'''CHAPTER TWO: GOD RECREATES THE EARTH'''
CHAPTER TWO
GOD RECREATES THE EARTH
For many years  (perhaps millions), Satan the devil and his demons roamed  a darkened, lifeless earth, which was covered with water and poisonous gases  (Genesis 1:2). Then one day, after years of careful planning, God decided it  was time to recreate the face of the earth.
He knew that the  conditions and surroundings had to be just right, so that it could support  physical life. 
On the first day,  God, using the tremendous power of His Holy Spirit, cleared away the poisonous  smoke, vapours, gases and clouds that filled the sky. This allowed some  sunlight to shine upon earth for the first time in many years (Gen 1:3-5). 
On the second day,  God cleared away a layer of water and replaced it with healthy, fresh air and  clean clouds, which swirled in the sky (Gen 1:8). This is known today as the  atmosphere (the Bible refers to it as the first heaven). 
On the third day, the  Creator pushed back the waters into sections of oceans, seas and lakes across  the earth. This cleared the way for dry land to appear and prosper with  plant-life. God also formed sections made up of mountains, hills, plains,  valleys, islands and continents (Gen 1:9-10). Then He created grass, plants,  trees and other vegetation (Gen1:11-13). 
On the fourth day,  God swept away the last layer of dust and gases.
This allowed the  stars to twinkle and shine down from the blackness of space into the night sky.  God calls this space the second heaven (Gen 1:14). His throne is in the third  heaven (Acts 7:49). 
On the fifth day, He  created fish, whales and other creatures of the sea (Genesis 1:20-21). He also  created birds to fly through the sky (Gen 1:21-23). With the waters and sky  populated with life, God was now ready to create man.
God  Creates Man From Dust
On the sixth day of  the week, God created animals of every kind: Horses, cows, lions, deer,  elephants, reptiles, insects and many more—
anything that walked, crawled or moved about the earth (Genesis 1:24-25). Each animal was made after its own kind. This is why horses give birth to baby horses (foals); cows give birth to baby cows (calves); lions give birth to baby lions (cubs).
Likewise, God created  man after His own kind. Like a piece of clay, man was sculpted into the same  image and likeness as his Creator (Gen 1:26-27). Just as you have hair, eyes, a  nose, a mouth, arms and legs like your parents, God created human beings to  look like Him. 
However, God is  Spirit (John 4:24). Man is flesh and  blood, created from the dust of the ground (Genesis 2:7). God lives forever. He  can never die. But humans are temporary, physical; eventually, all human beings  die. After God formed and shaped the first man, He breathed into his nostrils  the breath of life. Man then became a soul—a living, breathing being, just like  animals.
Animal  Brain Versus Human Mind
Human beings and  animals have temporary, physical lives. Both must rely upon food, drink and  fresh, clean air in order to survive. But there are two major differences  between humans and animals.
First, humans were  made to look like the God kind. Animals were made to look like the animal kind.
Second, animals live  by instinct. Like a computer, God programmed animals to automatically know how  to survive. Through instinct, a colt automatically knows how to walk almost as  soon as it is born. Through instinct, a calf automatically knows exactly where and  how to get milk—from its mother. Through instinct, birds automatically know how  to build nests.
But God did not give  humans instinct. Instead, He gives each person a human spirit (Job 32:8). This  means that we must learn to walk, speak, build things, and so forth. We do not  automatically know how to do these things.
However, the human  spirit empowers the brain to become a mind.
This is why man can  build and design towering skyscrapers, produce beautiful works of art, and  create wonderful, awe-inspiring music. Animals cannot do these things. Man can  produce powerful, super-fast computers of all shapes and sizes. He can build  spacecrafts that can visit other planets—and even take people to the moon and  back. He can create vast libraries of books that record thousands of years of  human history.
Animals can do none  of these things. The human mind is greater, higher and better than the animal  brain.
And yet the human  mind is far, far lower than God’s mind!
The  First Marriage
 
God named the first  man Adam and placed him in the  beautiful Garden of Eden (Genesis 2:8). He then instructed Adam to tend the garden and keep it lush and green  (Gen 2:15). God also brought before the man every animal that moved on the  earth or flew in the sky so that Adam  would name them (Gen 2:19-20).
As the animals came  to Adam, he noticed that each kind was  male and female. Seeing this, Adam  began to feel lonely. He was the only human being on the face of the earth. But  the Creator did not intend for Adam to  live alone. He said, “It is not good that man should be alone; I will make him  a helper” (Gen 2:18). God knew that without a helper or companion, Adam was physically incomplete.
So God caused Adam to fall into a deep sleep. He then took one of his  ribs and created a woman from it (Genesis 2:18-22).
Later, Adam called her “Eve,”  which means “life,” “living” or “life giver,” because she would become the  mother of every man, woman and child who has ever lived (Gen 3:20). 
Then, God performed  the first wedding—Adam and Eve became husband and wife (Genesis 2:22-24). God  intended for married couples to work together as a team and to walk in complete  agreement, the way God and the Word agree. God made the man to be the head of  his wife and family. And God made the wife to be head of the children and to  manage the household. The Creator intended that the man look to his wife as a  helper and for advice. The woman was made to look to her husband for  leadership, guidance and authority. Together, as they produce children and  build families, husbands and wives physically complete each other.
Peace  in the Garden of Eden
Adam and  Eve did not need to fear the animals  that roamed the earth.
Unlike today, animals  back then did not eat meat, nor did they attack and hurt each other. They all  lived together in peace. Lions, bears and other large animals walked freely  without attacking others.
One day soon, man and  animals will live in peace and harmony again. This will happen when God sets up  His kingdom on the earth.
At that time, all  will live according to His ways (Isaiah 11:6-9).
God instructed Adam and Eve  to have a family and fill the earth with children. He also gave them the  responsibility of ruling and taking care of the animals,  water creatures, birds and plants (Genesis 1:28-30). Adam’s  job was to till the ground and spread the supreme beauty and lushness of the  Garden of Eden around the world until it filled the whole earth (2:4-6).
God  Creates the Sabbath
God recreated the  earth, and then created plants, animals and humans, in six days. On the seventh  day, the Creator decided to rest from His work (Genesis 2:2-3).
 
God was not tired.  The Eternal is always filled with energy (Isaiah 40:28; Psalm 121:4). He rested  on the seventh day of the week in order to set an example for  us (Genesis 2:1-3). God gave the first six days of the week for people to work  and create things—just as God worked and recreated the earth. But the seventh day  is special. It is holy—set apart for a special purpose. God called that day His  Sabbath (Exodus 16:26). It is a day of rest, a holy time set apart from all  work so that people can have more time to seek and worship God. The first six  days of the week belong to man. But the seventh day—the Sabbath—belongs to God  (Exodus 20:8-11). Once God established the Sabbath day, the Creation Week was  finished.

