Reformed reading
Calvin observed that Moses wrote Genesis not for philosophers or natural scientists but for ordinary people — for farmers and fishermen and anyone who could look up at the sky and recognise that Someone made it. The point of "in the beginning God created the heavens and the earth" is not to provide a technical account of cosmological origins that can be mapped onto modern science. It is to anchor the faith of God's people in the most basic and necessary conviction: the God who called Israel, the God who gave the law, the God who sent the prophets — He is not one deity among many. He is the Creator of everything that exists. Science asks how. This verse asks who. Those are different questions, and they do not compete. The Reformed tradition has always insisted that all truth is God's truth, but not all questions are the same question.
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