An Exploration of Genesis, #8 - In His Own Image
Genesis 1:26-27 – [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 creepeth upon the earth.
[27] So God created man in his own image, in the image of God created he him; male and female created he them.
On Day Six, God reaches the grand centerpiece of His work of Creation: Man. He formed the planet for Man to live on, and filled the planet with animals for Man’s enjoyment (though not for food, as we see toward the end of chapter one); and now that all is prepared, God brings Man into existence.
What does it mean to be made “in the image of God”? God is spirit (John 4:24), so it cannot mean that we look like Him; as an omnipresent spirit being, God simply does not have two arms, two legs, a torso, and so on.
Some have suggested that to be made in His image is to be a triune being like He is. As He is Father, Son, and Holy Spirit, three distinct persons in one entity, so we are body, soul, and spirit, three distinct elements that constitute one person. The problem I have with this is that the body dies and the soul and spirit leave it. Multitudes of souls even now are in the Lord’s presence, having left their old bodies and awaiting their new ones, and have been that way for centuries or even millennia. By this explanation, they are missing a part of themselves and are not at all “in his image.” There is also debate on whether the soul and the spirit are actually two distinct parts of a person, or if that phrase is used in Hebrews 4:12 as hyperbole to indicate just how effective the Word of God is.
The best answer is that being made in His image refers to our bearing of God’s communicable attributes, such as His mind, intellect, ability to think and reason. Man also, in the beginning, bore His moral attributes and were sinless. This explanation is also consistent with the idea of our being conformed more and more to the likeness of Christ (Romans 8:29) and the urging not to conform to the world (Romans 12:2). Neither of these is referring to any physical transformation, but to our morals, ethics, and thought patterns: To conform to the image of Christ is to line one’s spiritual life up with His.
The first man and woman, then, bore this “image” of God. Unlike all the previously created creatures, mankind was given the ability to think and reason according to moral code. Animals behave only by instinct and give no thought to right or wrong. Lions do not debate the ethics of killing gazelles; spiders care not for whether they have invasively built their webs on private property; my cat feels nothing for the damage he does by marking his territory inside our house.
But regarding mankind it is specifically noted that God created them in His image. Man alone has the mental capacity to live by God’s moral code and to be accountable for his actions.
In creating Man, God gave him the charge to have dominion over all other creatures on earth. Once again, animals did not yet serve as food; but certainly some of them could legitimately be used as beasts of burden or transportation. Perhaps they also needed taming. The precise details of what it meant to have dominion over a perfect environment are not present, but we do know that God bestowed on Man the highest position in His earthly hierarchy, thus setting him apart from the animal kingdom. Man served as God’s representative in charge of life on earth.
Despite the hue and cry of radical feminists in the twentieth century, the terms “Man” and “mankind” are not inherently chauvinist. From the beginning, God created the species of Man as male and female. Both are fully human, members of one race. God created them from the beginning to work together, to form one unit between them. But we will look deeper at this in chapter two.
Why did God even create them as male and female? Why not one asexual life form called Man that reproduces like an amoeba, with the descendent splitting off from the parent’s body?
As mentioned in earlier devotionals, I believe the material universe is a physical and visible expression of spiritual truths. God created our world to function as an illustration of the world we cannot yet see. On this presupposition, then, my guess regarding God’s particular design for Man helps illustrate His own relationship with us. Indeed, the Bible is stocked with references to God’s people being His “bride,” that He loves us like a husband loves a wife, and so on.
Rather than make us independent agents of self-sufficiency and reproduction, God created male and female to work together as a unit. There is no producing offspring unless a male and a female are involved, even in today’s perverse world where the male and female never meet because the male left his seed at the sperm bank and the female bought the seed and got impregnated by someone not her husband.
Back when bridges were often constructed out of stone, the builders finished the bridge with a keystone, a rock placed in the center of the bridge’s arch. Because of its shape and placement, the keystone actually held the whole bridge together. Remove the keystone, and the forces holding the other rocks in place were removed and the bridge would collapse.
Mankind is Creation’s keystone. Man is the reason God created a planet, a sun, water, plant life, and animal life. This moment is the culmination of God’s entire Creation project. This thought should not bloat our sense of pride, but rather make us rejoice and be thankful to the God who made us.



An Exploration of Genesis, #2 - Raw Materials









