Yes. That is exactly the wonder, and the scandal, and the glory of God’s plan. You are seeing the unshakable self-assurance of a God who has no insecurity, no panic, no rival—only purpose.
What does it say about God that He would entrust man with His own image, knowing it would be wielded in rebellion, cruelty, pride, and betrayal?
It tells us volumes about the Person, power, and confidence of God. Let’s explore them.
1. His Absolute Sovereignty: He Is Never Threatened
God’s decision was not naïve. He wasn’t surprised by the fall.
He made man in His image knowing that image would one day curse Him, crucify Him, and claim His throne.
Yet He still said, “Let Us make man in Our image.”
Why?
Because His sovereignty is so total, His will so unstoppable, and His glory so secure that not even rebellion can frustrate Him.
“The Lord does whatever pleases Him, in the heavens and on the earth…” (Ps. 135:6)
He permits evil because He overrules evil.
He allows rebellion because He has already woven redemption.
He’s not just playing the long game—He wrote the ending.
2. His Utter Self-Confidence: He Is Not Insecure
Only an insecure ruler fears empowering others.
Only a weak god would hoard glory to protect himself.
But the God of Scripture shares His glory. Not in the ultimate worship sense (Isa. 42:8),
but in the relational, creative, and representative sense.
He gives image-bearing power to man
…knowing man would try to use it to dethrone Him.
…knowing He would become a man Himself to rescue man from himself.
This is not weakness. This is majestic boldness.
He’s not afraid of what man might do with what He gave him.
Because He knows what He will do to reclaim and redeem it.
3. His Patience and Love: He Is Not Trigger-Happy
If God were impulsive, impatient, or defensive,
Adam would have turned to dust the moment he bit the fruit.
But God walks in the garden. He speaks. He covers. He promises.
“I will put enmity… He shall crush your head.” (Gen. 3:15)
He endures centuries of rebellion, kings, idols, and injustice
…not because He’s passive, but because He is patient.
He entrusted man with power, and then suffers long with man’s abuse of that power.
Why? Because His heart was always to redeem, not destroy.
“What if God, desiring to show His wrath and make known His power, has endured with much patience vessels of wrath…?” (Rom. 9:22)
4. His Self-Giving Nature: He Will Enter the Rebellion
And here’s the final stroke of divine confidence:
God did not stay at a distance from the danger He created.
He entered the world through a womb,
took on the very image He had once given man,
and let fallen image-bearers crucify the perfect Image—Christ.
“The Word became flesh…” (John 1:14)
“He is the image of the invisible God…” (Col. 1:15)
God bore the consequences of the gift He gave.
The Giver was slain by the recipients.
And yet through that death, He redeems them—and restores the image.
Who does that?
Only a God so confident in His justice and mercy
that He would absorb rebellion rather than revoke the gift.
🔥 So What Does This Reveal?
- God’s power is so supreme that He can afford to let His creatures rebel—and still win.
- God’s character is so unwavering that He will not retract His generosity—even when it costs Him.
- God’s plan is so sure that He builds redemption into the very fabric of man’s fall.
He is not afraid of what man will do—because He knows what He will do through Christ.
Would You Entrust Power to Your Enemies?
God did.
And in doing so, He revealed Himself to be a God not only of power, but of fearless love.
“You would have no power over Me if it were not given to you from above.”
— Jesus to Pilate (John 19:11)
What kind of King grants power to His murderers?
Only one who knows that through death, He will birth eternal life.