This is the episode the entire series was building toward.
Over four episodes, we established Genesis One as the inauguration of a cosmic temple — a seven-day dedication ceremony, encoded with a sevenfold mathematical signature, culminating in the divine rest that makes the universe not just a physical structure but a living sanctuary. We established the human being as the living image of God placed at its center. We established the Sabbath as a portable, indestructible sanctuary built into the rhythm of time itself.
But one question remained: at what point did the human being move from being the image in the temple — to being the temple itself? When was the human temple dedicated?
The answer runs through a Roman cross. Seven words. Six hours. And a structural correspondence so precise — mapped day by day, word by word, against the seven days of Genesis One — that once you see it, you cannot unsee it.
Word One against Day One. Word Two against Day Two. All the way to the sixth word — it is finished — against Day Six's it was very good. And the seventh word — Father, into your hands I commit my spirit — against the divine rest of Day Seven.
We also sit with what this parallel means theologically — why the crucifixion, understood only as a transaction for sin management, loses something enormous. Drawing on N.T. Wright's argument that the cross is not primarily about individual sin clearance but the renewal of all creation, we make the case that what happened on Good Friday is Genesis One happening again. For you. Inside you.
The series closes with the full text of Genesis Chapter One, read aloud in the Amplified Bible — to be heard, after everything this series has established, with completely new ears.
In this episode:
- The seven last words of Christ mapped against the seven days of creation
- Why "Father, forgive them" corresponds to "Let there be light"
- Why the darkness at the fourth word is theologically inseparable from Day Four
- "It is finished" as the new creation's tov meod — very good
- N.T. Wright and the cosmic, creational dimensions of the cross
- When the human temple was dedicated — and what Pentecost means in temple terms
- The full text of Genesis Chapter One, read in the Amplified Bible
Next series: Genesis Chapter Two. If Chapter One answered who made the universe — Chapter Two answers what God thinks of you, specifically, by name. We're going to the garden. Into the dirt. To meet a God who kneels down and breathes.
The Daily Word | In the Beginning Series, Episode 5 of 5 Hosted by Marvins Jayriley Boma-Dienyefa