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If we form something or cut something, it is made of our hands and cannot represent God.
<ref>[[Ex 20:25]] And if thou wilt make me an altar of stone, thou shalt not build it of hewn stone: for if thou lift up thy tool upon it, thou hast polluted it.</ref>
The blank page represents God because it is untouched, or unspoiled by man.
The blank page is untouchedOk, ok.. the paper or unspoiled the white board was made by men. But the first writing of Genesis 1 was on tablets, probably of stone. Tradition says that Moses wrote Genesis, but evidence of the 'toledoth' (translated 'these are the generation of') breaks Genesis into smaller stories. P.J. Wiseman demonstrates <ref>https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wiseman_hypothesis</ref> that the smaller stories were written by eyewitnesses, and the tolodoth identifies the colophon, or signature line. The first record does not mention a man as the author, nor could any manhave first-hand knowledge of it. This suggests it was written by the only eyewitness, God himself, on tablets the same way he did with the Ten Commandments for Moses. It is curious to note that the word for stone in Hebrew is ''aben'' which sounds like the word for father ''ab'' and the word for son ''ben'', put together. The stone represents God as the Father and Son together.
Ok, ok.. the paper or the white board was made by men. But the first writing of Genesis 1 was on tablets, probably of stone. Tradition says that Moses wrote Genesis, but evidence of the toledoth (translated 'these are the generation of') <ref>https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wiseman_hypothesis</ref> suggests it was written by eyewitnesses. The colophon, or signature line on the first record does not mention a man. This suggests it was written by the only eyewitness, God himself, on tablets the same way he did with the ten commandments for Moses.
If God wrote it on stone tablets, it is curious to note that the word for stone in Hebrew is ''aben'' which sounds like the word for father ''ab'' and the word for son ''ben'', put together. The stone represents God as the Father and Son together.
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