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l believe in God the Father, Almighty, Maker of heaven and earth."
This is first in the Christian creed.
It is very simple: the Christian knows God as Creator and, therefore the truth about the origin of the world and himself by faithby faith only. Implied is that this knowledge of God as Creator is derived from Scripture, especially from the outstanding revelation of God as Creator in Genesis l and 2. For faith looks to, and is informed by, the inspired Word of God.
Knowledge of God as Creator is not only first. It is also fundamental. It is fundamental to our knowledge of God as Redeemer and, therefore, to knowledge of our redemption. Upon both of these articles, faith in God as Creator and faith in God as Redeemer, depends the third: "I believe in the Holy Ghost." Where the doubt of unbelief concerning the Creator is entertained, trust in the redemption of the cross and hope of the resurrection of the body are a lost cause.
This is the issue in the present controversy over the historicity of Genesis 1-11 in reputedly orthodox churches and seminaries. Rightly, the controversy centers on the days of Genesis 1 and 2.
In a few years, the churches that tolerate the question, "Genesis 1-11: Myth or History?" as a serious question (to be answered, of course, by "science") will be struggling with the question, "Luke 1 and 2: Myth or History?" Soon thereafter, I Corinthians 15 will be a problem.
Will Reformed and Presbyterian churches confess the first article of the Christian faith in the teeth of the scientism, evolutionism, higher criticism of the Bible, and sheer ridicule of faith of our day?
This is the real question.
Prof. David J. Engelsma