“In the beginning God created the heavens and the earth.” Genesis 1:1 places God as the origin of everything we name and hold. Before calendars, to‑do lists, or notebooks, there is the Creator whose word brought order out of formlessness. Recognizing this first truth frames every beginning we make—our days, our work, and even the pages where we collect thoughts.
You wrote, “Welcome! This is a sample note,” and mentioned organizing highlights in a Notebook and adding a #hashtag. That simple practice points to a spiritual habit: when you open the notebook of your life, begin by naming God’s role in it. Start meetings, plans, and journals with a short prayer or a line of praise; tag your priorities with God’s purpose so your decisions are filtered by his ordering, not merely by convenience or noise.
Theology and practice meet in the fact that we are made in God’s image to reflect his creative, ordering work. Just as Genesis shows God speaking and reality responding, our lives respond to the Creator by cultivating order—confession where there is chaos, stewardship where there is waste, and gratitude where there is provision. Keeping a faithful record of what God has done—little notes of answered prayer, lessons learned, and corrections made—becomes a spiritual discipline that trains attention back to the One who began all things.
So when you add another note or tag another task, do so with the confidence that the God who created beginnings is already at work in yours. Let Genesis 1:1 call you to start small: a short prayer, a line of praise, a faithful habit of recording God’s faithfulness. Be encouraged—God is present at every beginning, and he delights to order your days as you give them to him.