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Genesis: The Creation Story of the Hebrew Bible. Dr. Loredana Kun September 27, 2005. The Book of Genesis : Overview of Lecture. Relationship to other parts of the Bible Outline of Genesis The primeval narrative: two stories of creation The primeval narrative: other stories
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Genesis: The Creation Story of the Hebrew Bible Dr. Loredana Kun September 27, 2005
The Book of Genesis: Overview of Lecture Relationship to other parts of the Bible Outline of Genesis The primeval narrative: two stories of creation The primeval narrative: other stories The “generations” Abraham, the first of the ancestors 7. The Story of Lilith
Some Facts About Genesis First book of the Torah (“Laws”) Gives background to exodus from Egypt by the Israelites and why God gave them a collection of laws. The Pentateuch features the pre-history ofIsrael Comprises first five books of the Bible: Genesis, Exodus, Leviticus, Numbers, Deuteronomy The stories in Genesis come from a variety of sources and time periods.
Two Creation Stories in Genesis 1-3 Cosmogony: “an account of the creation of an ordered world”
Primeval History (1) Creation of the World (1) : 1:1- 11:26 Creation of the World (2) : 2:4 – 5:32 Including: Man and Woman: 2:7-25 Expulsion from God’s garden 3:1 -24 Cain and Abel : 4:1 -16 Generations from Adam to Noah 4:17-5:32
Primeval History (2) The Flood: 6:1- 9-29 Table of Nations: 10:1 – 10:32 Tower of Babel: 11:1-9 Generations from Noah to Abraham: 11:10-26
First Creation Story (1:1-2:4a) Exists in context of Judean exile in Babylon (587 -539 B. C. E.) Name for God: Elohim (God) View of Deity more majestic; calls things into existence (“and God said”) Structure: creates for six days & then takes a day of rest Creation begins with a watery chaos Order: light, heaven, earth, vegetation, sun, moon, stars, animals and humanity
Second Creation Story (2:4b - 3:22) Name for God: LORD God (Yahweh Elohim) View of Deity: Less abstract; God is more human-like and has a name (later suppressed) Structure: loose, a narrative; no ordering, no balance, no careful symmetry Creation begins with dry desert Order: earth , water, humans, vegetation, animals; man & woman created separately
Similarities of Second Creation Story to Mesopotamian Myth God makes man (Adam) out of dust (adamah) as in one Babylonian Creation story God not the serpent, tricks man out of immortality, like the myth of Adapa, the first man, in Mesopotamia Knowledge about good and evil (i.e. everything) and eternal life are two fundamental characteristics of gods Gods also wear clothes; both Apada and Adam and Eve are presented with clothes as a compensation for missing out on divine status
Importance of the Generations (toledot) Guarantee the identity of the Israelites and how they are to be distinguished from other people. Provide a way of understanding social relationships and the world around them.
Period of the Ancestors They are the ancestors of the Israelites Abraham is the first ancestor (11:27 -32) His story begins with the generations of his family (1127-32)
The Story of Abraham Abraham called by God 12:1-12:9 Adventures of Abraham and Sarah; God promised Canaan to Abraham’s descendants 12:9 -14:24 God makes contracts with Abraham who seals them with circumcision of all the males of his household 15:18:16 Adventures of Abraham’s nephew Lot etc. 18:16 – 20-1:8 At a great age, Sarah gives birth to an heir 21:1 -24 God tests Abraham by asking him to sacrifice his son; spares son and promises greatness to his descendants 22:1- 4 Death and burial of Sarah 23:1-20
THE DOCUMENTARY HYPOTHESIS • Scholars faced with these literary phenomena came up with an explanation for how the Pentateuch was formed; it is mixture of four traditions • J (Yahwist): version one of the “Old Epic” stretching from Creation to the Exodus; uses the name of Yahweh for God; composed in southern Israel in time of King Solomon or shortly thereafter (ca. 950 BCE) • E (Elohist): version two of the “Old Epic”; uses the name Elohim for God; written ca. 750 BCE after the ten northern tribes split from the two southern tribes; many of the stories of Abraham come from this source • D (Deuteronomist): ca. 650 BCE a book of the law was found in the Jerusalem Temple; scholars think this was Deuteronomy; mostly laws in sermonic form; joined to the other texts ca. 550 BCE • P (Priestly): end of 6th c. BCE Israelites return from Exile in Babylon; there was then an attempt by the priestly class to reinvigorate and restore worship; part of effort was to create a unified history of Israel; these priests gave the Pentateuch its final form ; (ca. 500-400 BCE) and added legal materials related to worship and genealogical listsmaterial in the Genesis creation stories believed to be a blend of Yahwist (Gen. 2-3) and Priestly material (Gen. 1); there is no E or D material in Gen. 1-3 • he stories of the Pentateuch are united by a single theme: a cycle of rebellion/ disobedience, punishment, mercy