דָם in Hebrew, dam which means blood. Do you see what's happening here? The very name of the first human being contains both the substance from which he was formed and the life force that animates him. He is Adam because he comes from Adomar and he lives because of dam, earth and blood, dust and vitality, the mortal and the divine woven together in a single word.
Genesis 2:7 makes this explicit. Then the Lord God formed the man of dust from the ground and breathed into his nostrils the breath of life, and the man became a living creature. Notice the sequence.
First, God forms. The Hebrew word here is yatsa. The same word used to describe a potter shaping clay. God's hands are in the dirt. He is sculpting, molding, fashioning a physical form from the raw material of the earth. This is intimate. This is artistic. This is intentional.
The animals were spoken into existence through the earth. But the human is formed by God's own hands.
And then comes the second act. God breathes. The Hebrew word is napach. A forceful intentional exhalation. God leans in close, places his mouth near the nostrils of this clay figure, and exhales his own breath into it.
And in that moment, the dust becomes nephesh chaya, נשמה חיה, nishma chia, a living soul. But here's the critical point. Nephesh chaya is the same phrase used for the animals in Genesis 1:24.
Both humans and animals are living souls. Both are animated by the breath of life. Both move, eat, reproduce, and eventually die. So if being a nephesh chaya doesn't distinguish humans from animals, what does?
צלם אלוהים tzlam elohim; Image of God
The answer is in the next phrase, tselem elohim, the image of God. This is where the paradigm shifts.
This is where the modern church has missed the mark because we've been taught to think of image as a photograph, a physical resemblance.
We imagine God with a form, a face, a body, and we assume that humans look like that form.
The Hebrew word "tselem" (צֶלֶם) means "image" or "likeness," often referring to a reflection or representation of something, such as a shadow or a statue. It is used in the Bible to describe humanity being created in God's image, emphasizing the idea of resemblance and representation.
But the Hebrew word tselem doesn't mean physical appearance.
It means something far more functional, far more powerful, and far more terrifying.
The word tselem in ancient Hebrew culture referred to a statue, an idol, or a representative image that was placed in a location to signify the presence and authority of a king.
When an ancient near eastern king conquered a territory, he didn't visit every city personally.
Instead, he would erect a statue at tselem in the public square. That statue didn't look exactly like the king in every detail, but it represented him. It carried his authority. It reminded the people that they were under his rule even when he was miles away. To deface the statue was to insult the king. To honor the statue was to honor the king. The tselem was not the king himself, but it functioned as his presence, his voice, his power in that place.
Now bring that understanding to Genesis 1:26-27. When God says, "Let us make man in our image," he is not saying, "let us make a creature that physically resembles us."
He is saying, "Let us make a creature that will represent us on the earth. Let us place our tselem, our representative image in creation so that wherever humanity goes our presence, our authority and our character will be visible.
This is not about anatomy.
This is about function.
This is about vocation.
To be made in the image of God means that you are God's representative on earth. You are his ambassador. You are the living statue that reminds all of creation who is king. You don't just have the image of God. You are the image of God.
You are the walking, breathing, thinking, acting presence of the Creator in the physical world.
This is why Genesis 1:26 doesn't stop with "let us make man in our image." It continues, "And let them have dominion over the fish of the sea and over the birds of the heavens and over the livestock and over all the earth and over every creeping thing that creeps on the earth."
Do you see the connection?
The image is directly tied to the dominion.
The representation is inseparable from the responsibility. You are made in God's image so that you can exercise his authority over creation.
The image is not a passive attribute. It's an active commission. You were designed to reflect God's character, his justice, his mercy, his creativity, his order by governing the world in alignment with his will.
This is the first key, but it's not the full picture yet because we still need to understand what that dominion actually looks like.
And that's where the next layer gets even more profound.
Let me ask you a personal question. Do you ever feel like your life doesn't matter? Like you're just going through the motions, waking up, working, eating, sleeping, repeating, without any real significance or purpose? Do you ever look at the world around you and feel powerless to change anything, like you're just a small, insignificant speck in a massive, indifferent universe?
If you've ever felt that way, I want you to hear this. That feeling is a lie.
It's a lie that contradicts the very foundation of your identity as a human being.
Because according to Genesis 1, you are not insignificant. You are not powerless. You are not just another creature trying to survive.
You are the tselem of God placed on this earth with authority, purpose, and responsibility.
Now, let's talk about that authority.
Genesis 1:28 records God's first words to humanity. Be fruitful and multiply and fill the earth and subdue it and have dominion over the fish of the sea and over the birds of the heavens and over every living thing that moves on the earth.
Two key words here, subdue and dominion.
In Hebrew, subdue is kavash and dominion is שְׁלִיטָה shemlita . These are strong words, forceful words, and they've been misunderstood and abused for centuries.
Some have used these verses to justify exploitation, environmental destruction, and cruelty toward animals.
But that's not what the Hebrew conveys. Kavash means to bring under control, to cultivate, to develop. It's the word used for taming wild land, for turning a wilderness into a garden. It's not about domination for the sake of power.
It's about transformation for the sake of flourishing.
Rada, on the other hand, means to rule, to govern, to shepherd.
It's the same word used to describe a king's relationship with his people. And here's the critical point. A good king does not exploit his people. He serves them. He protects them. He creates conditions for them to thrive.
That is the kind of dominion God is calling humanity to exercise. You are not a tyrant over creation. You are a steward. You are a caretaker. You are a gardener, a shepherd, a governor who reflects the character of the God who made you.
And here's the beautiful part.
This calling is not just for pastors, missionaries or spiritual people. This calling is for you right where you are.
In your job, in your home, in your relationships, in the way you care for the environment around you, every act of creativity, every moment of compassion, every decision to bring order out of chaos, that is you fulfilling the image of God, that is you being exactly what you were designed to be.
But now we have to confront something uncomfortable.
Because if being made in the image of God means carrying his authority and reflecting his character, then we have to ask, are we doing that?
Look around at the world we've created.
Look at the brokenness, the injustice, the violence, the exploitation, the environmental devastation.
Look at the way we treat each other.
The way we hoard resources.
The way we dehumanize those who don't look like us or think like us.
Is this the image of God?
Is this what it means to have dominion?
Or have we somewhere along the way twisted our calling into something dark, something selfish, something that dishonors the very God we were meant to represent?
Genesis 3 tells the story of how the image became fractured. Adam and Eve standing in the garden were given everything they needed to fulfill their calling. They had relationship with God.
They had meaningful work. They had authority without corruption.
But then came the lie, "You will be like God, knowing good and evil." The standing upright serpent didn't offer them something they didn't already have. They were already like God. They were his image. But the serpent convinced them that the image wasn't enough, that they needed to become God, to seize autonomy, to define good and evil for themselves apart from their Creator. And the moment they ate that falsehood, the image didn't disappear, but it became distorted.
Humanity still carried the tselem Elohim, but now it was warped by sin, by pride, by rebellion.
We still have dominion, but now we use it to dominate.
We still have authority, but now we abuse it.
We still have creativity, but now we create weapons, systems of oppression, and monuments to our own glory.
And here's the devastating truth.
The image is still there. Even after the fall, Genesis 5:13 reaffirms that humanity is made in the likeness of God.
Genesis 9:6 grounds the prohibition against murder in the fact that humans are made in God's image.
James 3:9 warns against cursing people because they are made in God's likeness.
The image is not erased by sin, but it is corrupted. It is like a cracked mirror. It still reflects, but the reflection is broken, distorted, incomplete.
And that's the tension we live in every single day. You are the image of God. You carry his authority. You have his calling.
But you are also fallen, fractured, prone to use that authority for selfish ends.
You have the capacity for great good and great evil.
You can create or destroy. You can bless or curse.
You can reflect God's character or obscure it.
And the weight of that responsibility is staggering. Because every choice you make, every word you speak, every action you take, it's either polishing the image or cracking it further.
So the question is not just what does it mean to be made in the image of God. The question is what are you doing with that image?
Now let's come back to Genesis 1:31.
After God creates humanity in his image and commissions them to fill the earth and exercise dominion, something changes in the narrative. Up until this point, after each stage of creation, God looked at what he had made and said, "It is good." Six times the refrain repeats. And God saw that it was good.
But in verse 31, after the creation of humanity, the language shifts and God saw everything that he had made. And behold, it was very good. Not just good, very good. Why?
What changed between verse 25 and verse 31?
The answer is simple. Humanity entered the picture.
The earth was good.
The animals were good. The ecosystems were functioning perfectly.
But the creation was not complete until the image bearer arrived. Here's the profound implication.
The world doesn't reach its full potential without you.
God designed creation to be governed, cultivated, and developed by His image bearers.
The earth was not meant to remain a wilderness. It was meant to become a garden, a place where divine order and human creativity work together to produce flourishing. The animals were not meant to wander aimlessly. They were meant to be named, understood, and cared for by a creature who could see them as God sees them. The cosmos itself was waiting for humanity to step into the role of co-governor, Co-creator, co-sustainer alongside God. This is why the creation becomes very good only after humanity is formed. Because now the system is complete. Now the purpose can be fulfilled. Now the image of God is present in the world ready to reflect his glory in every corner of creation.
But here's where it gets personal. If the world was very good because humanity fulfilled its role, then the opposite is also true. When humanity fails to fulfill its role, the world suffers.
This is exactly what apostle Paul describes in Romans 8:19-22.
He writes, "For the creation waits with eager longing for the revealing of the sons of God. For the creation was subjected to futility, not willingly, but because of Him who subjected it, in hope that the creation itself will be set free from its bondage to corruption and obtain the freedom of the glory of the children of God. For we know that the whole creation has been groaning together in the pains of childbirth until now.
Did you catch that? The creation is waiting for humanity to be fully restored.
The earth itself is groaning, longing for the imagebearers to be healed, renewed, and recommissioned.
The brokenness of creation is not just a punishment for human sin.
It's a direct result of humanity's failure to fulfill its calling.
When the image is distorted, the world suffers. When the representative fails, the kingdom crumbles.
So here's the realignment. Your life is not insignificant. Your choices are not inconsequential.
Your presence on this earth is not accidental.
You were designed to be God's representative to carry His image, to exercise His authority with wisdom, justice, and compassion.
And the world is waiting for you to step into that role. Not perfectly because none of us can do that this side of eternity, but faithfully, intentionally with the awareness that every moment of your life is an opportunity to reflect the character of the God who made you. This is not about earning God's love or proving your worth. This is about living into the identity you already have. You are that Elohim. You always have been.
The question is, will you live like it?
Now, we're ready for the final layer, the one that connects everything we've explored.
Because there's one more question we haven't fully answered. If the image of God is fractured by sin, if humanity is incapable of perfectly reflecting God's character and exercising his authority in the way he intended, then how do we fulfill our calling? Is the image just a tragic reminder of what we were supposed to be but can never fully become?
Or is there hope? Here's where the entire biblical narrative comes into focus.
Because Genesis 1 is not the end of the story. It's the beginning. And the story moves forward toward one central figure, Jesus Christ.
The New Testament calls Jesus Christ the image of the invisible God. Colossians 1:15.
Not an image, the image, the perfect, uncorrupted, fully realized representation of God in human flesh. Where Adam failed, Jesus succeeded.
Where humanity distorted the image, Jesus restored it. Where we abused dominion, Jesus exercised it perfectly. Not by dominating, but by serving, healing, teaching, and ultimately dying to reconcile creation back to God. And here's the stunning truth.
Jesus Christ didn't come just to be the image. He came to renew the image in us.
2 Corinthians 3:18 says that as we behold the glory of the Lord, we are being transformed into the same image from one degree of glory to another.
Colossians 3:10 speaks of putting on the new self, which is being renewed in knowledge after the image of its Creator.
Romans 8:29 says that God's purpose is for us to be conformed to the image of His Son.
Do you see what's happening? The image is being restored, not through our effort, but through Christ's work. Through his life, death, and resurrection, the cracked mirror is being repaired. The distorted reflection is being clarified.
The fallen image-bearers are being renewed into the likeness of the perfect image bearer. And this brings us full circle back to day six.
God creates humanity in His image, commissions them to have dominion, and calls the creation very good.
But the story doesn't end there because in Christ, we see the full realization of what that image was always meant to be.
Jesus is the second Adam, the true human, the faithful image bearer, the one who perfectly represents God on earth and restores humanity to its original calling. And through union with Him, we are invited back into that calling. Not as independent rulers, but as sons and daughters of the King, co-heirs with Christ, empowered by the Spirit to once again reflect God's character and exercise His authority, not for our own glory, but for His and for the flourishing of alI creation.
This is the hidden meaning of image of God that most people never discover.
It's not about looking like God. It's about representing God. It's not about a static attribute you possess. It's about a dynamic calling you fulfill.
And it's not something you do alone. It is something you do in Christ, through Christ, and for Christ.
The image was given in Genesis 1. The image was fractured in Genesis 3. The image was restored in the Gospels. And the image is being renewed in you right now every day as you surrender to the Spirit 's work and step into the identity you were created to carry.
So when you read Genesis 1:26-27, don't just see it as ancient history. See it as your story. See yourself in that moment when God said, "Let us make man in our image. See the dignity, the responsibility, the calling that was placed on humanity from the very beginning.
And see the hope, the promise that even though the image has been broken by sin, it is being restored by grace. You are the tselem Elohim , image of God, and that changes everything.
I want to bring the intensity down for a moment because after everything we've explored, the Hebrew meanings, the theological layers, the weight of our calling, I don't want you to walk away from this truth feeling crushed by the responsibility.
I want you to walk away feeling empowered, equipped, and hopeful. Yes, being made in the image of God is a profound calling.
Yes, it means that your life has weight, significance, and eternal consequence.
Yes, it means that every choice you make is an opportunity to reflect God's character or obscure it. But it also means that you are not alone. You were never meant to carry this calling in your own strength.
From the very beginning, God designed humanity to live in relationship with Him, to be sustained by His presence, to be guided by His wisdom.
And through Christ, that relationship has been restored. You don't have to be a perfect image. bearer. You just have to be a faithful one. And faithfulness does not mean perfection. It means showing up day by day, choice by choice, asking God to shape you more and more into the likeness of Jesus Christ.
Respected reader, so, here's my challenge to you this week. Pay attention to the moments when you have the opportunity to reflect God's image.
Maybe it's in how you treat a co-worker who frustrates you.
Maybe it's in how you care for the environment around you.
Maybe it's in how you speak to your children or how you use your creativity or how you respond to injustice.
In those moments, remember who you are.
You are the tselem Elohim, the image of God, called to represent His character and exercise His authority with wisdom and compassion.
You are not insignificant. You are not powerless.
You are not just surviving. You are image bearing.
And the world is waiting for you to step into that calling.
Before you go, I want to remind you that this channel exists to help you encounter the depth, beauty, and power of God's Scripture in ways you've never experienced before. If this revelation opened your eyes to something you'd never seen, if it challenged you, if it gave you a deeper understanding of who God is and who you are, then please do not keep it to yourself.
And share this truth with someone who needs to hear it.
Because the truths we've uncovered today are not just interesting information.
They're life-changing revelation. And there are people in your life who need to encounter the God who made them in His image and called them "very good."
Thank you for walking through this with me. I thank God for you, too.
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