Friday, May 12, 2023

Who Was Jesus?

Jesus Christ is undoubtedly one of the most famous figures in human history. The very mention of his name can evoke strong emotional responses, ranging from reverence to disdain. For many people, Jesus represents the ultimate symbol of hope, comfort, and salvation. However, some people may view him as irrelevant or even inconsequential to their lives.

The name "Jesus" itself is derived from the Hebrew name "Yeshua," which means "to deliver" or "to save." It is a fitting name for a figure who, according to the Bible, came to deliver humanity from sin and death through his sacrifice on the cross.

However, it is the second part of Jesus' name that carries even greater significance: "Christ." This word comes from the Greek "christos," which means "anointed one" or "chosen one." In the Hebrew Bible, prophets, priests, and kings were anointed with oil as a sign of their special status and authority. The word "Christ" therefore denotes Jesus' divinely ordained role as the savior and ruler of all humanity.

The concept of the Messiah or "anointed one" was deeply ingrained in Jewish culture and religion at the time of Jesus. Many Jews were eagerly anticipating the arrival of a powerful and righteous leader who would liberate them from Roman oppression and establish a glorious kingdom. However, Jesus' claim to be the long-awaited Messiah was controversial and met with resistance from some of the religious leaders and even his own disciples.

Nevertheless, Jesus' life, teachings, death, and resurrection have left an indelible mark on human history, shaping the beliefs, values, and cultures of countless people around the world. The Christian faith, which centers on Jesus as the Son of God, the Savior, and the Lord, has over 2 billion followers worldwide. Christianity has inspired some of the greatest art, music, literature, and humanitarian work in human history, as well as numerous conflicts and controversies.

For Christians, Jesus Christ is not merely a historical figure or a moral teacher, but rather the living Son of God who offers salvation, forgiveness, and eternal life to all who believe in him. Jesus' life embodies the perfect love, wisdom, and compassion of God, and his death on the cross represents the ultimate act of sacrifice and selflessness.

Moreover, Jesus' resurrection from the dead on the third day after his crucifixion is seen as the ultimate proof of his divinity and victory over sin and death. The belief in resurrection is a central tenet of the Christian faith, providing hope and assurance of eternal life for believers.

The name "Jesus Christ" therefore represents the most powerful and transformative force in human history. It captures the essence of a figure who, through his life, teachings, death, and resurrection, has touched the hearts and minds of people across generations, cultures, and circumstances. The name reminds us of the ultimate power of love, grace, and truth, as well as the enduring human quest for meaning, purpose, and connection.

In conclusion, the name "Jesus Christ" evokes a wide range of emotions, beliefs, and experiences for different people. For Christians, it represents the ultimate expression of God's love and power, as well as the hope of eternal life. For others, it may represent a historical figure, a controversial religious leader, or a cultural icon. Regardless of one's perspective, the name of Jesus Christ remains a testament to the enduring power of faith, hope, and love in the human experience.

Saturday, April 23, 2016

Grazing Ranches Or Jihadists Cells?

Recently a bill was sponsored by a senator from Niger state for the federal government to create grazing reserves across the country for Fulani herd men. These terrorists disguised as herds men have been unleashing death, rape and vandalization of crops are now to be rewarded with the victims' lands and farms. Nigeria should say no to this Fulani/Hausa expandist plan. They want to prepare and put their people in place for the final Islamists conquest of this nation.
This is a pure strategy to put Nigerian Christians under siege for the final onslaught. Rise my people. The enemy is not at the gate but in the camp. Nigerians expecially those in the Middle-Belt have to rise against this preposterous and ill-willed murderous scam.

Tuesday, February 23, 2016

Recounting The Animals On Noah's Ark

No Kind Left Behind

Recounting the Animals on the Ark

by Dr. Marcus Ross  on January 1, 2013
  
We’ve all seen images of giraffes, zebras, and elephants boarding Noah’s Ark. But what did Noah’s floating zoo really look like? The answer is sure to surprise us … and to remind us that there’s much more to the Ark than we ever imagined.

Imagine gathering all the kinds of land animals that ever lived into one place. What a zoo that would be! Recently, Answers in Genesis began work on its Ark Encounter outreach project, to build a full-sized Ark and populate it with a sampling of the animals that Noah may have brought on board. Which animals were there? How many?

Helping to find the answer is this paleontologist’s dream come true. Such a project requires gathering data on every kind of creature ever discovered, sifting through the list, and calculating which ones showed up at Noah’s door. In addition to rabbits, elephants, and tigers, most creationists now recognize that dinosaurs must have tromped onboard the Ark, along with flying pterosaurs. A few enterprising artists have shown kangaroos, lemurs, birds of paradise, and even saber-toothed cats and mammoths. But what about all the other unbelievable beasts in the fossil record?

Few people realize just how many bizarre-looking creatures once made earth their home—boomerang-headed amphibians; car-sized reptiles that ate plants; and giant, horned, elephant-sized mammals that look like beasts from Tolkien’s The Lord of the Rings. These are just some of the amazing creatures known to paleontologists but little-known to the general public. These and many other extinct animals belong to “kinds” completely different from anything living today.

Did Noah have to make room for all these creatures, too? After all, every kind of air-breathing land animal had to be on the Ark. No matter how rare an animal is, a representative of its kind had to board the Ark. Yet how could they fit, especially since the number of named animal species, living and extinct, exceeds one million?

First Step: Biblical Clues
The first step is to examine the Bible to see what instructions God gave to Noah concerning animals and the Ark. Only “living creatures” (Hebrew: nephesh) were to be brought on the Ark (Genesis 6:19–20; 7:2–3; 7:8–9). That excludes plants, bacteria, and fungi. The only plants brought on board the Ark were used for food. All other plants were presumably left outside.

NOAH DID NOT NEED TO BUILD AN AQUARIUM FOR THE ARK!
Also excluded were fish and other aquatic organisms. After all, Noah did not need to build an aquarium for the Ark!

Noah’s job was to care only for flying creatures and air-breathing land animals: “Bring into the ark two of all living creatures, male and female, to keep them alive with you. Two of every kind of bird, of every kind of animal and of every kind of creature that moves along the ground will come to you to be kept alive” (Genesis 6:18–20, NIV).

The term “living creatures” is the same as in Genesis 1, which includes birds, larger domestic and wild animals, and small, scurrying animals. This list likely includes small vertebrates, such as rodents and lizards, and possibly invertebrates, such as insects.1

Drawing the Line for Ark Kinds
Over one million animal species have been named, but it’s a mistake to assume all were on the Ark. The Bible says Noah took only air-breathing land animals. So that excludes sea creatures and possibly insects and other invertebrates. Of the land vertebrates, there are only around 33,000 named living species (and a few thousand more fossil species). These are divided into fewer than 10,000 genera and 1,000 families.

So how many kinds of animals were on the Ark? The answer depends on which modern taxonomic level—order, family, genus, or species—represents each original “kind.” A 1996 study assumed the genus, but the new Ark Encounter is evaluating each family.

Ark kinds
*What About Fossil Species?
The various studies of “kinds” have included fossil creatures in their lists of “families” and “genera.” Determining the number of fossil species is much more difficult. Since vertebrate fossils are often incomplete, there may not be enough material to identify the specimen as a new species of a known genus. Or, the physical differences may simply represent variations within one species, rather than differences between two species.

Previous Work
Even without bacteria, fungi, plants, and sea creatures on the Ark, lots of species remain to be accounted for. The key is to understand the word used in Scripture: kind (Hebrew: min). The Bible does not say God brought every individual or every species to Noah, since species is a modern concept. Instead, He brought a male and female of every “kind” (and seven of the clean animals).2

Over the centuries, there have been several estimates on the numbers and types of animals brought aboard Noah’s Ark. The first significant attempt was by the French mathematician Johannes Buteo (ca. 1492–1564).3 He went through all known animals, including the ones known from newly discovered North and South America. He estimated about 100 total “kinds,” or 300 individuals (along with 3,650 sheep to feed the carnivores on the ship). These were all mammals because he did not think it necessary to count reptiles and birds separately, which could more easily find space. (He didn’t know about dinosaurs!)

ADVERTISEMENTSMaster Books Masters CollegePensacola Christian College
Our understanding of biology has grown steadily over the centuries, leading us closer to the true number. We now know more about the full diversity of land animals, for instance. We have also learned that many species may belong to the same kind. If species can interbreed and produce hybrids, it is assumed that they descended from a pair of animals on the Ark that could interbreed.

For instance, big cats like lions and tigers can be interbred with each other, creating hybrid “ligers” and “tigons.” Indeed, it appears that all members of the cat family (Felidae) may be connected through a series of hybrid pairings that ultimately connects different cat species to each other. In such cases, it seems that only one original “kind” onboard the Ark produced all of these species. So if “kind” is above species, where does it lie in our modern taxonomy?

One of the most important studies among young-earth creationists was by John Woodmorappe in his technical book Noah’s Ark: A Feasibility Study.4 For the sake of argument, he chose the taxonomic rank just above the species—the genus. On this basis, he estimated that approximately 16,000 terrestrial vertebrate animals (consisting of nearly 8,000 genera of reptiles, mammals, and birds) were on board. However, Woodmorappe considered this a deliberate and huge overestimation, since he suspected that the “kind” was broader than the genus.5 Newer studies have indicated that “kinds” were generally at the level of family.6

Current Approach
When Answers in Genesis decided to move forward with the Ark Encounter project, they needed to take another look at the “Ark kinds.” Partnering with other creation scientists, the Ark Encounter team is working toward a full tally and description of the “kinds” likely represented on the Ark.

In 2011, the initial team of creationists published an article detailing the approach they would take.7 The team will rely on all the best available scientific methods and evidences, including breeding records and statistical studies. Based on past studies, the team recognized that the taxonomic rank of family is the closest representation of the “kind.” This is not to say that the “kind” and the family are identical in every case: the team may determine that a few “kinds” are broader or narrower than families, as they explore all the available information.

Team members Jean Lightner and Tom Hennigan have been the lead researchers on the terrestrial vertebrates and doing the bulk of the work. Both have years of experience in “kinds” studies—Jean is a veterinarian and Tom an ecologist and associate professor at a Christian college. While the list of various living families of amphibians, reptiles, mammals, and birds is large (it includes hundreds of families), it is not as large as Woodmorappe’s estimates.

Georgia Purdom, a geneticist with Answers in Genesis, oversees the whole project. In 2011 she approached me about assisting with the number of extinct families from the fossil record, and I was thrilled. In the first phase a student and I published an estimate of the number of both living and extinct families based on leading references.8 That paper suggested 719 total kinds of mammals, terrestrial reptiles, and birds. We did not include amphibians, but the future studies will.

So, How Many Were There?
Currently, I am overseeing students in vertebrate paleontology at Liberty University to finalize a list of extinct families. Jean Lightner and Tom Hennigan are finalizing numbers of living families.

So far, the current estimate of living and extinct vertebrate families is about 950. While we will continue to evaluate these families to see if they should be split up or combined with other families for our final estimate of the “kinds,” 950 families is a good approximation. Given that most animals were brought onto the Ark by twos, while “clean” birds and mammals were brought by sevens, this means that Noah cared for approximately two thousand land-dwelling vertebrate animals.

More to Come!
The Ark Encounter team has just begun publishing the final estimate of Ark “kinds” in peer-reviewed creationist literature as a series of technical papers. The first paper, by Jean Lightner, was published in November of 2012.9 Each paper will discuss the methods, the resulting numbers of “kinds,” and descriptions of each. Combined, these works will help the Ark Encounter artists and planners faithfully represent these creatures in the full-scale replica of Noah’s Ark. Some no doubt will be familiar, but others will be unlike any animals you’ve ever seen! The amazing variety of God’s initial work at creation far exceeds the greatly limited variety we see among surviving species today.

The fossil record has expanded our imaginations about the wonderful possibilities of God’s creation. By His grace and by His leading, the Ark Encounter team hopes, once again, to give a loud witness to the Creator’s amazing wisdom, His judgment of sin during the Flood, and His provision of salvation. Jesus Christ, the Son of God and the Creator of the universe, is the One who brought the animals to Noah to be saved. Later He died on the Cross for sins, so all who would come to Him would be saved for eternity.

Dr. Marcus Ross is the assistant professor of geology and assistant director for the Center for Creation Studies at Liberty University. He holds a master’s degree in paleontology and a PhD in geosciences from the University of Rhode Island.

Friday, October 22, 2010

WHO IS AGAINST TWO STATES SOLUTION?

"Two states, living side by side in peace and security." This, in the words of President Barack Obama, is the solution to the century-long conflict between Jews and Palestinian Arabs in the Middle East. Washington is fully and determinedly on board. So are the Europeans. The UN and the "international community" vociferously agree. Successive governments of the state of Israel have shown their support for the idea. So far, there is—just as there has always been—only one holdout.

The story begins a long time ago. In April 1920, the newly formed League of Nations appointed Britain as the mandatory power in Palestine. The British were committed, via the Balfour Declaration, to facilitating the establishment of a Jewish national home in Palestine. But they were repeatedly confronted with violent Arab opposition, which they just as repeatedly tried to appease. As early as March 1921, they severed the vast and sparsely populated territory east of the Jordan River ("Transjordan") from the prospective Jewish national home and made Abdullah, the emir of Mecca, its effective ruler. In 1922 and 1930, two British White Papers limited Jewish immigration to Palestine and imposed harsh restrictions on land sales to Jews.

But the violence mounted, and in July 1937 it reaped its greatest reward when a British commission of inquiry, headed by Lord Peel, recommended repudiating the terms of the mandate altogether. In its stead, the commission now proposed a two-state solution: the partitioning of Palestine into an Arab state, united with Transjordan, that would occupy some 85 percent of the mandate territory west of the Jordan river, and a Jewish state in the remainder. "Half a loaf is better than no bread," the commission wrote in its report, hoping that "on reflection both parties will come to realize that the drawbacks of partition are outweighed by its advantages."

But partition did not happen. While the Zionist leadership gave the plan its halfhearted support, Arab governments and the Palestinian Arab leadership (with the sole exception of Abdullah, who viewed partition as a steppingstone to the vast Arab empire he was striving to create) dismissed it out of hand.

The same thing happened in November 1947 when, in the face of the imminent expiration of the British mandate, the UN General Assembly voted to partition Palestine. Rejecting the plan altogether, the Arab nations attempted to gain the whole by destroying the state of Israel at birth. This time, however, Arab violence backfired. In the ensuing war, not only did Israel confirm its sovereign independence and assert control over somewhat wider territories than those assigned to it by the UN, but the Palestinian Arab community was profoundly shattered, with about half of its members fleeing to other parts of Palestine and to neighboring Arab states.

But the results hardly won the Arabs over to the merits of the two-state solution. Rather, the Arab states continued to manipulate the Palestinian cause to their own several ends. Neither Egypt nor Jordan permitted Palestinian self-determination in the parts of Palestine they had occupied during the 1948 war. Jordan annexed the West Bank in April 1950, while Egypt kept the Gaza Strip under oppressive military rule. No new Palestinian leadership was allowed to emerge. Only after the conquest of these territories by Israel during the June 1967 Six-Day war, and the passage five months later of UN Security Council Resolution 242, would their political future become a question of the first order.

At the time, though, nobody envisaged a return to the two-state solution. To the contrary: Palestinian nationhood was rejected by the entire international community, including the western democracies, the Soviet Union (then the foremost supporter of radical Arabism), and the Arab world itself (as late as 1974, Syrian President Hafez al-Assad openly referred to Palestine as "a basic part of southern Syria"). Instead, under Resolutions 242's "land for peace" terms, it was assumed that any territories evacuated by Israel would be returned to their pre-1967 Arab occupiers: Gaza to Egypt, and the West Bank to Jordan. The resolution did not even mention the Palestinians by name, affirming instead the necessity "for achieving a just settlement of the refugee problem"—a clause that applied not just to Arabs but to the hundreds of thousands of Jews expelled from Arab states following the 1948 war.

What, then, about the Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO), established in 1964 at the initiative of Egypt's President Gamal Abdel Nasser? Through a sustained terror campaign in the late 1960s and early 1970s, most notably including the massacre of eleven Israeli athletes at the September 1972 Munich Olympics, the PLO would gradually establish itself as a key international player. In October 1974 it was designated by the Arab League as the "sole legitimate representative" of the Palestinian people, and in the following month PLO Chairman Yasir Arafat became the first non-state leader ever to address the UN General Assembly. Soon afterward, the UN granted observer status to the PLO despite that organization's open commitment to the destruction of Israel, a UN member state; within a few years, it was allowed to open offices in most west European capitals.

The PLO's ascendance, coupled with Jordan's renunciation of its claim to the West Bank, led to a reinterpretation of Resolution 242 as in fact implying a two-state solution: namely, Israel and a Palestinian state governed by the PLO in the West Bank and the Gaza Strip. Conveniently ignored was one glaring fact: the PLO rejected any such solution. In June 1974, the organization adopted a "phased strategy," according to whose terms it would seize whatever territory Israel was prepared or compelled to cede and use it as a springboard for further territorial gains until achieving, in its phrase, the "complete liberation of Palestine."

It is true that, in November 1988, more than two decades after the passage of 242, the PLO made a pretense of accepting the resolution; but this was little more than a ploy to open a dialogue with Washington. Shortly after that move, Salah Khalaf, Arafat's second-in-command (better known by his nom de guerre of Abu Iyad), declared: "The establishment of a Palestinian state on any part of Palestine is but a step toward the whole of Palestine." Two years later, following the Iraqi occupation of Kuwait (which the PLO endorsed), he reiterated the point at a public rally in Amman, pledging "to liberate Palestine inch by inch from the [Mediterranean] sea to the [Jordan] river."

Despite all this, Israel's Labor government, which had backed the "land for peace" formula in the immediate wake of the 1967 war, decided to enter into its own peace negotiations with the PLO. In 1993 it signed the "Oslo Accords" providing for Palestinian self-rule in the entire West Bank and Gaza Strip for a transitional period not to exceed five years, during which time Israel and the Palestinians would negotiate a permanent settlement. Although the Oslo accords were not based explicitly on a two-state solution, they signaled an implicit Israeli readiness to acquiesce in the establishment of a Palestinian state.

But once again the PLO had other plans. In its judgment, the Oslo "peace process" offered a path not to a two-state but to a one-state solution. Arafat admitted as much five days before signing the accords in Washington when he told an Israeli journalist that "In the future, Israel and Palestine will be one united state in which Israelis and Palestinians will live together"—that is, Israel would cease to exist. And even as he shook Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin's hand on the White House lawn, Arafat was assuring the Palestinians in a pre-recorded Arabic-language message that the agreement was merely an implementation of the PLO's phased strategy.

The next ten years offered a recapitulation, over and over again, of the same story. In addressing Israeli or Western audiences, Arafat would laud the "peace" he had signed with "my partner Yitzhak Rabin." To his Palestinian constituents, he depicted the accords as transient arrangements required by the needs of the moment, made constant allusion to the "phased strategy," and repeatedly insisted on the "right of return," a euphemism for Israel's destruction through demographic subversion.

And that was the least of it. Further discrediting the idea of "two states living side by side in peace and security," Arafat's Palestinian Authority (PA) launched a sustained campaign of racial hatred and political incitement. Israelis, and Jews more generally, were portrayed as the source of all evil and responsible for every problem, real or imagined, in the West Bank and Gaza. Palestinians were indoctrinated in the illegitimacy of the state of Israel and the lack of any Jewish connection to the land, supplemented with tales of Israeli plots to corrupt and ruin them.

Nor did it stop there. Embracing violence as the defining characteristic of his rule, Arafat set out to build an extensive terrorist infrastructure in the territories—in flagrant violation of the accords and in total defiance of the overriding official reason for his presence there: namely, to lay the groundwork for Palestinian independence. Israeli concessions had no effect, or worse. In 1997, Jerusalem gave the PA full control over virtually the entire Arab population of the West Bank and the Gaza Strip, as well as some 40 percent of the land, as a prelude to final-status negotiations. But Israel's civilian casualties only mounted. At the American-convened peace summit in Camp David (July 2000), Ehud Barak offered Arafat a complete end to the Israeli presence, ceding virtually the entire territory of the West Bank and Gaza Strip to the nascent Palestinian state and making breathtaking concessions with respect to Jerusalem. Arafat's response was war, at a level of local violence unmatched in scope and intensity since the attempt to abort the creation of a Jewish state in 1948.

Although it had become abundantly evident by then that the PLO had no interest whatsoever in statehood, the international community responded by condemning Israel's defensive measures against the Palestinian intifada and urging it to accelerate the "peace process." It also maintained the massive influx of international aid to the Palestinian Authority, making the Palestinians the largest recipients of foreign aid per-capita in the world—though most of the funds were promptly siphoned off to the personal bank accounts of Arafat and his cronies and/or channeled to terror operations. Even after Arafat's death in late 2004 and the landslide victory of the militant Islamist group Hamas in Palestinian parliamentary elections twelve months later, Western governments insistently maintained the façade of a "peace process," now embracing Mahmoud Abbas and his defeated Fatah as the epitome of moderation.

But is there in fact a fundamental distinction between Hamas and Fatah when it comes to a two-state solution? Neither faction formally accepts Israel's right to exist; both are formally committed to its eventual destruction. Moreover, for all the admittedly sharp differences between Arafat and his successor Abbas both in personality and in political style, the two are warp and woof of the same dogmatic PLO fabric.

In a televised speech on May 15, 2005, Abbas described the establishment of Israel as an unprecedented historic injustice and vowed his unwavering resolve never to accept it. Two-and-a-half years later, at a U.S.-sponsored peace conference in Annapolis, he rejected Prime Minister Ehud Olmert's proposal of a Palestinian Arab state in 97 percent of the West Bank and the entire Gaza Strip, and categorically dismissed the request to recognize Israel as a Jewish state alongside the would-be Palestinian state, insisting instead on full implementation of the "right of return."

In June 2009, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu broke with longstanding Likud precept by publicly accepting a two-state solution and agreeing to the establishment of a Palestinian Arab state, provided the Palestinian leadership responded in kind and recognized Israel's Jewish nature. The Arab world exploded in rage. Egyptian President Husni Mubarak, whose country had been at peace with the Jewish state for 30 years, deplored Netanyahu's statement as "scuppering the possibilities for peace." Palestinian chief negotiator Saeb Erekat warned that Netanyahu "will have to wait 1,000 years before he finds one Palestinian who will go along with him."

At Fatah's sixth general congress, convened in Bethlehem in August last year, the delegates reaffirmed their longstanding commitment to "armed struggle" as "a strategy, not a tactic . . . . This struggle will not stop until the Zionist entity is eliminated and Palestine is liberated." More recently, even as Abbas has publicly mouthed the Obama formula for "two states living side by side in peace and security," he pointedly insists on preconditions impossible for Israe

l to accept.

The Peel Commission had the principle right. While a two-state solution "offers neither party all it wants, it offers each what it wants most, namely, freedom and security." It is a great historical irony that this "half-a-loaf" solution should have been repeatedly advanced as a response by others—Europeans, Americans, Israelis—to the actions of its most implacable opponents, who have then repeatedly proceeded to repudiate it in word and deed. On the Palestinian side, not a single leader has ever evinced any true liking for the idea or acted in a way signifying an unqualified embrace of it. The same is true, with the partial exceptions of Egypt and Jordan, for the larger Arab world.

Nearly two decades and thousands of deaths after the launch of the "peace process," one might hope that Western policy makers would at last begin to take the measure of what the Palestinian leadership tells its own people and wider Arab audiences. For the lesson of history remains: so long as things on the Arab side are permitted, or encouraged, to remain as they are, there will be no two-state solution, and therefore no solution at all.

Efraim Karsh, editor of the Middle East Quarterly and author most recently of Palestine Betrayed (Yale), is professor of Middle East and Mediterranean Studies at King's College, University of London.

Sunday, July 25, 2010

TITLE: IN THE BEGINNING…

TEXT: Genesis 1:1 - 2

“In the beginning God created the heavens and the earth. (2) Now the earth was formless and empty, darkness was over the surface of the deep, and the Spirit of God was hovering over the water".

This was the condition of things before God said “Let there be light, (Genesis 1:3). From the two verses of Genesis, God created the heavens and the earth but somehow the earth was formless, empty and darkness covered every where. To fully understand and grasp the full meaning of the first two verses of Genesis 1 the key is the Hebrew verb translated “was” (the fourth word in verse 4). The best translation of the verb is “became” not “was”. This can be seen from the marginal reading of the New International Version (NIV) of the Bible which says the word can be rendered “became”. Let now read our text again substituting the verb “was” with “became” “in the beginning God created the heaven and the earth. (2) Now the earth became formless and empty…” You can see the picture very vividly; God created a perfect earth and heavers, but the earth became foamless, empty and dark. The English word became is the past tense of become which is defined by the Oxford dictionary as (1) to come to be; (2) to grow to be or to begin to be. God never fashioned the earth to become without form, dark or empty. This truth is corroborated by Isaiah 45: 18 which reads; “For thus says the Lord who created the heaven, God Himself who formed the earth and made it, Who establish it and created it not worthless wastes; He formed it to be inhabited: I am the Lord, and there is no one else” (Amplified Bible). It is very clear that the earth became formless as a result of some action. No effect without a cause.
The narration in Genesis 1 is a story of re-creating of the earth. After creating of first earth, God entrusted Lucifer (which means light bearer) with the management of the earth to implement God purpose. The purpose was that of transforming the earth into a paradise, but Lucifer with the angelic host that was with him rebelled against God. This rebellion brought the emptiness, darkness and formless of Genesis 1:2.

The story of this rebellion though not told directly can be seen in the books of Ezekiel, Isaiah and Revelation. In Ezekiel 28:11 - 19 a prophecy was recorded about the king of Tyre. But the superficial study of that prophecy gets so complicated if it literally applied only to a human ruler. We are told in verse 13 of Ezekiel 28 that this being was in Eden, the garden of God. Verse 14 reads “You were the anointed cherub who covers,” New American Standard Version of the Bible (NAS). Verse 15 says that this being was blameless in his ways. There is no how this verse can be applied to the king of Tyre only. Now the king of Tyre was not in the Garden of Eden at any time, but Lucifer was there before Adam. Now God DID not CREATE a devil or Satan. He created Lucifer (light bearer) who by his own activities turned himself to the devil or Satan. Verse 15 said iniquity or wickedness was found in Lucifer. What then was this wickedness? The answer is found in Isaiah 14:12-17. Verses 12 and 13 reads thus “How art thou fallen from heaven, O Lucifer, son of the morning! how art thou cut down to the ground, which didst weaken the nation! (13) For thou (Lucifer) hast said in thine heart, I will ascend into heaven, I will exalt my throne above the stars of God: I will sit also upon the mount of the congregation, in the sides of the north”. Lucifer refused to keep to the dominion God allotted him (i.e. his authority). See Jude 6. He wanted to be like God. This probably occurred after he had completed the beautification of earth, for verse 13 says that he said in his heat that ‘I will ascend into heaven’ (from earth). He wanted to be worship and revered like God. He wanted to be worship and revered like God. That was what brought his expulsion from heaven. Revelation 12:7-9. He wanted to exalt his throne above the stars of God and enthroned himself on mount of congregation. The stars in this context are not literal. God Almighty is enthroned upon the cherubs (cherubim). These are the four living creatures mentioned in Ezekiel 1 and Revelation 4 Read the whole chapters.
Notice verse 22 - 25 of Ezekiel 1, God sits above the expanse; the expanse sits above the cherubim. For further study of this awesome throne read Ezekiel 10. This is the amazing throne that Lucifer wanted to ascend and sit. God expelled him from heaven, and he because of his corrupted knowledge, wisdom (those were perfect when he was created) and erroneous reasoning he wrought destruction on the earth. This occurs because he became a creature without fear of the creator. His wisdom became void of the fear of God his creator. This brought the darkness, emptiness and formlessness of Genesis 1:2.

From this condition (darkness, emptiness and formlessness, God begin to create the earth and the things on it again. First he created light. On the sixth day God created man and placed him in the Garden of Eden just like he did Lucifer. Man still cut himself from by choosing knowledge. Satan Possessed serpent, (who was not a reptile then) and through serpent transmitted his false reasoning to the woman and the woman in turn to the man. (Subsequently we shall take the account of the fall of man in a more detail way). God has to undertake the pain of re-creating because his purpose for earth must be achieved. God then created man by direct action. “(S)o God created man in His own image, in the image and likeness of God He created him…” Genesis 1:27 (Amplified Bible), to execute God’s purposes on the earth or in other words to populate and subdue the earth in fear and knowledge of God. The earth population would have been offspring of man equip with God’s Spirit to bring God’s Purpose into being, (Isaiah 44:2 - 5). But before mankind could reach for the Tree of Life and receive God’s Spirit, Satan deceived them. Mankind now left God no choice but to expel them from Eden.

Mankind went out of Eden without the reverential fear of God, till he was at the brink of destroying himself and the earth. God then intervened, Genesis 6:5. The most High God decided to blot out the whole system that mankind had put in place. Only one man was found righteous on earth at that time, Noah. God used the flood to destroy the system only Noah and his household were saved. He then was given the privilege of repopulating the earth,
Genesis 9:1-7

The faith of Noah was not in his offspring. Ham’s grandson, Nimrod built the Tower of Babel which was a center of false religion, witchcraft and magic etc. in fact the Tower of Babel could be described as “melting pot” of that time. There were united because all the earth was monolingual: so it came to a point that besides having cultural, language, civil, economic, government and social unity they wanted a religious unity. So this tower be came the inspiration for those things, what we may call today a common heritage. They were building the tower using tar (bitumen) for mortar and bricks. Genesis 11:1-9. Every body was doing his part and there was total coordination of the work till God came down to inspect this great project of men, verse 5, 6 and 7.He confounded the language of the people. Mankind was scattered over the face of the whole earth.

What we have in the scene today is the evidence that mankind has refuse to learn from his history and God’s History- His Bible. He has still continued in his devices without regard to God’s laws, his commandments. The time we are living in is prophesied by the prophet Daniel. This is found in the twelfth chapter of Daniel which reads thus: “But thou O Daniel, shut up the words, and seal the book even to the time of the end, many shall run to and for, and KNOWLEDGE SHALL INCREASED, (verse 4). This knowledge is not a positive type but a one that shall bring “perilous time” in this last days as Christ made it clear in his prophecy record in the Mathew 24: 21 - 22, “For them there will be great tribulation -affliction, distress and oppression such as has not been from the beginning of the world until now; no, and never will be (again). 22 and if those days had not been shortened, no human being would endure and survive; but for the sake of the elect (God’s chosen ones) those days shortened” (Amplified Bible). This prophecy was made by Jesus Christ who was here on earth about 2000 years ago and about 2000 years after the flood of Genesis 7. He made clear to His disciples what the earth’s condition will be this end time the last days. Human self destruction was not possible or imminent few decades ago, but now. Today Human civilization is threatened by nuclear/biological and chemical weapons, diseases, famines, etc.

It is such that many people cannot see what goodness lays ahead for the earth and it people and the entire universe. “For I reckon that the sufferings of this present time are not worthy to be compared with the glory which, shall be revealed in us.” Romans 8:18. Jesus Christ will intervene to usher in a time of perfect peace and security, free of nuclear or biological/chemical weapons, Isaiah 2:1-5, 11:1 -10. Whether they like it or not “nation shall not lift up sword against nation, neither shall they learn war any more.” The wicked shall be destroyed, but individuals who surrender to God’s principles-his way of salvation, laws and commandments will be saved from those sorrows, distress mentioned earlier and saved by Christ’s presence which will consumed the wicked as mentioned in the Holy Bible many times and in many passages, Luke 21:18, Daniel 12:1-2, Isaiah 26:20 -21.

Christ also counseled us who believe in him to “Be always on watch, and pray that you (who believe in Christ) may be able to escape all that is about to happen, and that you may able to stand before the Son of man Luke 21:36 (NIV). If this is you prayer you can repent of you wrong doing (sins) and receive Jesus Christ as you Lord and savior and asked him to forgive you, and transform your life to conform to his principles. Because it is only in Christ, that you can have forgiveness and redemption. Ephesians 1:7-8