“The earth was without form and void, and darkness was over the face of the deep. And the Spirit of God was hovering over the face of the waters.”
This verse belongs to the creation account Moses writes in Genesis 1, and it describes the condition of the earth immediately after God's initial act of creation — unformed, unfilled, and covered in deep darkness, with the Spirit of God hovering over the surface of the waters like a bird over a nest. The Hebrew word for 'formless and void' (tohu wabohu) conveys not evil but incompleteness — raw material awaiting divine shaping. The Spirit's hovering signals readiness and intention; nothing here is abandoned. This same Spirit who hovered over the waters would later fill Bezalel for craftsmanship (Exodus 31:3) and, in the New Testament, move over the waters of baptism as Jesus began his ministry (Mark 1:10). If you find yourself in a season that feels shapeless and dark, this verse is an invitation to remember that God's Spirit is present precisely in those unformed places — and that ordering and filling is what he does.
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Genesis 1:2
“The earth was without form and void, and darkness was over the face of the deep. And the Spirit of God was hovering over the face of the waters.”
This verse belongs to the creation account Moses writes in Genesis 1, and it describes the condition of the earth immediately after God's initial act of creation — unformed, unfilled, and covered in deep darkness, with the Spirit of God hovering over the surface of the waters like a bird over a nest. The Hebrew word for 'formless and void' (tohu wabohu) conveys not evil but incompleteness — raw material awaiting divine shaping. The Spirit's hovering signals readiness and intention; nothing here is abandoned. This same Spirit who hovered over the waters would later fill Bezalel for craftsmanship (Exodus 31:3) and, in the New Testament, move over the waters of baptism as Jesus began his ministry (Mark 1:10). If you find yourself in a season that feels shapeless and dark, this verse is an invitation to remember that God's Spirit is present precisely in those unformed places — and that ordering and filling is what he does.
Community Reflections
No reflections on this verse yet
Be the first to write a reflection about this verse.
This verse belongs to the creation account Moses writes in Genesis 1, and it describes the condition of the earth immediately after God's initial act of creation — unformed, unfilled, and covered in deep darkness, with the Spirit of God hovering over the surface of the waters like a bird over a nest. The Hebrew word for 'formless and void' (tohu wabohu) conveys not evil but incompleteness — raw material awaiting divine shaping. The Spirit's hovering signals readiness and intention; nothing here is abandoned. This same Spirit who hovered over the waters would later fill Bezalel for craftsmanship (Exodus 31:3) and, in the New Testament, move over the waters of baptism as Jesus began his ministry (Mark 1:10). If you find yourself in a season that feels shapeless and dark, this verse is an invitation to remember that God's Spirit is present precisely in those unformed places — and that ordering and filling is what he does.