In the Beginning
God made everything. Life was a gift. You were made to receive, not perform.
You didn’t make yourself
Let’s start with the most obvious thing that nobody thinks about: you didn’t create yourself.
You didn’t choose your eye color, your DNA, your heartbeat, or the fact that your lungs started working the moment you were born. All of that was given to you.
That’s not a random detail. That’s the whole point.
“In the beginning, God created the heavens and the earth.” — Genesis 1:1
The very first sentence of the Bible sets up everything that follows. God is the source. Everything else — everything — is a receiver.
Life is a gift, not a product
When God made Adam, He didn’t hand him a manual and say “figure it out.” He breathed life into him. Life came from God into man.
“Then the Lord God formed the man from the dust of the ground and breathed into his nostrils the breath of life, and the man became a living being.” — Genesis 2:7
Think about that. You’re made of dust. The only thing that makes you alive is something that came from outside of you — from God Himself.
This is the setup for the entire Bible. You were designed to receive life, not to produce it.
The tree that changed everything
God put two trees in the garden. The Tree of Life and the Tree of the Knowledge of Good and Evil. One was about receiving from God. The other was about sourcing life from yourself — deciding on your own what’s good and what’s evil, apart from God.
Guess which one they picked.
“When the woman saw that the fruit of the tree was good for food and pleasing to the eye, and also desirable for gaining wisdom, she took some and ate it.” — Genesis 3:6
That moment wasn’t just about breaking a rule. It was about a fundamental switch in orientation. Humanity went from being receivers to being self-sourcers. From getting life from God to trying to generate it on their own.
And that decision broke everything.
This isn’t ancient history
Here’s why this matters to you right now: this is still the default setting for every human being.
Think about your life. How much of your energy goes into trying to prove yourself? To perform well enough to be accepted? To build something that makes you feel like you matter?
That’s the fruit of the wrong tree. It’s exhausting, and it never quite works.
The Bible calls this condition “sin” — but it’s not just about bad behavior. At its root, sin is trying to be your own source of life instead of receiving it from the One who made you.
So what now?
The rest of the Bible is the story of God fixing this. Not by giving you better rules or a stronger willpower. But by doing something so radical it changes who you actually are.
That story starts with a man named Abraham, a nation called Israel, and a promise that took thousands of years to fulfill.
Let’s keep walking.