“The
Story of Creation” from the book of Genesis
Background:
Biblical
scholars generally hold that the beginning of the book of Genesis
in fact contains two “creation stories” that are interwoven into the account
we now have, the older account beginning at 2:4b and the later account found in
1:1-2:4a. Can you notice any
differences between these sections of the text that would suggest that they were
indeed originally different accounts of origins?
While
there are Christians who take the creation story in a quasi-scientific fashion,
most mainstream Christians acknowledge that there are insuperable problems when
taking the Genesis accounts this way.
For example, notice how the text affirms that God created light and
darkness on the first day (1:3-5), then the earth on the third (1:9-10), and
later the sun and moon (1:16) on the fourth day.
Is it clear to you why this is a problem, scientifically speaking?
Explain.
Most
contemporary Christian scholars recognize this section of Genesis
to be of the genre of myth,
that is, a story (usually of divine figures) that reveals something about the
fundamental structure of reality for those who live in light of the story.
If the first chapter of Genesis is this sort of a sacred text (i.e., a myth), then what is
it revealing about the underlying structure of reality for those who live by it
(e.g., Christians)?
Reading guides:
How does God create according to the first creation story? What does God “see” after God creates each feature of the cosmos? What are the implications of such a claim? How does God make human beings according to the first story? What are the implications of this claim?
What
is the basic “story line” of the second creation story?
What is the significance of the man’s being made out of earth and
God’s “breathing” the “breath of life” into his nostrils? (2:7)
What significance do you see in the way the woman was created? (2:21-2)
What is the point to the observation that they were not ashamed (2:25)
when they walked around naked?
Why
did the serpent go to woman (instead of the man) first when trying to get the
pair to eat of the fruit of the tree God had forbidden? (3:1-5)
What happened to the pair once they ate of the forbidden fruit? (3:7)
What
do you think of God’s actions (3:14-24) after he found out about the pair’s
failure to obey his command? If the
genre of this story is also myth, what might it be revealing about the
underlying structure of reality?
Do
you think that accepting this account of creation (as a devout Jew or Christian
would) leads to a conflict with a contemporary scientific account of the world
(as proposed in physics and biology)? Why
or why not?