February 5, 2026

Creation was never meant to be about us. It was meant to be enjoyed by us, stewarded by us, and lived within by us, but it was never centered on us.

Paul says it plainly in Colossians 1. All things were created by Christ and for Christ. Everything that exists came into being through Him, and everything that exists ultimately exists for His glory. Creation has an origin, and it has a purpose. Both are rooted in God.

This corrects a quiet assumption many of us carry. We often speak as if God made the world primarily for human benefit. There is truth there. Creation is a gift. God gave humanity a place to live, to work, to flourish, and to enjoy. But enjoyment is not the same as purpose. Creation serves us, but it does not center on us.

If it did, much of the universe would make little sense.

Scripture invites us to lift our eyes beyond the earth. The universe stretches farther than we can measure. Galaxies exist beyond our reach. Stars burn larger than our sun. Vast regions of space appear empty, silent, and untouched. If humanity were the point of it all, much of creation would seem unnecessary. It would feel like wasted space.

But Psalm 19 gives us the key. “The heavens declare the glory of God, and the sky above proclaims his handiwork.” Creation is not telling our story. It is telling His. The universe exists as a display, not of human importance, but of divine glory.

Seen that way, nothing is wasted. The immensity of creation does not diminish our value. It magnifies God’s greatness. The more we discover, the smaller we feel, and that is precisely the point. Creation is meant to humble us, not inflate us. It reminds us that we are creatures, not the Creator.

This does not make humanity insignificant. Scripture still affirms that we are made in God’s image and entrusted with real responsibility. But it places that dignity in the right frame. We are participants in God’s world, not the reason it exists. We reflect His glory; we do not generate it.

Understanding creation this way also reshapes purpose. If all things are for Christ, then life is not about self-definition but faithful response. Meaning is not something we invent. It is something we receive. Our role is not to take center stage, but to live in alignment with the One who is already there.

This is why creation matters so much to the rest of the biblical story. Before sin enters, before rebellion distorts, before redemption becomes necessary, Scripture establishes this truth. God is glorious. God is central. God is worthy.

Creation sets the tone for everything that follows. It reminds us who the story is about and why it exists at all. The world was made by Him and for Him. And when we finally understand that, the story begins to make sense.


Story

The Bible is often read in pieces, but it was written as one story. Tracing the singular story of Scripture from creation to commission reveals how every page points to Jesus Christ.

Unity

When we read the Bible in fragments, we gain familiar verses but lose the coherence of God’s unfolding work. This article shows how a piecemeal approach to Scripture weakens understanding, thins meaning, and keeps us from seeing how every part fits into the one story God is telling.

Hero

The Bible was never meant to place us at the center of the story. Reading Scripture rightly means recognizing God as the true hero and seeing every page point to what He has done, not what we hope to do.

Orientation

Reading the Bible as one unified story brings clarity where there was confusion and purpose where there was frustration. When God’s redemptive plan comes into focus, Scripture stops feeling scattered and starts shaping how we read, believe, and live.

Design

The Bible opens with a declaration, not a debate: God exists, and He created everything. Creation is presented as intentional and ordered, revealing a sovereign God whose design establishes the foundation for the entire story of Scripture.

Purpose

Creation was made by Christ and for Christ, meant to display God’s glory rather than our importance. The vastness of the universe points beyond us, reminding us that the world exists to declare who God is and to call us into humble participation in His purposes.

Travis Agnew

Travis Agnew serves as the Lead Pastor of Rocky Creek Church in Greenville, SC.