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							Picture me on a stage with stacks and 
							stacks and stacks of books around me, everywhere. 
							Some stacks are high as my waist; some as high as my 
							shoulders, but most stacks far above my head. Can 
							your image it? This would just be a small sampling 
							of how many books have been written on the subject 
							of the origins of our universe—religious and 
							otherwise. Where did mankind come from? How did we 
							get here? It doesn’t matter how much I preach on it 
							or how convincing I might be, I’ll never answer 
							these questions in a way everyone will accept. The 
							debate is just too intense. 
 However, we need to answer it for ourselves. We need 
							to know where we stand and where we can and cannot 
							bend, because sooner or later, someone is going to 
							challenge our views. If the first professor you run 
							into at college (or online) that questions your God 
							or questions your bible or questions your Christian 
							worldview causes you to give up your faith, then all 
							that tells me is how
 weak your foundation was from the beginning. 
							Christians compromise too much.
 
 Some people just cannot bring themselves to say, “In 
							the beginning God . . . !” They say, “In the 
							beginning gases,” or “In the beginning some matter 
							and vapors.” The constant struggle to explain our 
							origin has always been here. The ancient Greeks 
							taught the earth was held up by a god named Atlas. 
							When Greek children asked, “What’s does Atlas stand 
							on?” They were told he stands on the back of an 
							elephant. “What does the elephant stand on?” A Giant 
							turtle! “What does the giant turtle stand on?” On 
							the back of bigger Turtle! Every time they asked, 
							the next turtle got bigger and bigger until they 
							concluded: “It’s easy . . . there are turtles all 
							the way down.” All the way down to what? Do you 
							really want to put your eternal destination in 
							something like that?
 
 Genesis 1:2–4 reads: “Now the earth was formless and 
							empty, darkness was over the surface of the deep, 
							and the Spirit of God was hovering over the waters. 
							And God said, ‘Let there be light,’ and there was 
							light. God saw that the light was good, and he 
							separated the light from the darkness.” I love that 
							the first thing God did was to address darkness. The 
							first recorded words of God are, “Let there be 
							light.” This isn’t the creation of the sun . . . it 
							doesn’t come until later on in day four. How do we 
							have light before the sun, moon, and stars? We’re 
							told, “God dwells in unapproachable light” (I 
							Timothy 6:16). It was because God was there . . . 
							and there was light everywhere.
 
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							Now I don’t want to be too rigid, but 
							I do have strong convictions here. But that doesn’t 
							mean we have to attend every argument we’re invited 
							to. Beware of people who are overly dogmatic. There 
							have been countless seminars on both Genesis and 
							Revelation. There are people who are convinced they 
							have it all figured out; how God made the world and 
							how the end of times will play out. To them, they 
							have the only right view and the only right 
							interpretation and they dogmatically fight you for 
							their views. Beware of people like that.
 As for me, I believe! You see, if we only had an 
							eyewitness there at the beginning, what a difference 
							that eyewitness makes in a court of law when there 
							are conflicting opinions about what happened. If we 
							could find a creditable witness to creation, it 
							would be most helpful. Well I believe we have such a 
							witness. And this eyewitness has gone on record. 
							None of us were there . . . but the Holy Spirit was. 
							And the Spirit continued to lead men to write what 
							God wanted written. For me, we can trust our bibles 
							and enjoy Genesis.
 
							[Ron Otto, preaching minister at Lincoln 
							Christian Church in Lincoln]
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