Genesis 1:1-2:3 · The Beginning
In The Beginning
Genesis 1:1-2:3
Sermon
by Robert Allen
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Walter de la Mare wrote a fascinating little poem titled, "The Listeners." He wrote:

"Is anybody there?" asked the Traveler,
Knocking on the moonlight door;
And his horse in the silence chomped the grasses
Of the forest’s ferny floor;

And a bird flew up out of the turret,
Above the traveler’s head:
And he smote upon the door again a second time;
"Is anybody there?" he said.

But no one descended to the traveler,
No head from the leaf-fringed sill
Leaned over and looked into his gray eyes,
Where he stood perplexed and still.

Is anybody there? This is one of the long, agonizing questions of the ages when people have looked to the heavens and wondered about God. Thousands and thousands of people have stood in the silence and asked, "Is there anybody there?" If there is a God, where is he?

The asking of that question has led to many answers. Some have asked the question and come back with a wishful agnosticism. They say we really can’t answer the question of God. Robert Ingersoll stood at the grave of his brother and said:

Life is a narrow veil between the cold and barren peaks of two eternities. We strive to look beyond their heights. We cry aloud, and the only answer is the echo of our wailing cry. But hope sees a star, and in the night of death, listening love can hear the rustling of an angel’s wing.

Some have asked the question, "Is there anybody there?" and they have come back with a bitter atheism - a bitter denial of God. Jean Paul Richter said:

I have traveled the world, I have risen to the suns. There is no God! I have gazed into the gulf beyond and cried out, "Where art Thou?" And no answer came. We are utterly alone.

And others have asked the question and come back with an awesome vision of power, but a power so remote and so uninterested in his creation that he has forgotten us. Mark Twain, the great American writer, used to say:

Special Providence! Why the phrase nauseates me. God doesn’t know where we are and wouldn’t care if He did.

There are times in our lives when we wonder the same things. In spite of the hymns of faith that we sing ... in spite of the creeds we repeat affirming our belief in God ... in spite of the prayers we send up to the heavens ... there are times when God just doesn’t seem to be around. One of the popes of the Catholic church, Pope Julian, knew this feeling when he said: "When I pray, God seems to be deaf."

I have been a minister for several years and I have pastored three different churches. During this time, I have been with parents when a child died ... I have gone into homes to tell families that a loved one has been killed in an accident ... I have sat and prayed with families as illness claimed the life of one they loved. All of these people, in one way or another, have asked, "Is anybody there? If God is real, why doesn’t he do something? Why doesn’t he prove he exists?"

I can understand the agony and grief which produces these questions. We are hurting ... we are grieving ... and like the traveler in the poem, we want to know if anybody is up there in the heavens. We want to prove that he is God.

However, you can’t read very far into the Bible without getting the idea that there is no attempt to prove God. The first verse begins with the assumption of God. It says:

"In the beginning, God created the heavens and the earth ..."

The Bible doesn’t waste time trying to prove the existence of anyone being out there; it simply begins with the obvious.

There is an old story about a boy who believed that the blue sky was just a big blue tent. When he went to school, he learned that the sky was not a big blue tent. He reported to his friends, "There ain’t no sky."

One of the boys tilted his head back and looked at the clouds. He looked at the sun shining brightly, he looked at the beautiful blue sky that went from one horizon to another, then he asked, "What is it that ain’t?"

Although the boy’s grammar may not have been very good, it was a good question. Something was obviously there! And so it is with the question of God. We cannot find God and prove God ... we can’t put God into some test tube and analyze him. It is like your love for someone. Your love is seen by what you do ... by what you say ... by how you live. And it is the same with God! The Bible simply assumes the obvious, "God is ..." and we see the evidence of his presence. Next I want to look at a couple ways we can see his presence.

I. We see his presence in the steady, unfailing order of creation. The faithfulness of God is consistent. Each day the sun shines and each night the stars sparkle across the darkened sky. There is an orderliness to this universe that even the Psalmist of over 2,500 years ago could see when he wrote, "... I consider thy heavens, the work of thy fingers, the moon and the stars, which thou hast ordained ..." (Psalm 8). When we look at this universe in all of its magnitude and the atom in all of its infinitesimal perfection, we begin to grasp the greatness and orderliness of God in creation.

I was fascinated a while back because something very small, yet very significant took place. A computer system that is so precise and so accurate that it would take 300 years to be two-fifths of a second off in time told our scientists that we needed to add one second to a year. So, at precisely midnight of January 1, 1988, the scientists at Greenwich, England, added one second to that year.

The thing which caught my attention was not the computer which told us to add one second to our year. What I wondered was how the computer knew. And the answer was simple. The computer tested itself against another, more precise clock - the universe itself. The computer, keeping track of the movement of the earth and moon and planets and stars, could accurately tell us we needed to add one more second to our clocks that year.

I don’t see how we can miss this evidence ... this awareness of the presence of God. When Jesus preached, he often used the world around him to make a point of God’s presence. He said that no flower ever bloomed that was not nourished by God’s care; he said that no sparrow ever fell to the ground without God being aware; he said that God knows so much about you and me that even the hairs of our head are numbered.

God’s love and faithfulness is so constant that we have a tendency to take it for granted and to forget the deeper faith. Perhaps the very constancy of God’s creation dims our gratitude. Because the sun shines each day, we scarely notice it; because the seasons come with regularity - spring, summer, autumn, and winter - we seem more impressed with a large snowfall than by the abiding constancy that January is always a cold month. We have a tendency to look for God in the spectacular and the unusual; and we miss him in the constant, everyday order of things which confirms that he is so near. How near is God? God is ...

As near as green grass is to a hill
As petals of gold to a daffodil,
As near as the sunlight is to the sod,
So near to the human heart is God.

II. We see his presence in the midst of his people. The evidence of God is not only visible in the steady, unfailing order of creation, but he is here among us, working out his will, and moving toward his eternal purpose in our midst. God is not an absentee landlord, but he is here among us.

During World War I, a war that was fought in muddy trenches, a young British soldier was close to mental breakdown. The artillery bombardment ... the stench of death ... the fear, they had driven him to the point of despair. He looked at his captain and asked, "Sir, you said you believed in God. Where is God in all of this?"

Just then, two stretcher-bearers climed over the top of the trench and moved out under enemy fire to pick up a wounded soldier lying in no-mans-land. And the Captain said, "Look, private, there goes God now."

God is not a spectator looking on from the heavens. God is all of our efforts to bring light out of darkness; God is in every deed of compassion; God is in every act of mercy shown; God is in our hospitals where doctors and nurses minister to those who are sick; God is in every court of law trying to bring justice and righteousness; God is in every human endeavor where kindness and forgiveness are shown; God is in all the events of our time, and we need to constantly remind ourselves that there is something at work in history that is beyond us - and that the destiny of the world is in stronger hands than ours.

When President Reagan and the Soviet leader, General Secretary Gorbachev, signed the peace treaty to begin destroying part of their stockpile of nuclear weapons, there was a cartoon in a religious magazine that made a profound point. The cartoon pictured the angel Gabriel, up in heaven, about to blow his horn and end life on this planet. But God, looking down on this earth said, "Hold on, Gabriel. They’re going to have another peace conference."

Where is God? He is here in our midst. He is in the conference which move nations toward peace ... He is in the work of missionaries who cross the seas to serve him ... He is in your daily lives as you cross the street to help a neighbor or to be a friend to someone in need.

I realize that it is not very spectacular and it won’t make the front pages of the paper, but it tells us where God is. He is here. He is among his people. He is becoming known by the way we, his followers, live our lives every day.

III. We see his presence in Jesus Christ.

If you want to see the clearest evidence of God, you will not find it by looking to the heavens; you will not find it in the realm of nature; you will not find it in the goodness of humanity. The clearest word of God was made flesh and lived among us in the person of Jesus Christ. He is the heart, mind, and nature of God spelled out in the language of life.

If you want to see the clearest evidence of God, look to Jesus Christ who was born in a stable in Bethlehem ... If you want to see the clearest evidence of God, look to Jesus Christ who was crucified on a Roman cross saying, "God is like this. God is like I am." If you want the clearest evidence of God, look to Jesus Christ who walked forth from the tomb because death could not hold him.

The clearest word of God has been made known to us in Jesus Christ. You can open up your life to him and depend on him forever.

Will you?

CSS Publishing Co., Inc., Greatest Passages Of The Bible, The, by Robert Allen