What It Means to Be Human
SamuelAshford
あらすじ
What does it mean to be human in a world made by God? In What It Means to Be Human, Samuel Ashford begins where the Bible begins: Genesis 1 and 2. This thoughtful Christian theology book offers a clear, reflective exploration of the image of God, human dignity, and purpose. Rather than starting with modern theories of identity, it returns to the Creator, the goodness of creation, and the truth that human life is received before it is defined. If you are looking for a Genesis Bible study, a book on biblical anthropology, or a Scripture-centered Christian worldview read on creation and purpose, this volume speaks directly to those questions. Moving carefully through the opening pages of Scripture, this book considers what it means to be made in God's image and likeness, why human dignity is grounded in creation, and how Genesis shapes the way Christians think about identity, vocation, and worship. It reflects on the goodness of embodied life, the meaning of male and female within the one humanity God made, and the way bodies, relationships, labor, and rest belong to God's design from the beginning. What do Genesis 1 and 2 reveal about who we are? What becomes clearer when we begin with the Creator instead of the self? This volume also explores creation as home, not accident; Eden as a place of presence; work as stewardship rather than domination; and Sabbath as gift rather than burden. Along the way, it shows why the theology of creation matters for questions of freedom, obedience, human worth, and hope. The result is a rich yet readable study of Genesis 1 and 2 that invites deeper reflection without drifting into abstraction. What It Means to Be Human is not written as a technical textbook, and it does not rush past the first chapters of Scripture to get somewhere more familiar. Instead, it lingers where the Bible lingers. It asks readers to slow down and hear what God says about creation, the image of God, human dignity, work, rest, stewardship, and the beginnings of Christian theology. For readers interested in Christian discipleship, biblical foundations, and a theology of creation that speaks to real life, this book offers a calm, serious, and deeply rooted starting point. As the first volume in the Ashford Biblical Theology Series, it also prepares the ground for the larger biblical story by showing why Genesis is not disposable background. Before sin, exile, redemption, and renewal can be understood rightly, creation must be seen clearly. Before the brokenness of the world can be measured, the goodness of God's design must be remembered. Before restoration can be treasured, the dignity and calling of humanity must be named. What kind of reading experience can you expect? Careful biblical reflection, steady theological clarity, and a reverent return to first things. This is a book for readers who want to think more deeply about the image of God, human dignity, creation and purpose, bodies, work and rest, and the meaning of being human before the fall. This Book Is For Readers Who... want a Genesis 1 and 2 study centered on creation, identity, and purpose are looking for a clear introduction to biblical anthropology and the image of God care about Christian theology that remains readable, grounded, and reflective want to think more deeply about human dignity, embodiment, and vocation are interested in the theology of creation, stewardship, worship, and Sabbath appreciate Christian discipleship books that begin with Scripture's foundations Perfect For Readers Who Enjoy... Christian theology rooted in the opening chapters of Genesis Bible study books on creation, human nature, and purpose reflective nonfiction with a calm, Scripture-centered tone Begin where Scripture begins. Open these pages and return to Genesis to see humanity, creation, and the Creator with renewed clarity.