The Fallible · Synthetic · Study Bible
The Sixth Day
Genesis 1:24–31 — The Sixth Day. Each verse below carries the full apparatus: the Berean Standard Bible, the vocalized original (tap any word), and a parsed breakdown of every term transcribed from the interlinear. Synthesized commentary, canonical threads, and the reading of Christ gather at the end, over the whole unit.
24And God said, “Let the earth bring forth living creatures according to their kinds: livestock, land crawlers, and beasts of the earth according to their kinds.” And it was so.
Berean Standard Bible · CC0
Hebrew — tap a word ↓
’ĕ·lō·hîm way·yō·mer hā·’ā·reṣ tō·w·ṣê ḥay·yāh ne·p̄eš lə·mî·nāh bə·hê·māh wā·re·meś wə·ḥay·ṯōw- ’e·reṣ lə·mî·nāh way·hî- ḵên
Literal — word-for-word from the original
And-said God: Let-bring-forth the-earth a-breathing-creature living after-its-kind — cattle and-crawling-thing and-living-thing-of earth after-its-kind. And-it-was so.
Where the English smooths the original
On this sixth creative day there are four words of power. By the first, the higher animals are summoned into being; by the second, man; the third provides for the continuance and increase of the beings which God had created; the fourth assigns the vegetable world both to man and animals as food.
To speak of animals having “a soul” is strange to modern ears. But it was not so to the Israelites, who realized, perhaps better than we do, man’s kinship with the animal world, in virtue of that principle of nephesh , the mystery of life, which is shared by the animals and human beings.
which, however, no more implied that the animals were to be developed from the soil than were the finny tribes generated by the sea. Simply in obedience to the Divine call, and as the product of creative energy, they were to spring from the plastic dust as being essentially earth-born creatures.
He that of stones can raise children to Abraham, and who called forth the universe from nothing, could easily produce animals from the dull and sluggish earth, although inanimate.
25God made the beasts of the earth according to their kinds, the livestock according to their kinds, and everything that crawls upon the earth according to its kind. And God saw that it was good.
Berean Standard Bible · CC0
Hebrew — tap a word ↓
’eṯ- ’ĕ·lō·hîm way·ya·‘aś ḥay·yaṯ hā·’ā·reṣ lə·mî·nāh wə·’eṯ- hab·bə·hê·māh lə·mî·nāh wə·’êṯ kāl- re·meś hā·’ă·ḏā·māh lə·mî·nê·hū ’ĕ·lō·hîm way·yar kî- ṭō·wḇ
Literal — word-for-word from the original
And-made God the-living-thing-of the-earth after-its-kind, and-the-cattle after-its-kind, and-every crawling-thing-of the-ground after-its-kind. And-saw God that-[it-was] good.
Where the English smooths the original
Notice the word “made,” Lat. fecit , not “created”; cf. Genesis 1:7 ; Genesis 1:16 . and God saw that it was good ] It is noticeable that the blessing, which followed these words after the creation of the water animals and the birds ( Genesis 1:22 ), is here omitted.
The wild beasts, and the several sorts of them; beginning the account with the last mentioned, as is frequent in the Hebrew language, and so he made all the rest
The creation of the higher animals completed the earth's preparation for the advent of man; to which, doubtless, the Creator's commendation of his finished work had a special reference. Everything was in readiness for the magnum opus which was to close his creative labor and crown his completed cosmos.
The Creator's wisdom and power are to be admired as much in an ant as in an elephant. The power of God's providence preserves all things, and fruitfulness is the effect of his blessing.
26Then God said, “Let Us make man in Our image, after Our likeness, to rule over the fish of the sea and the birds of the air, over the livestock, and over all the earth itself and every creature that crawls upon it.”
Berean Standard Bible · CC0
Hebrew — tap a word ↓
’ĕ·lō·hîm way·yō·mer na·‘ă·śeh ’ā·ḏām bə·ṣal·mê·nū kiḏ·mū·ṯê·nū wə·yir·dū ḇiḏ·ḡaṯ hay·yām ū·ḇə·‘ō·wp̄ haš·šā·ma·yim ū·ḇab·bə·hê·māh ū·ḇə·ḵāl hā·’ā·reṣ ū·ḇə·ḵāl hā·re·meś hā·rō·mêś ‘al- hā·’ā·reṣ
Literal — word-for-word from the original
And-said God: Let-Us-make man in-Our-image, after-Our-likeness; and-let-them-rule over-the-fish-of the-sea and-over-the-birds-of the-heavens and-over-the-cattle and-over-all the-earth and-over-every crawling-thing the-[one]-crawling upon the-earth.
Where the English smooths the original
When the Creator says, "Let us make man," he calls attention to the work as one of pre-eminent importance.
i. Until recently, the traditional Christian interpretation has seen in the 1st pers. plur. a reference to the Three Persons of the Blessed Trinity. The requirements of a sound historical exegesis render this view untenable: for it would read into the Book of Genesis the religious teaching which is based upon the Revelation of the New Testament.Cambridge canvasses six readings of "Let Us" and finally favours the plural of Deliberation and the address-to-the-heavenly-host; it explicitly resists reading the Trinity back into the verse — set here in deliberate tension with the older voices.
so in Elohim, the many powers concentrated in one being, lies the germ of the doctrine of a plurality of persons in the Divine Unity. It is not a formal proof of the Trinity, nor do believers in the inspiration of Holy Scripture so use it.
but that between man and them all there is a gulf, since he is made in the divine image. That image implies personality, the consciousness of self, the power to say ‘I,’ as well as purity.
27So God created man in His own image; in the image of God He created him; male and female He created them.
Berean Standard Bible · CC0
Hebrew — tap a word ↓
’ĕ·lō·hîm ’eṯ- way·yiḇ·rā hā·’ā·ḏām bə·ṣal·mōw bə·ṣe·lem ’ĕ·lō·hîm bā·rā ’ō·ṯōw zā·ḵār ū·nə·qê·ḇāh bā·rā ’ō·ṯām
Literal — word-for-word from the original
And-created God the-man in-His-image; in-the-image-of God He-created him; male and-female He-created them.
Where the English smooths the original
This significant verb is thrice repeated with reference to man. It indicates, first, that man has that in him which was not a development or evolution, but something new.
Man in his essential part, the image of God in him, was entirely a new creation.
The threefold parallelism of the members of this verse is likewise suggestive, as Umbreit, Ewald, and Delitzsch remark, of the jubilation with which the writer contemplates the crowning work of Elohim's creative word.
Male and female created he them — Not at once, or both together, as some have unscripturally taught, but first the man out of the earth, and then the woman out of the man.
28God blessed them and said to them, “Be fruitful and multiply, and fill the earth and subdue it; rule over the fish of the sea and the birds of the air and every creature that crawls upon the earth.”
Berean Standard Bible · CC0
Hebrew — tap a word ↓
’ĕ·lō·hîm way·ḇā·reḵ ’ō·ṯām ’ĕ·lō·hîm way·yō·mer lā·hem pə·rū ū·rə·ḇū ū·mil·’ū ’eṯ- hā·’ā·reṣ wə·ḵiḇ·šu·hā ū·rə·ḏū biḏ·ḡaṯ hay·yām ū·ḇə·‘ō·wp̄ haš·šā·ma·yim ū·ḇə·ḵāl ḥay·yāh hā·rō·me·śeṯ ‘al- hā·’ā·reṣ
Literal — word-for-word from the original
And-blessed them God, and-said to-them God: Be-fruitful and-multiply and-fill the-earth and-subdue-it; and-rule over-the-fish-of the-sea and-over-the-birds-of the-heavens and-over-every living-thing the-[one]-crawling upon the-earth.
Where the English smooths the original
And God blessed them. Not him , as LXX. As on the introduction of animal life the Divine Creator conferred on the creatures his blessing, so when the first pair of human beings are formed they are likewise enriched by their Creator's benediction.
and subdue it ] A strong word, denoting subjugation to power. Man’s authority over the creatures of the earth confers upon him responsibility for the exercise of his powers. Supremacy over the fishes, the birds, and the beasts, will require courage, forethought, skill, observation, and judgement.
It differs from that of the lower animals chiefly in the element of supremacy.
It is here rather a promise or benediction than a command, as appears both from Genesis 2:22 , where the same words are applied to the brute beasts, who are not subject to a command
29Then God said, “Behold, I have given you every seed-bearing plant on the face of all the earth, and every tree whose fruit contains seed. They will be yours for food.
Berean Standard Bible · CC0
Hebrew — tap a word ↓
’ĕ·lō·hîm way·yō·mer hin·nêh nā·ṯat·tî lā·ḵem ’eṯ- kāl- zō·rê·a‘ ze·ra‘ ’ă·šer ‘ê·śeḇ ‘al- pə·nê ḵāl hā·’ā·reṣ wə·’eṯ- kāl- hā·‘êṣ ’ă·šer- p̄ə·rî- zō·rê·a‘ bōw ‘êṣ zā·ra‘ yih·yeh lā·ḵem lə·’āḵ·lāh
Literal — word-for-word from the original
And-said God: Behold, I-have-given to-you every herb sowing seed which-[is] upon the-face-of all the-earth, and-every tree in-which [is] fruit-of-a-tree sowing seed — to-you it-shall-be for-food.
Where the English smooths the original
But undoubtedly the food originally assigned to man was vegetable; nor was express leave given to eat flesh until after the flood.
the sacred writer here hands down to us from the mists of a hoary antiquity the primitive deed of conveyance, which lies at the foundation of the the common property of man in the earth, and all that it contains.
By comparison with Genesis 9:3 , we see that the writer believed that, until after the Flood, mankind subsisted upon a purely vegetable diet.
It does not appear that liberty was given to men to eat animal food before the flood.
30And to every beast of the earth and every bird of the air and every creature that crawls upon the earth—everything that has the breath of life in it—I have given every green plant for food.” And it was so.
Berean Standard Bible · CC0
Hebrew — tap a word ↓
ū·lə·ḵāl- ḥay·yaṯ hā·’ā·reṣ ū·lə·ḵāl- ‘ō·wp̄ haš·šā·ma·yim ū·lə·ḵōl rō·w·mêś ‘al- hā·’ā·reṣ ’ă·šer- ne·p̄eš ḥay·yāh ’eṯ- bōw kāl- ye·req ‘ê·śeḇ lə·’āḵ·lāh way·hî- ḵên
Literal — word-for-word from the original
And-to-every living-thing-of the-earth and-to-every bird-of the-heavens and-to-every [thing]-crawling upon the-earth in-which [is] a-breathing-creature living — [I-have-given] every green herb for-food. And-it-was so.
Where the English smooths the original
The words, “every green herb,” would be more literally “all the green, or verdure, of the herbs.” A distinction is, therefore, drawn between the food ordained for mankind and the food ordained for the animals.
From this Delitzsch infers that prior to the introduction of sin the animals were not predaceous. The geological evidence of the existence of death in prehistoric times is, however, too powerful to be resisted
Still, the main substance of the means of animal life, and the ultimate supply of the whole of it, are derived from the plant.
perhaps those creatures which are now carnivorous were not so at their first creation: and it was so; every creature, both man and beast, had food suitable to their nature and appetite, and a sufficiency of it.
31And God looked upon all that He had made, and indeed, it was very good. And there was evening, and there was morning—the sixth day.
Berean Standard Bible · CC0
Hebrew — tap a word ↓
’ĕ·lō·hîm ’eṯ- way·yar kāl- ’ă·šer ‘ā·śāh wə·hin·nêh- mə·’ōḏ ṭō·wḇ way·hî- ‘e·reḇ way·hî- ḇō·qer haš·šiš·šî yō·wm
Literal — word-for-word from the original
And-saw God all that He-had-made, and-behold-[it-was] very good; and-it-was evening and-it-was morning — the-day the-sixth.
Where the English smooths the original
Literally, lo! good very! Not simply good, but good exceedingly. It is not man alone that God surveys, but the completed cosmos, with man as its crown and glory
That which He saw to be “good,” on each separate day, was but a fragment; that which He sees to be “very good,” on the sixth day, is the vast ordered whole, in which the separate parts are combined.
This final blessing of God’s completed work on the Friday must be compared with the final words of Christ spoken of the second creation, upon the same day of the week, when He said “It is finished.”Ellicott's parallel between the "very good" of the first creation and Christ's "It is finished" of the second is a typological reading, offered as comparison, not as a verbal link in the text.
It had been said of each day’s work, except the second, that it was good, but now, of every thing, that it was very good. For man, the master-piece of God’s works, and his visible image and deputy here on earth, was now formed and constituted the head and governor of the whole.
The verse-by-verse work is done. What follows gathers the whole unit. All three layers below are machine-generated (⚙). Weigh them; they have no authority.
AI synthesis — woven from the public-domain voices above and the original text; generated and fallible.
Day six, like day three, is built of a double act. Charles Ellicott counts "four words of power" across it: the higher animals, then man, then the charge to increase, then the grant of food. The first word commands the earth to bring forth — תּוֹצֵא, the same causative used of the plants in v. 11 — so that, as The Pulpit Commentary insists, the beasts "spring from the plastic dust" not by evolution but "in obedience to the Divine call, and as the product of creative energy." Yet the Hebrew keeps a careful register: in v. 25 the verb is עָשָׂה ("made"), and Cambridge catches it — "the word 'made,' Lat. fecit, not 'created.'" The land animals are fashioned; the verb bārā’ ("create") is being held back for man. John Gill notes a further subtlety the English list erases: v. 25 reverses v. 24's order, "beginning the account with the last mentioned, as is frequent in the Hebrew language" — a chiastic close. And one thing is pointedly missing. The blessing pronounced over the sea-creatures in v. 22 is, says Cambridge, "here omitted" — "the blessing was allowed to drop out," because the narrator is hurrying toward the creature in whom the day will culminate.
For the first and only time, the fiat changes person. Not "Let there be" but נַעֲשֶׂה — "Let Us make." Albert Barnes marks the elevation: God "calls attention to the work as one of pre-eminent importance," and "the language of the fiat of creation ascends to the Creator himself." The plural verb is the battleground, and the voices here are genuinely divided — deliberately so. Charles Ellicott, cautious, will say only that "in Elohim, the many powers concentrated in one being, lies the germ of the doctrine of a plurality of persons in the Divine Unity" — and immediately adds, "It is not a formal proof of the Trinity." Cambridge goes further the other way, judging the Trinitarian reading historically "untenable: for it would read into the Book of Genesis the religious teaching which is based upon the Revelation of the New Testament," and preferring the "plural of Deliberation" and the address to the heavenly host. Between them stand the image-words themselves: צֶלֶם (ṣelem, a struck outline) and דְּמוּת (dəmûth, resemblance). Keil & Delitzsch, against the Greek Fathers who split body from soul, hold them synonyms "merely combined to add intensity" — Luther's "an image which is like Us." Whatever the plurality means, Alexander Maclaren fixes the result: "between man and them all there is a gulf, since he is made in the divine image. That image implies personality, the consciousness of self, the power to say 'I,' as well as purity."
When the deed is told, the prose breaks into verse. The Pulpit Commentary hears "the threefold parallelism of the members of this verse… suggestive of the jubilation with which the writer contemplates the crowning work," and the verb of creation, בָּרָא, sounds three times. Ellicott reads the repetition as proof that "man has that in him which was not a development or evolution, but something new"; Barnes presses it inward — "Man in his essential part, the image of God in him, was entirely a new creation." Then the single creature becomes two: אֹתוֹ ("him") and, a breath later, אֹתָם ("them"). The image is borne by humanity as male and female. The blessing of v. 28 falls, as The Pulpit Commentary notes against the Septuagint, on "them. Not him." And its second word is fierce: וְכִבְשֻׁהָ, from kāḇash — "A strong word," says Cambridge, "denoting subjugation to power," which "confers upon him responsibility for the exercise of his powers." Yet the imperative is gentled by its own history: Matthew Poole reads it "rather a promise or benediction than a command, as appears… from Genesis 2:22, where the same words are applied to the brute beasts, who are not subject to a command." Barnes sums the difference from the animals' blessing: "It differs from that of the lower animals chiefly in the element of supremacy."
The day's fourth word is the grant of food, and it is a deed of gift: נָתַתִּי, "I have given." Albert Barnes reads it as "the primitive deed of conveyance, which lies at the foundation of the common property of man in the earth." The menu is plant only — and divided. Man receives the seed-bearing herb and the fruiting tree (v. 29); the animals receive, as Cambridge renders it literally, "all the green, or verdure, of the herbs" (v. 30). Ellicott states the consequence plainly: "the food originally assigned to man was vegetable; nor was express leave given to eat flesh until after the flood." The voices then divide honestly over whether this implies a world without predation. The Pulpit Commentary reports that "Delitzsch infers that prior to the introduction of sin the animals were not predaceous," but answers that "the geological evidence of the existence of death in prehistoric times is… too powerful to be resisted" — a tension the Berean parses do not resolve and neither will we. Then the seventh inspection: טוֹב מְאֹד. The Pulpit Commentary gives the bare Hebrew — "lo! good very! Not simply good, but good exceedingly" — and Cambridge explains the leap from six "goods" to one "very good": each day was "but a fragment; that which He sees to be 'very good,' on the sixth day, is the vast ordered whole, in which the separate parts are combined." The day alone takes the article — the sixth — and the work is sealed.
Read on its own terms, the sixth day is structured as an ascent and a deed. Four times God speaks; each word lifts higher — beast, man, mandate, food — until the recurring "good" of the week becomes, once and only once, "very good," and the day alone is given the definite article. The unit's own internal grammar makes two claims I take to be load-bearing. First, that man is both continuous with the animals (made the same day, of the same ground, given the same word, sharing the same nephesh ḥayyāh) and discontinuous from them (named not by "let the earth bring forth" but by "Let Us make," stamped with ṣelem, told with the rare verb bārā’). The text refuses both the flattening that makes man only a clever beast and the inflation that severs him from the creation he is set to rule. Second, that dominion is downstream of the image, not the reverse: rāḏāh and kāḇash are granted to the creature already made "in Our image," so that rule is the effluence of likeness (K&D's word) and not its substitute. Where the older voices and Cambridge part — on whether "Let Us" preaches the Trinity, on whether Eden was bloodless — I follow the Verifier's discipline: the Hebrew of v. 26 gives a plural verb-form and the rare noun ṣelem, not a doctrine of three persons; the doctrine is a later, fuller light read back, legitimately, by Christians, but it is not asserted by this verse. The verse asserts less and means more than either side admits: that the God who is somehow "Us" made a creature who is somehow "them," one and many, in His likeness — and called the whole, with man its crown, exceedingly good. (This paragraph is the tool's fallible reading, ⚙, offered to be tested against the Word.)
The God who is somehow "Us" made a creature who is somehow "them" — one and many — in His own image, and called the whole exceedingly good. (An interpretive line from the synthesis layer, not a verse of Scripture.)
AI-generated connections. Each carries a verification badge with a recorded basis; contested links are flagged.
The threefold roll of v. 24 — bᵉhêmâh (cattle), remes (creeping thing), each "after its kind" (mîyn) — is the very vocabulary the Flood narrative reaches for when it gathers and then destroys the same orders. The link is carried by genuinely rare lexemes: remes (H7431) occurs in only 17 verses of the Hebrew Bible and mîyn (H4327) in only 18; their co-occurrence is not a coincidence of common words but a deliberate re-use of the creation-list. The Verifier's computed basis for Genesis 7:14 is the shared cluster remes / mîyn / bᵉhêmâh / chay — a verbal echo, not merely a theme. What God orders into being here is exactly what He preserves and judges there.
Genesis 1:24 · Genesis 6:20 · Genesis 7:14 · Genesis 8:17
basis: Verifier (Gen 1:24 ↔ Gen 7:14): shared rare lexemes H7431 remes (17 vv) and H4327 mîyn (18 vv), with H929 bᵉhêmâh and H2416 chay. The low frequency of remes and mîyn makes the Flood-list a verbal re-use of the creation-list, not a generic thematic overlap.
"I have given you every… herb… for food" (v. 29) and "I have given every green herb for food" (v. 30) are the original, vegetable-only deed of conveyance. Genesis 9:3 deliberately re-opens that deed and amends it: "Every moving thing that lives shall be food for you; as I gave you the green herbs, I have given you everything." The Verifier ties v. 30 to Gen 9:3 by the rare pair yereq (H3418, "green/verdure," only 6 verses) and ’oḵlâh (H402, "food," only 18 verses), with the donation-verb nâthan — and rates v. 29 ↔ 9:3 a verbal link on ’oḵlâh / ‘eseb / nâthan. The post-Flood grant quotes the Edenic grant in order to expand it; the change in the menu is measured against the original by re-using its own words.
Genesis 1:29 · Genesis 1:30 · Genesis 9:3
basis: Verifier (Gen 1:30 ↔ Gen 9:3): shared rare lexemes H3418 yereq (6 vv) and H402 ʼoklâh (18 vv), with H6212 ʻeseb and the verb H5414 nâthan. Gen 9:3 re-uses the Edenic food-grant's own vocabulary to amend it — a textual quotation, not a loose theme.
The blessing of v. 28 — pᵉrû ū-rᵉḇû ū-milʼû ("be fruitful and multiply and fill") — is repeated almost word for word to Noah in Genesis 9:1, re-instituting the creation mandate on the far side of judgment. The Verifier records the shared cluster pârâh (H6509, "be fruitful," only 28 verses), râbâh ("multiply"), mâlê’ ("fill"), and the blessing-verb bârak (H1288). The same words first fell on the sea-creatures (v. 22), which is why several voices (Benson, Poole, JFB) read them as benediction rather than command. The thread runs Eden → ark → renewed earth on a single, repeated formula. Tiered structural rather than verbal: although the lexemes recur, this is a re-used liturgical formula / shared pattern of blessing rather than one text citing another.
Genesis 1:28 · Genesis 1:22 · Genesis 9:1
basis: Verifier (Gen 1:28 ↔ Gen 9:1): shared lexemes H6509 pârâh (28 vv), H7235 râbâh, H4390 mâlêʼ, H1288 bârak. A re-spoken blessing-formula (pattern), not a quotation-with-attribution; tiered structural by preference for under-claiming.
The ṣelem / dəmûth of v. 26–27 is not left in Eden. Genesis 5:1 re-states it ("in the likeness of God He made him"), and Genesis 9:6 turns it into the warrant for the sanctity of human life: "Whoever sheds man's blood… for in the image of God He made man." The Verifier links v. 26 to both by ṣelem (H6754, rare — only 15 verses) together with ’âdâm (H120). Because the connection is the recurring concept and noun rather than a quotation claim, it is tiered structural/thematic, not verbal — but the rarity of ṣelem makes the through-line unmistakable: the same image that dignifies man in creation grounds the prohibition of murder after the Flood.
Genesis 1:26 · Genesis 1:27 · Genesis 5:1 · Genesis 9:6
basis: Verifier (Gen 1:26 ↔ Gen 9:6 and ↔ Gen 1:27): shared H6754 tselem (15 vv) + H120 ʼâdâm. The image-noun is rare but the link is a continued concept/term across passages, not a citation; tiered structural rather than verbal.
The plural cohortative נַעֲשֶׂה ("Let Us make," v. 26) recurs at the only other comparable moments in Genesis: "the man is become as one of us" (3:22) and "let us go down" (11:7), and again in Isaiah 6:8 ("who will go for us?"). This is a link of grammatical form — a first-person plural in the mouth of God — not of shared vocabulary: the Verifier finds no shared original-language lexeme between 1:26 and 11:7, and only the common noun ’âdâm between 1:26 and 3:22. The connection is real but must be argued from morphology, not asserted from a lexeme; and what the plural means (Trinity? heavenly council? plural of deliberation?) is exactly the point the voices contest. Flagged, in the spirit of under-claiming, because the basis is a contested grammatical reading rather than a verified verbal quotation.
Genesis 1:26 · Genesis 3:22 · Genesis 11:7
basis: Verifier: Gen 1:26 ↔ Gen 11:7 returns NO shared lexeme; Gen 1:26 ↔ Gen 3:22 shares only the common H120 ʼâdâm. The thread rests on a shared 1cp verb-form (morphology), which the Verifier does not score, and on a disputed interpretation; therefore flagged, not confirmed.
The refrain "and God saw that it was good" (vv. 4, 10, 12, 18, 21, 25) is gathered and surpassed in v. 31: "God saw all that He had made, and behold, it was very good." The Verifier links v. 31 to v. 25 by ṭôḇ (H2896, "good") and râ’âh (H7200, "see") — both very common words, so the basis is the repeated pattern of inspection-and-verdict, not a rare quotation. The structural force is in the single added intensifier mə’ōḏ ("very"): the parts were good; the completed whole, with man as its crown, is good exceedingly.
Genesis 1:31 · Genesis 1:25 · Genesis 1:4
basis: Verifier (Gen 1:31 ↔ Gen 1:25): shared H2896 ṭôwb and H7200 râʼâh, both high-frequency. A repeated inspection-verdict refrain (structural pattern), not a rare verbal link; the added H3966 mə’ōḏ marks the climax.
AI-generated reading; weigh it against the text.
Man is made "in the image of God" (v. 27, ṣelem). The New Testament names the One who is that image: Christ, "the image (εἰκών) of the invisible God" (Colossians 1:15), "the brightness of His glory and the express image of His person" (Hebrews 1:3). Keil & Delitzsch, commenting on this very verse, draw the line forward: the divine likeness "was shattered by sin; and it is only through Christ… that our nature is transformed into the image of God again (Colossians 3:10; Ephesians 4:24)." The Adamic image is restored by being conformed to the Image it always pointed toward. Attestation: widely-held — this reading (Adam's image fulfilled and restored in Christ) is the mainstream patristic and Reformation reading; it is a cross-Testament theological link, not a verbal one, since Greek εἰκών and Hebrew ṣelem cannot share a Strong's number.
Genesis 1:26 · Genesis 1:27
The unit closes on the sixth day with the completed work pronounced "very good" (v. 31). Charles Ellicott hears a deliberate echo across the Testaments: "This final blessing of God's completed work on the Friday must be compared with the final words of Christ spoken of the second creation, upon the same day of the week, when He said 'It is finished.'" The first Adam, crown of the first creation, is answered by the Last Adam (1 Corinthians 15:45), the firstborn of a new creation, whose finished work on a sixth day inaugurates a new "very good." Attestation: this is a typological reading, offered by Ellicott as comparison; it is figural, not a verbal link in the Hebrew text, and is marked as such — ancient in impulse (the Adam–Christ typology of Romans 5 and 1 Corinthians 15) though Ellicott's specific Friday parallel is a homiletical, novel application.
Genesis 1:27 · Genesis 1:31
The biblical text is the Berean Standard Bible (BSB), public domain (CC0). Hebrew/Greek text, transliteration, morphology and Strong’s are transcribed from the Berean interlinear (CC0) + Strong’s lexicons (PD); the literal renderings, divergence notes, word notes and all synthesis are this tool’s own work (⚙) — fallible; verify them.
Named voices, quoted verbatim from public-domain works:
Three honesty notes specific to this unit. (1) The plural of v. 26 is left contested on purpose. The thread "Let Us make / one of Us" is tiered flagged — verify source because its basis is a grammatical form (a 1cp cohortative), not a shared lexeme — the Verifier returns no shared word between Genesis 1:26 and 11:7. The voices themselves split: Ellicott calls it a "germ" but "not a formal proof of the Trinity," while Cambridge judges the Trinitarian reading historically "untenable." We assert only what the text asserts — a plural verb-form and the rare noun ṣelem — and flag the doctrine as later, legitimate, fuller light, not a claim of this verse. (2) Whether Eden was bloodless is genuinely disputed in the sources and not resolved here. Keil & Delitzsch and Delitzsch argue from the vegetable-only diet (vv. 29–30) that there was no predation before the fall; the Pulpit Commentary and Cambridge answer that the geological/palaeontological evidence for pre-human death is "too powerful to be resisted." The Berean parses do not adjudicate this, and neither do we. (3) The Christ links are cross-Testament and therefore cannot be "verbal." Greek εἰκών (Col 1:15, 3:10) and Hebrew ṣelem (v. 27) share no Strong's number; the image-of-God-in-Christ connection is tiered as a structural/theological reading and the Last-Adam / "It is finished" parallel as typological — figural, ancient in impulse (Romans 5; 1 Corinthians 15), but argued rather than lexically proven. One editorial flag: several voices (Gill, JFB, the Cambridge editors) intrude post-biblical natural science and rabbinic legend; these are reproduced verbatim where quoted but are the human ✦ layer, not the machine ⚙ synthesis.
✦ = human, public-domain source, quoted and named. ⚙ = machine synthesis, to be verified. Flagged cross-references are left visible on purpose — the verifier working in the open. “Search the Scriptures daily, whether those things were so.” (Acts 17:11)