Four Reasons Why Your Family Needs Genesis

Four Reasons Why Your Family Needs Genesis

 There are many reasons why parents might be tempted to steer clear of working through Genesis in family worship. The lengthy genealogies might deter us. The graphic stories of immorality might deter us. The thought of explaining circumcision or polygamy to a five-year-old might deter us. The size of the book itself might deter us. But whatever reasons may arise for not setting these fifty chapters before our families, none of them are legitimate. Your family needs the book of Genesis, and so does mine. Many arguments could be given to support this assertion, but I want to focus here upon four.

 1. Genesis puts us in our rightful place as creatures.

In case you are unaware, our culture is tireless in its attempt to indoctrinate our children in atheistic evolution. The message they are being spoon-fed from the earliest age is that they are random blobs of highly evolved protoplasm, and thus the only way to find true identity and purpose is to create it. But Genesis tells our children that they are image-bearing creatures, created to know, enjoy, and reflect their Creator. The creation account in Genesis teaches our children that humans are altogether unique. It shows us that the self is not and can never be autonomous—that we are always under the authority of God and that it is good for us to be so.

  we are always under the authority of God and…it is good for us to be so.

2. Genesis puts us in our rightful place as sinners.

Recently, I went to the store to pick up some cards for college graduates in my congregation. I didn’t intend for this to take long, but I ended up spending ten minutes looking at literally every graduation card they had. I couldn’t bring myself to buy any of them. Every single one (even the religious ones) exalted the greatness of the graduate; some even commanded arrogance.

ocean rocks genesis bible creation

Our children come out of the womb thinking they are great, and we as parents continue to suffer from this delusion about ourselves and our children. But Genesis sets before us our catastrophic fall into sin. Through engaging narrative, it confronts us with our tragic condition—by nature, we are hell-worthy, death-deserving sinners who have nothing to be proud of in ourselves. That kind of message might not sell in the Hallmark world, but it is reality. We desperately need to hear this message, especially in our age of empty motivation and fault-deflecting victimization.

 Genesis sets before us our catastrophic fall into sin.

3. Genesis sets before us the mediatorial grace of Jesus Christ.

I want my children to grow up seeing that the Bible is not a random collection of unrelated books but a beautiful, God-inspired tapestry of a variety of books written by diverse human authors from different historical periods that presents a harmonious message of salvation through the singular Mediator, Jesus Christ.

Teaching Genesis to our children helps them to see that Christ did not appear out of thin air in first-century Palestine, but that God has been promising from the very beginning a son of Eve, Noah, and Abraham who would crush the serpent’s head and bring salvation to the world. Genesis wonderfully calls our children to faith in Christ and also beckons them to marvel at the unity of God’s redemptive purpose from the start.

 4. Genesis instills hope of a consummated world full of God’s worship.

When you think of Genesis, hope is probably not the first word that comes to your mind. But the entire book is brimming with future-looking anticipation. God’s purpose for the world and mankind, forfeited by Adam and restored by Christ, will one day be gloriously consummated.

When we reach the final chapters of Scripture, we are confronted by the fact that the end looks remarkably like the beginning, only better. God’s purpose for Adam to be fruitful and fill the earth with image-bearing worshipers will be realized in climactic finality as God’s garden-temple stretches to the four corners of the globe. The book of Genesis calls our children and us to look forward with great expectation to this coming day and to pray and labor to hasten it.

As the cultural scene around us grows bleaker, our children need not merely faith in Christ but hope in the final triumph of Christ. The beginnings of Genesis prepare us for the end of history and teaches us to live in anticipation as we journey through this earthly pilgrimage.

 God’s purpose for the world and mankind, forfeited by Adam and restored by Christ, will one day be gloriously consummated.

Give your family Genesis

There will be difficult questions to answer and complex realities to explain to your children in the book of Genesis. Certain portions may indeed be best to skip over or quickly breeze through with your kindergartener. But dear parent, do not rob your family of the riches of this most foundational and glorious book. Give your children Genesis and pray for God to use it to grow Christward faith and hope in their souls unto His glory.

Thanks for reading. If you are interested in leading your family through Genesis, check out our new family worship resource: Beginning: Family Worship in Genesis co-authored by Nick Thompson and Joel R. Beeke.

Beginning: Family Worship in Genesis by Joel R. Beeke and Nick Thompson

Give them Genesis.

Joel and Nick’s books is available from Reformation Heritage Books.

The Transcendent Excellency of Jesus Christ

The Transcendent Excellency of Jesus Christ

What Is Spiritual Watchfulness and Why Does It Matter?

What Is Spiritual Watchfulness and Why Does It Matter?