Imagine the unimaginable–the power confined in that original Big Bang pinhead, imagine the power to spew out all the future matter in the universe, and keep it expanding at ever-increasing speeds after 13.7 billion years. We’ve already seen this verse when Job is meditating on the role played by God’s Spirit during the creation. “By his spirit he has garnished the heavens…” (Job 26:13). Here are a couple of parallel contexts that assist us in comprehending the far-reaching utilization of His Spirit. All we need to know from this poetic narrative is that God has deposed the opposition, taken care of the hostile conflict, and now that we have the recap let’s move forward to the Spirit of God. On the other hand, we do find verses with the second part in opposition to the first, which we remember from our English classes are called antithetical poetry. A verse break at the end of “…the surface of the deep” might have been more accurate, but the translators would’ve needed to understand the context. The first part shows Satan raising Cain (pun intended) the second shows God’s constructive intervention. This last little section of verse 2 turns full-swing to restire what God is now going to accomplish. And the Spirit of God moved upon the face of the waters. 1 In the beginning God created the Heaven and the earth.Ģ And the earth was without form, and void and darkness was upon the face of the deep.