Sunday, October 06, 2013

Creation Commission & New Creation Commission

Have you ever noticed how similar God’s commission to Adam and Eve, and Jesus’ commission to his disciples are?

Genesis 1.28 records God’s first words to Adam and Eve: “Be fruitful and increase in number; fill the earth and subdue it. Rule over the fish in the sea and the birds in the sky and over every living creature that moves on the ground.”

Matthew 28.19-20 records Jesus’ final words to his disciples: “Go and make disciples of all nations, baptizing then in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit, and teaching them to obey everything I have commanded you.”

Here are six similarities between these two commissions. My guess is that Jesus did this on purpose, that is, he intended there to be close parallels between these two.

1. Genesis: “Fill”, Matthew: “Go”

For Adam and Eve and their descendants to “Fill the earth” they had to go. As the disciples and their successors obeyed the command to “Go” they filled the earth.

2. Genesis: “Be fruitful and increase in number”, Matthew: “Make disciples”

When God created oak trees he made oak trees that would produce more oak trees that would produce more oak trees… Likewise humans. “Go and have babies,” was God’s first command. Humans produce more humans which produce more humans. That is, God created each species to be self-replicating. What do we find in Matthew? Jesus sends disciples out to go and make disciples who would make more disciples who would make more disciples… Same pattern: self-replicating.

3. Genesis: “The earth”, Matthew: “All nations”

In both commissions the scope is global.

4. Genesis: “Subdue it”, Matthew: “Baptizing them in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit”

We “subdue” the earth with agriculture, gardening, ploughing the fields and scattering the good seed on the land. We bring a level of order to the earth and enable it to fulfil its potential. As we baptize new disciples (itself a symbol of new birth, new creation), bringing them into the faith community, they are becoming more fully human, sorted, better able to fulfil their potential as people made in the image of God.

5. Genesis: “Rule over”, Matthew: “Teaching them to obey”

God made Adam, Eve and their descendants his stewards, caring for the earth in his stead. At least that was the idea: oh how we’re failing. “Ruling over” does not mean abusing, raping and pillaging like a tyrant or dictator. God has put us in charge of his creation to rule over it in the same love as he displayed when he created it. Likewise the obedience that Jesus asks for. Like the word “rule”, the word “obey” indicates a hierarchy – but not one based on fear and domination, but on love and having the best interests of the other at heart.

6. Genesis: “Every living creature”, Matthew: “Everything”

Nothing and no one is exempt.


The Genesis commission is a blessing: “God blessed them and said…” The Matthew commission concludes with an assurance which is also a blessing: “I am with you always, to the very end of the age.”

3 comments:

Teija said...

A very interesting and convincing six-fold connection. Teija

Teija said...

Is the blessing a seventh similarity?

Michael said...

It's not such a direct parallel. On the 7th day I guess we enter into his rest, in both creation and new creation.