1-13 Did Jesus Create The Earth?
“The firstborn of every creature: for by (Jesus)
were all things created that are in heaven, and that are in earth,
visible and invisible, whether they be thrones, or dominions, or
principalities, or powers; all things were created by him, and for him:
and he is before all things, and by him all things consist. And he is
the head of the body, the church: who is the beginning, the firstborn
from the dead...” (Col. 1:15-18). This is typical of those passages
which can give the impression that Jesus actually created the earth.
1. If
this were true, then so many other passages are contradicted which
teach that Jesus did not exist before his birth. The record in Genesis
clearly teaches that God was the creator. Either Jesus or God were the
creator; if we say that Jesus was the creator while Genesis says that
God was, we are saying that Jesus was directly equal to God. In this
case it is impossible to explain the many verses which show the
differences between God and Jesus (see Study 8.2 for examples of these).
2. Jesus was the “firstborn”,
which implies a beginning. There is no proof that Jesus was God’s
“firstborn” before the creation of the literal earth. Passages like 2
Sam.7:14 and Ps. 89:27 predicted that a literal descendant of David
would become God’s firstborn. He was clearly not in existence
at the time those passages were written, and therefore not at the time
of the Genesis creation either. Jesus became “the Son of God with
power” by his resurrection from the dead (Rom. 1:4). God “has
raised up Jesus again; as it is also written in the second psalm, You
are My Son, this day have I begotten you” (Acts 13:32,33).
Thus Jesus became God’s firstborn by his resurrection. Note too that a
son standing at his father’s right hand is associated with being the
firstborn (Gen. 48:13-16), and Christ was exalted to God’s right hand
after his resurrection (Acts 2:32 R.V.mg.; Heb. 1:3).
3. It
is in this sense that Jesus is described as the firstborn from the dead
(Col. 1:18), a phrase which is parallel to “the firstborn of every
creature” or creation (Col. 1:15 R.V.). He therefore speaks of himself
as “the first begotten of the dead...the beginning of the creation of
God” (Rev. 1:5; 3:14). Jesus was the first of a new creation of
immortal men and women, whose resurrection and full birth as the
immortal sons of God has been made possible by the death and
resurrection of Jesus (Eph. 2:10; 4:23,24; 2 Cor. 5:17). “In Christ
shall all (true believers) be made alive. But every man in his own
order: Christ the firstfruits, afterward they that are Christ’s at his
coming” (1 Cor. 15:22,23). This is just the same idea as in Col. 1.
Jesus was the first person to rise from the dead and be given
immortality, he was the first of the new creation, and the true
believers will follow his pattern at his return.
4. The
creation spoken about in Col. 1 therefore refers to the new creation,
rather than that of Genesis. Through the work of Jesus “were all things
created...thrones...dominions” etc. Paul does not say that Jesus
created all things and then give examples of rivers, mountains, birds
etc. The elements of this new creation refer to those rewards which we
will have in God’s Kingdom. “Thrones...dominions” etc. refer to how the
raised believers will be “kings and priests, and we shall reign on the
earth” (Rev. 5:10). These things were made possible by the work of
Jesus. “In him were all things created in the heavens” (Col. 1:16 R.V.). In Eph. 2:6 we read of the believers who are in Christ as sitting in “heavenly places”. If any man is in Christ by baptism, he is a new creation (2 Cor. 5:17). By being in Christ we are saved by His death (Col. 1:22). The literal planet could not be created by being in Christ.
Thus these verses are teaching that the exalted spiritual position
which we can now have, as well as what we will experience in the
future, has all been made possible by Christ. The “heavens and earth”
contain “all things that needed reconciliation by the blood of
(Christ’s) cross” (Col. 1:16,20), showing that the “all things...in
heaven” refer to the believers who now sit in “heavenly places...in
Christ Jesus”, rather than to all physical things around us.
5. If
Jesus were the creator, it is strange how He should say: “…from the
beginning of the creation God made them…” (Mk. 10:6). This surely
sounds as if He understood God to be the creator, not He Himself. And
if He literally created everything in Heaven, this would include God.