01 January 2025

January 1st

By Randall L. Broad

Read: Genesis 1-2:25; Matthew 1-2:12; Psalm 1:1-6; Proverbs 1:1-6

New Year’s Day represents a symbolic beginning for all of us. Essentially nothing has changed except the calendar, but a new year offers the hope things will be different– better than the year before. All of us were blessed last year, but time offers us the chance to continue to grow in our faith and in our relationships. Do not neglect your relationship with Jesus Christ; create something better for yourselves and the people you love.

It is fitting that we start the reading of the One Year Bible with the story of God’s creation found in the Book of Genesis. In my biblical studies, I discovered a whole new perspective on these first important verses of scripture.

Genesis 1:3-5 tell this story:

Then God said, “Let there be light,” and there was light. And God saw that the light was good. Then he separated the light from the darkness. God called the light “day” and the darkness “night.”

Conventional wisdom tells us the obvious–God created light.

One of the fundamental elements of all creation stories is that the form of their god and the purpose of that god were based upon essential functions found in nature. For example the sun gods controlled the movement of the sun, other gods controlled harvests, some controlled human fertility, etc. These pantheons of gods shifted with the unique needs of their human creators to explain functions that could not be explained otherwise. Gods were created, worshiped, and forgotten as needed.

The God of Adam, Noah, Abraham, and David was different. He had no creator. He shared no authority with any other god. The idea of a monotheistic God was unique to the Israelite. As descendants of that legacy we take the Bible literally and purposefully stay away from the definition of Yahweh creating function. Instead, we see the God of the Israelite as the creator of substance–in the case found in Genesis 1:3-5–light.

This brings me to my point. In Genesis 1:5, “God called the light (‘or) day (yom) and the darkness he called ‘night’.

God did not create only light (‘or) the first day. He created the period of light known as yom, or day; a contrast to the night, a period of darkness. What he created was both substance and function.

Conceding God Himself called ‘or a period of light. The above verse really reads:

Then God said, “Let there be light and there was a period of light. And God saw that the period of light was good. Then he separated the period of light from the darkness. God called the period of light day and the darkness “night.”

Professor John H. Walton said it best;

We could only conclude, then, that day one does not concern itself with the creation of the physicist’s light, that is “light” as a physical element with physical properties. Day one concerns something much more elemental to the functioning of the cosmos and to our experience of the cosmos. On day one, God created time.[1]

Thus it is only fitting as we pass through one of the milestones of the calendar–the beginning of a new year that we honor the creator of time itself.

Walk with the Lord …
Ephesians 1:17 
(RLB250101)

© Copyright 2017: Randall L. Broad

Disclaimer: This commentary is written by Randall L. Broad. It is in no way affiliated with or represents any denomination, university, church, or pastor. Any errors or omissions are purely my responsibility.



[1] Walton, John H. Ancient Near Eastern Thought and the Old Testament. Grand Rapids: Baker Academic, 2006: pg. 180.

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