage. God formed the
woman from the man, and caused
the whole race of mankind to
descend from one original pair,
that all the families and
nations of men, being made of
one blood, and proceeding from
one common stock, might know
themselves to be brethren, and
might love and assist one
another to the uttermost of
their power: but, alas! what a
sad reverse of this do we daily
see exemplified before our eyes!
Verse 28
Genesis 1:28. Be fruitful, and
replenish the earth — A large
estate is given them, and they
are to fill it with inhabitants,
to cultivate it, and enjoy the
fruits it produces. But these
words rather contain a
benediction and a promise, than
a command, as appears from
Genesis 1:22, where the same
words are applied to the brute
creatures, which are not capable
of understanding or obeying a
command. Verse 29-30
Genesis 1:29-30. I have given
you every herb — It does not
appear that liberty was given to
men to eat animal food before
the flood. Indeed, there seems
to have been no need of it, as
before the deluge, and more
especially before the earth was
cursed for the sin of man,
undoubtedly its fruits were not
only brought forth in greater
abundance, but were both more
pleasant to the taste, and more
strengthening and nourishing to
the body, than they were after
these events. And to every beast
— Thus the great Lord of all
took care for oxen, and every
living creature that he had
created, and made ample and
continued provision for their
subsistence. Verse 31
Genesis 1:31. Behold, it was
very good — It had been said of
each day’s work, except the
second, that it was good, but
now, of every thing, that it was
very good. For man, the
master-piece of God’s works, and
his visible image and deputy
here on earth, was now formed
and constituted the head and
governor of the whole. And all
these wonderful works being
connected together and dependant
one on another, till the last
link of the chain was made and
added to the rest, some defect
and imperfection must of
necessity be attached to them
all: but this being now
finished, the whole was
complete, and very good. The
evening and the morning were the
sixth day — No doubt, God could
as easily have made the world
and all things therein in an
instant, as in six days: but he
chose to form it in this gradual
way, partly, perhaps, that his
wisdom, power, and goodness,
manifested in each part, might
be more distinctly viewed and
considered; and that he might
show us how great things might
rise from small beginnings, and
be gradually accomplished; as
also that he might set us an
example of working six days, and
resting on the seventh. |