The general term used to refer to the account in the first chapters of Genesis where Jehovah created the heavens, the earth, and mankind Though completely in harmony with proven science, this part of the Bible has come to be severely criticized by some who fail to understand it, particularly by those who prefer to believe the unproven and unprovable theory that human life came about as the result of a process of {evolution} <<We learn much about God's personality by examining creation >> (Rom 1: 20) (Compare {creationism} )
The act of constituting or investing with a new character; appointment; formation
That which reveals God The one Structure that contains all that can be known The Environment in which the Life Continuum expands, and it is the Life Continuum expanding It is both It is ALL
In many religions, creation is the making of the universe, earth, and creatures by God. For the first time since creation, the survival of the Earth is entirely in our hands
Until a few years ago, creating a virus required knowledge of a computer programming language Today anyone with even a little programming knowledge can create a virus Usually, though, viruses are created by misguided individuals who wish to cause widespread, random damage to computers
A subschool of the Conjuration school of magic Creation spells manipulate matter to create objects or creatures in the places the spellcaster designates Whether these creations are permanent or temporary depends on the duration of the spell (instantaneous or otherwise, respectively)
What has been brought into being; the Hebrew Bible attributes the creation of the world to Israel's God; the classic descriptions of creation are found in Genesis 1 and 2, but there are many other allusions to creation found in Israel's Psalms and in prophetic literature See Chapter 1
You can refer to something that someone has made as a creation, especially if it shows skill, imagination, or artistic ability. The bathroom is entirely my own creation see also create
variously referred to as God's "dream", God's "song", or God's play in various mystical traditions In Hinduism, two Upanishads in particular refer to the divine intention in creation: the Aitareya (1: 1: 1) and the Brihadaranyaka (1: 4: 1)
The establishment of a wetland or other aquatic resource where one did not formerly exist [top]