Wind
and Water
by Lois Tverberg
"The
earth was formless and void, and darkness was over the surface of the
deep, and the Spirit of God was moving over the surface of the waters.
" Genesis
1:2
There
is a really fascinating theme that runs through all of the Bible - the
picture of God beginning a new creation. Genesis begins the story of creation
with the Spirit of God "hovering over" the deep (Tehom), and
one of God's first acts of creation is the separation of water from water.
This picture is a theme that recurs over and over in the scriptures, every
time God starts something new. There is a little of a poetic motif there,
because the word for "the deep" is Tehom, which was symbolic
of chaos. It is a picture of God conquering evil and chaos to bring order
and a beautiful new thing into existence. The word for Spirit in Hebrew
is ruach, which also means wind or breath, so when God parts
the waters by a great wind it is a picture of God in the act of creating.
Where do we see this? First we see
it in Genesis 1:1 of course, but only a few chapters later, after the
flood destroyed all of life on earth, we read in Genesis 8:1-3 that God caused
a wind (ruach) to pass over the earth, and restrained the waters of the
deep (Tehom), and the flood waters receded, giving the world a new, clean
beginning.
We next see this in the parting of
the Red Sea, as the wind (ruach) blows to separate the waters so that the
Israelites can pass through. This marks the beginning of God's new nation
of Israel, who now would have their own sovereignty and identity as the
people of God. Later, as they pass through the river Jordan, once again God was parting the waters, and in a sense, re-creating them
as his people and cleansing them of their sin in the desert. After their entrance into the land they took on the covenant again, just like they did at Sinai, and
made a clean beginning as God's people.
There is one more place significant
scene in the Bible when we see this imagery of God at the waters - at the baptism of Jesus. Here the heavens are parted (reminiscent of
the waters being parted) and we see the Spirit of God "hovering"
over, in the form of a dove, just as it hovered over the first waters
of creation. Here is God's new creation, God on earth in the form of the
Son of Man.
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