Origin Story #11 of 21:
In
the day that the Lord God made the
earth and the heavens…
The Lord God formed man of dust from the ground,
The Lord God formed man of dust from the ground,
and
breathed into his nostrils the breath of life;
and
man became a living being.
And
the Lord God planted a garden in
Eden, in the east;
and
there he put the man whom he had formed. (Gn 2:4-7)
It looked like our origin story was over—“finished”
(Gn 2:1-2). The hymn is finished with the seventh stanza, but our origin story
continues. To know something of our individual origin, we need a story with
plot, interesting characters, suspense, and resolution. Hymn (poetry), and
story (narrative) is how the Bible goes. The Exodus story can’t be told without
the songs of Mariam and Moses. Songs weave their way through our Christmas
story: “The Song of Mary”; or, “the heavenly host praising God and singing
‘Glory to God in the highest…’” (Lk 1-2). That’s how we worship. We gather to
sing our hymns of praise; and then, someone will tell a story about God and his
way with us. So too with our origin story. It’s worshipful.
The story part takes place “in the day when the Lord God made the earth and the
heavens.” Not “days” as the hymn goes; but “in the day” singular. Like we use
the phrase “in the day” meaning a span of time; or, an epic of time during
which something memorable happens. Our majestic God who speaks from a distance
and calls creation into existence; now comes close forming man from the ground
and breathing the breath of life into his nostrils. This is the God we know as Lord—his divine name given to Moses at
the burning bush: “I am” for
short; or “I am who I am”. A name
so precious—so sacred that worshipers just whisper, “Lord.” God is the Creator worshipers have come to know as Lord.
In the story part that follows the hymn, the Lord God plants “a garden in Eden, in
the east”; a place suited for “the man whom he had formed.” Not the great expanses
of our Hymn; but, a particular garden in the east. Not big like “Let the earth
bring forth”; but particular: Out of Eden’s ground “the Lord God made to grow
every tree that is pleasant to the sight and good for food, the tree of life
also in the midst of the garden, and the tree of the knowledge of good and
evil.” Not chaotic waters separated and put into their proper place so that the
earth could bring forth vegetation; but, particular water from particular
rivers: “A river flowed out of Eden to water the garden, and there it divided
and became four rivers”—rivers with names, two of which we know to this day:
Tigris and Euphrates.
As with the hymn, man is given a vocation. He has
responsibilities. Only here, his responsibilities are not so vast as being
fruitful and multiplying, and filling the earth and subduing and ruling it.
Now, our origin story speaks of a particular vocation suited for a particular
place: to care for the garden. For the garden to be the garden, it needs our
tilling and keeping. All is well; or is it? There’s more to the story.
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