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Articles, Bible studies, and sermons that contain The First Book of Moses Called Genesis 2:19:
Genesis 2:19-20
Excerpted from: Lessons From the AnimalsWe find that the very first act the newly-formed, created Adam did was in carrying out a responsibility toward animals. This was the first thing that he did.
This assignment from God was a way God showed Adam his dominion. The primary purpose of this was undoubtedly to show Adam that there was not one among the animals with whom he could be intimately at one with. But it also served to introduce to Adam his responsibility toward animals. It showed him that not only could he not be one with them, but it also showed him the vast difference between him and the other living creatures.
Now he alone, among all the created beings on earth, was intelligent. Therefore, it was his responsibility, in his dominion, to take care of them. The animals were dumb; that is, they could not communicate with him on his level, and they could not think spatially or invent things the way he could.
I think that God made it clear to Adam that his responsibility was to take care of them. And though Adam was monarch of everything that he surveyed, it was clear to him (because of the conclusion at the end of verse 20, the conclusion that Adam reached) that he was created as a social being. He was created for fellowship. He was created for service. He was not created for power. And he understood that he could have comradeship with the animals, but he could not have fellowship.
That is why it says there was no helper comparable to him. That is why Adam made the jubilant response that he did when Eve was created, in verse 23. He said, This is now bone of my bones and flesh of my flesh. He could see that this was somebody that he could fellowship with! This was somebody who was his equal. This was someone with whom there could be communication. He could be one with this person and he was jubilant about it.
God's bringing of the animals to Adam to see what he would name them also implies that Adam was to become acquainted with them. It says He brought them to see what he would name them. Now how would Adam do that? Did not Adam then have to use his intelligence? Did he not have to use his powers of observation? And from the personality or characteristics of the animals he was observing and that were passing before him, he then pronounced names upon them. The naming was the result of his observation of the characteristics of every beast.
Genesis 2:19-20
Excerpted from: The Two Great Commandments: First PrinciplesThis is very interesting in terms of people identifying as other things like fish or cattle or red fox or something. God did this purposely, bringing the animals before Adam so he could see that there was not anything else out there that was like him.
She had not been created yet. Here Adam was, a lone male among humanity. And all these animals were out there and nothing was like him. I am sure God even brought orangutans and gorillas and other monkeys, primates, and Adam could see that none of these were really like him either, even though they walked perhaps on their two legs and had opposable thumbs and all those things. They were still not human.
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Will You Marry Me? (Part One)
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Our Help
Where God Places His Name (Part One)
Called Their Name Adam
Called Their Name Adam
Christian Marriage (Part Two)
Cultural Paradigms in Scripture
Leadership and the Covenants (Part Five)
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Imagining the Garden of Eden (Part 12)
God's Stare Decisis
Imagining the Garden of Eden (Part 10)
Homosexual Marriage?
Choosing to Have a Good Relationship
Dating Outside the Church
The Purpose of the Marriage Relationship
A Name's Significance
Virtues Hard and Soft
Using Power Righteously (Part One)
God's Stare Decisis
It IS All About Government
Husbands, Love Your Wives
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