Yes, in context Genesis 1:1 must be ex nihilo. Think about it. The passage specifically states that God created something unformed. He created the unformed earth. "The earth was formless and void." You can't form something unformed. If you form something unformed, you haven't formed anything. You've gone from unformed to unformed which would be absurd. But logically you can create something unformed (that is the unformed material). So I think it's significant that different words are used in the creation toledoth. It makes sense if one act was ex nihilo, and the rest were the formation of the original created unformed matter.
While we translate
tohu as formless, it is not related to any of the verbs mean form, make or create. There is a verb meaning to form,
yatsar, used in Genesis 2, but it is not used in Genesis 1. There the two main verbs are
bara, create and
asah, make. There is no reason God could not make or create something that is still formless. You may not form something formless, but you can certainly make it.
As you say it is the context of Genesis 1:1 that makes the act of creation ex nihilo. But since
bara is used two other times in Genesis 1, God creating sea creatures and man, and creating man certainly wasn't ex nihilo but used pre-existing material, then the ex-nihilo comes from the context not the word
bara. Mark tried to argue that
bara itself mean ex-nihilo creation, but it isn't. It can be used in ex-nihilo contexts but
bara itself simply means it is God creating and making things.
In fact it is not actually clear that Genesis 1:1 is talking about ex nihilo creation, the bible does teach ex nihilo creation, but you only find clear examples in the NT John 1:3
All things were made through him, and without him was not any thing made that was made. Col 1:16
For by him all things were created, in heaven and on earth, visible and invisible, whether thrones or dominions or rulers or authorities--all things were created through him and for him. 17 And he is before all things, and in him all things hold together. The problem with Genesis 1:1 is that it can be interpreted as the title describing the whole chapter, or translated Gen 1:1
In the beginning when God created the heavens and the earth... In both cases account of creation describes God making everything from a pre-existing chaos. The bible still teaches ex nihilo creation, it just wasn't an issue the Jewish writers were bothered with.
What you have to do is stop resisting God's revelation. Just let it speak. You're trying to cram God's revelation into man's ideas and it won't work. You seem to be on an endless quest for loopholes in God's word.
Assyrian, what you really have to do is make a decision. Either trust God or don't. Be honest with yourself. As it is written, you don't believe the Bible.
Seems to me you are the one who doesn't want to look at what the text actually says, you have your ideas of what it should say, and you insist everything has to fit. Insisting on literalism is not trusting God either, because God loves to speak in metaphor and parables just as we saw Jesus do when he was on earth. Maybe it takes more faith, more trust, to approach the bible without handy man made rules of literal interpretation to tell you what everything means.
God uses all kinds of things. But Israel the nation was different than other nations. It was the nation that God specifically intervened with to bring it about. It was God that superintended the process that birthed Israel out of Egypt. Thus it is called His "son." Adam also is called God's son, as are angels. They came about by direct intervention, rather than procreation, though the references to Israel are metaphorical, obviously. But the concept is consistent. Jesus was God's only begotten (fathered) son. Apart from Adam, the only way we can become sons of God, is by being in Christ.
What about creating the Ammonites (Ezek 21:28&29) and the blacksmith (Isaiah 54:16) which I mentioned in the previous post of mine you addressed?