
Starting the New Year with the God Who Created the Earth
A devotional by Terry Overton
“In the beginning, God created the heavens and the earth.”
—Genesis 1:1 (ESV)
This time of year, many people set new goals or make resolutions to change something in their lives. Common resolutions include learning new skills, saving or earning more money, improving self-care, losing weight, changing a relationship, deepening faith, providing service to others, and many more. We plan. We set our path for the coming weeks and months. We sense we are in control of the events in our lives.
There is probably nothing so profoundly powerful in the history of the world as the opening words of the first chapter of the first book of the Bible. Genesis 1:1 (ESV) reads, “In the beginning, God created the heavens and the earth.”
Why is this such an important sentence?
This first sentence tells us of God’s infinite power. Nothing existed until He created everything in our world and in the heavens. As humans, we can name and break down the elements and chemicals of most things and organisms in our world and in most of the heavens. But we do not have the knowledge to create the world and everything in it from the bits and pieces we have identified. Humans have tried—and to some degree, succeeded—in laboratory settings to recreate, clone, or construct something. But a universe? No. The knowledge to do such things and the power He has are beyond our understanding.
There is no knowledge like God’s knowledge. It was only through His divine intention that our world was created. How He did this is beyond our understanding. And all God had to do to create the world and universe was to speak it.
But Genesis 1:1 is also important in our everyday lives. It tells us God knows all. He knows how to create, and He knows everything that has happened since creation and what will happen in the future. He knew us before we were born. God planned our life story for us, and He continues to guide us. God knows what will happen in our future. We can plan, set resolutions, and try our best to go through life according to our plans and path, but God knows what will take place.
The Bible says in Proverbs 16:9 (ESV), “The heart of man plans his way, but the Lord establishes his steps.” The Bible also says in Proverbs 3:5-6 (ESV), “Trust in the Lord with all your heart, and do not lean on your own understanding. In all your ways acknowledge him, and he will make straight your paths.”
We are in awe of God’s power and His infinite knowledge. But as we struggle with our daily lives, we often forget that we are called to trust God. Trust God’s knowledge to plan our path. Trust God’s power to help us in weakness. This new year, perhaps the most important resolution we should make—and keep—is to trust our future to Him because He knows all. He can make the impossible happen.
To have a better understanding of Him, one New Year’s Resolution should be to understand the attributes of God. God is powerful, infinite, and knows all. He is everywhere, is faithful, good, and just. I believe to learn more about God, to trust Him, and to draw nearer to Him, are the best ways to go through the New Year.
Let’s Pray:
Dear Heavenly Father,
You are the Maker of the universe. You number our days and make our paths straight in this life on Earth. You know what the future will bring and what we need. Help us to trust You with everything. Help me to pray more and worry less. My future is in Your hands alone. In Jesus’s Name I pray. Amen.
Song of Reflection #1: “God of the Impossible” by Lincoln Brewster. Listen to it here.
Song of Reflection #2: “The Maker” by Chris August. Listen to it here.
Song of Reflection #3: “For the Beauty of the Earth” by Barlow Girl. Listen to it here.
Song of Reflection #4: “God of All My Days” by Casting Crowns. Listen to it here.
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Author Bio:
Terry Overton is a retired university professor of educational and school psychology. She has an Ed.D. in Special Education and a Ph.D. in Psychology.

Her professional experience includes teaching public school, teaching at the university level, and being a college dean.
She has two children, seven grandchildren, and one great granddaughter.
Her previous writing and publication experiences include textbook and journal articles in the fields of special education and school psychology. She now seeks to answer God’s call to share the good news and grow the church by writing Christian books and devotionals.
Over the years, Terry’s books have won the Mom’s Choice Award, Christian Indie Award, Firebird Book Awards, American Writing Winner Awards, Bookfest Winner Awards, Pencraft Award, Reader Views Silver Reviewers Award, and International Book Award Finalist. Her writing examines real world events with a Christian worldview. She enjoys writing for young children, middle grade readers, YA fiction, and adult level novels.
Terry’s background in teaching adults and children shine through her stories that often include a character with educational or learning challenges. Her Christmas series, The Oddball Ornaments, features a box of misfit ornaments who first learn the meaning of Christmas and then discover the meaning of forgiveness. In The Underground Book Readers series, one of the main characters is on the autism spectrum yet is one of the leaders of the group of teens. Book one of a new series, The Messiah Brigade, features an awkward middle school nerd who helps his school turn around a bully gang of kids. Adoption and family issues are the focus of her new book, Charlotte McMaster and the Messenger Angel.
Terry lives in Texas and enjoys reading, taking pictures for devotional posts on social media, visiting with her family, playing golf, and writing.
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Connect with Terry:
Website: https://www.authorterryoverton.com
Blog: https://terryovertonbooks.com
LinkTree: https://linktr.ee/overtont
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