Introduction: The Bible Begins with Christ
When most people open the book of Genesis, they see creation, early humanity, and ancient history. But Jesus Himself made a profound claim: all Scripture testifies of Him. That means Genesis is not just a book of beginnings—it is a revelation of Christ.
From the first chapter to the last, Genesis quietly but powerfully unfolds the identity, mission, and character of Jesus Christ. He is not absent in the Old Testament—He is woven into its very structure.
As one reflection puts it, “The Book of Genesis serves as the foundational testimony of Jesus Christ, revealing Him as the Creator, the promised Redeemer, and the eternal source of life.”
Let’s walk through Genesis and uncover Christ—step by step.
🌟 Jesus as the Creator and Source of Life
Genesis 1: The Eternal Word
“In the beginning God created…” (Genesis 1:1)
But Scripture reveals something deeper:
Jesus is the Word through whom creation happened
Nothing exists apart from Him
Humanity itself bears His image
Genesis tells us what happened. The New Testament tells us who made it happen—Jesus Christ.
This means:
The One who formed the stars is the same One who came to save you
Creation itself is evidence of His power and love
Creation is not just a display of power—it is a testimony of Christ.
Genesis 2: The Lord of the Sabbath
In Genesis 2:3, God blesses and sanctifies the Sabbath.
This is not just about rest—it is about relationship.
Jesus is the Author of the Sabbath
The Sabbath is a memorial of His creative work
It is a reminder that life comes from Him, not from human effort
Christ established a rhythm of rest long before sin entered the world—a sign that true life is found in Him.
Genesis 3: The First Gospel Promise
After sin enters the world, hope appears immediately:
“The seed of the woman shall bruise the serpent’s head.” (Genesis 3:15)
This is the first gospel message.
The serpent represents Satan
The “seed” points to Christ
The crushing of the head points to final victory over sin
Even in humanity’s darkest moment, God revealed:
- A Savior is coming
- Evil will not win
- Redemption has already begun
🕊️ Jesus in Covenants and Promises
Genesis 9: The Rainbow Covenant
After the flood, God sets a rainbow in the sky.
This is more than a symbol of peace—it is a covenant of grace.
It is God’s promise, not man’s
It depends on divine faithfulness, not human performance
It reflects the everlasting covenant in Christ
The rainbow reminds us:
- Salvation is rooted in God’s promise—not our works
Genesis 11: Babel vs. Christ
At Babel, humanity tries to reach heaven through their own effort.
The result?
Confusion
Division
Scattering
This stands in contrast to Christ:
Babel = salvation by works
Christ = salvation by grace
Only Jesus can restore unity and bring humanity back to God.
Genesis 12–13: The Promise to Abraham
God promises Abraham:
“In thee shall all families of the earth be blessed.”
This blessing is fulfilled in Christ.
Jesus is the true Seed of Abraham
Through Him, all nations receive salvation
The promise is global and eternal
Genesis 15: Faith and Righteousness
Abraham believed God—and it was counted as righteousness.
This is foundational:
Salvation has always been by faith in Christ
Even before the cross, people were saved by trusting in Him
Faith is not a New Testament idea—it begins in Genesis.
🪜 Jesus as Mediator, Sacrifice, and King
Genesis 16–17: The Everlasting Covenant
God reveals Himself to Abraham as the Almighty.
This encounter shows:
Christ is the God who sees
Christ is the God who enters into covenant
The relationship requires faith and surrender
Genesis 22: The Sacrifice of Isaac
This is one of the clearest pictures of Christ in all Scripture.
Isaac carries the wood → Jesus carries the cross
A father offers his son → God offers His Son
A substitute is provided → Christ becomes our substitute
“God will provide Himself a lamb.”
This points directly to Calvary.
Genesis 28: Jacob’s Ladder
Jacob dreams of a ladder connecting heaven and earth.
This represents Jesus:
He is the bridge between God and man
He restores what sin separated
He is the only way to the Father
Without Christ, heaven and earth remain disconnected.
Genesis 49–50: The Coming King—Shiloh
Jacob prophesies:
“The sceptre shall not depart from Judah… until Shiloh come.”
“Shiloh” is a title for Christ—the rightful King.
He comes from the tribe of Judah
He is the ruler all nations will gather to
He brings the final fulfillment of God’s promises
Genesis ends not with death—but with expectation.
📖 The Unity of Scripture: One Story, One Savior
The Old Testament looks forward.
The New Testament looks back.
But both point to the same truth:
- Jesus is the center of everything
As reflected in the source material:
The Old Testament testifies of Christ before the cross
The New Testament testifies of Christ after the cross
Together, they form a complete witness
This means:
There has never been more than one plan of salvation
No one has ever been saved apart from Christ
The gospel began in Genesis—not Matthew
- Why This Matters for You Today
Understanding Christ in Genesis changes how you see the Bible—and your life.
1. You realize God had a plan from the beginning
You are not an afterthought. Redemption was planned before you were born.
2. You see grace earlier than you expected
Even in judgment, God speaks hope.
3. You understand the Bible as one unified story
Not disconnected books—but one continuous revelation of Jesus.
4. You gain confidence in Scripture
From Genesis to Revelation, the message is consistent and reliable.
🙏 Final Reflection: The Lamb from the Foundation
The same Jesus who walked in Galilee:
Spoke the world into existence
Promised redemption in Eden
Walked with Abraham
Provided the sacrifice on Moriah
Bridged heaven and earth for Jacob
Was foretold as King by Jacob
He is:
- Creator
- Redeemer
- Mediator
- King
And most importantly—He is your Savior.
“Neither is there salvation in any other: for there is none other name under heaven given among men, whereby we must be saved.” (Acts 4:12)