If you learn nothing else in the coming year, learn that there are not two creation stories. Despite a constant barrage of falsehoods by atheists and others, Genesis two is NOT a creation account.
Is this where you play a semantic game and define creation account as the literary style of Genesis 1?
Let's have a look at what happens in Genesis 2.
Verse 7 God is the Creator of man
Verse 9 God is the Creator of plants
Verse 22 God is the Creator the woman
Genesis 2 is clearly portrayiing God as the Creator. If that isn't a creation account then what on earth IS a creation account?
It is clear that the focus of the accounts are different Genesis 2 is looking at creation as it relates to man, but differing focus doesn't mean they aren't creation accounts.
What is your definition of a creation account?
It begins by stating: "Thus the heavens and the earth were completed in all their vast array. By the seventh day God had finished the work he had been doing; so on the seventh day he rested from all his work. Then God blessed the seventh day and made it holy, because on it he rested from all the work of creating that He had done." If something begins by stating that the creation had been completed, then how could it be a creation story?
You may be confused. When people talk about the creation account of Genesis 2, they refer to the passages that begin with Gen 2:4. The chapter breaks are not part of the originals, they were added much later, and the first chapter break is in the wrong spot. Versus 13 of Chapter 2 belong to Chapter 1 as a summary.
The fact is that Genesis two tells the story of the first man and woman on the newly created earth. It does not list the sequence of creation or in any way describe the events of creation.
Genesis 2 does have a sequence of events.
4[bless and do not curse]This[bless and do not curse]is[bless and do not curse]the history[a][bless and do not curse]of the heavens and the earth when they were created, in the day that the[bless and do not curse]LordGod made the earth and the heavens,[bless and do not curse]5[bless and do not curse]before any plant of the field was in the earth and before any herb of the field had grown. For the[bless and do not curse]Lord[bless and do not curse]God had not caused it to rain on the earth, and[bless and do not curse]there wasno man to till the ground;[bless and do not curse]6[bless and do not curse]but a mist went up from the earth and watered the whole face of the ground.
7[bless and do not curse]And the[bless and do not curse]Lord[bless and do not curse]God formed man[bless and do not curse]of[bless and do not curse]the dust of the ground, and breathed into his nostrils the breath of life; and man became a living being.
See? Man, then plants. A sequence! Ta da!
It DOES make some specific statements about certain details, but NOTHING in Genesis two in any way contradicts Genesis one.
Genesis 1 has man created after the plants. Genesis 2 has man created before the plants.
Genesis 1 has woman created at the same time as man. Genesis 2 has woman created after man.
That would be Moses, who wrote what was revealed to him by God.
I only need to point to the passages in Deuteronomy that describe Moses death and burial to prove that he can't have been the sole author. I point to scholarly research to demonstrate substantial evidence that he was one of many authors (if he was an author at all), and that there were multiple redactors / editors who put the Torah together.
I don't know why fundamentalists want to debate this point? Who cares who wrote the bible? If you believe in the inspiration of Scripture then the author and redactor / editor doesn't matter.
Your view of inspiration seems to be that of dictation and that is a very fundamentalist view. It is fairly clear that the character and background of each writer comes through in the various books they contribute to the bible... why would God dictate such flavoured writings? Why would God dictate a creation account that is heavily steeped in ancient near east cosmology?
Wait. Who is it that claims Genesis is nothing but mythology or perhaps parables which are not to be believed? That is certainly not the YEC, for whom the Bible is the literal word of God.
Whoa up there buddy. Your view of what is to be believed is a bit off skew. Jesus spoke in parables. Are those parables not to be believed just because parables are not literal? CS Lewis spoke about true myth and the fact that allegory and mythology can be used as vehicles to deliver truth. I believe Genesis, and that Genesis uses creation accounts as a vehicle to deliver theology (a foreshadowing of redemption, the doctrine of sin, theology proper).
In essence, the bible is true, and some of it actually happened. Something doesn't have to be literal in order to be the Word of God. In what sense are the Psalms true, since they are poetry? Poetry is full of poetic devices such as hyperbole and repetition. Do those poetic devices render the passages untrue? In what sense are the wisdom passages true? In what sense are the parables true? I think it is time to acknowledge that scientific wooden literalism is not the only type of literature that can convey truth.
Jesus believed in the Scriptures as written, and declared them to be accurate. You claim that Genesis is only the stories of man. One of you is NOT telling the truth. Sorry, I believe that person is you.
Jesus believing in the Scriptures does not necessarily tell us what kind of literature He believed Genesis to be. Jesus simply declared them truth, nowhere does He declare them literal in the scientific western sense.