Thoughts on Genesis
I have considered these three questions for some time.
1. How do we read Genesis 1.
2. Is evolutionary theory true in terms of the grand narrative?
3. How do 1 and 2 relate.
The search has led me to the present considerations.
Genesis 1 needs to be taken up seriously on exegetical grounds, distinct from the questions concerning Darwinism. I have read Genesis 1, over and over. I have found that there is a spectrum of interpretation amongst Christians in all places and at all times. This much is clear:
Genesis 1 offers us a framework that is concerned with teaching that God created an ordered world from disorder through his Word and for humankind. The days correspond as follows:
Day 1: Light and Darkness/Day 4: Sun, Moon, and Stars
Day 2: The sky and the waters/Day 5: The birds and fish
Day 3: The formation of land/Day 6: The formation of animals and humans
Day 7: God Rests.
Of the main points so it seems, is that God created the heavens and the earth by his Word and by his Breath (ruach/Spirit, breath). That he alone is the Author. The world is functional because God created it by his ordination and providence to be as such. Nothing is divine nor worthy of worship but was rather created by God who alone is worthy of worship. To its original audience, it would have read as a powerful polemic against pagan and idol worship. Man was worshiping images and even humans as gods. But Genesis 1 turns this on its head. The sun, the moon, animals, and humans were not worthy of worship. Man and women are created in God's image though man makes god's in their own image.
The concern here seems to be of communicating that God alone is creator and that he formed for himself a world (Day 1-3), created the functionaries, (Days 4-6), thus making it functional for us and so "took up his rest" in the world with the humans that he made in his image. Importantly, "it is good" since it is sourced in God, and God delights in the world that he has made. So why do people take the text literally?
I see no relation between the scientific questions concerning Darwinism and the Bible since we are offered a theological framework for apprehending how God relates to the world that he has made following the seven day week of the ancient Hebrews that was already acknowledged before the receiving of the Torah. The first chapter of Genesis then, I believe, is something of a catechism for teaching the Hebrews first, and then us second, our place in the created order and God's relation to humans and creation.
Also, what is your take on evolution? Here there are many perspectives, I am no biologist, and I do not know who is telling the truth or if anyone knows the answer. I lean towards evolution but I have my doubts about the grand narrative. Importantly, the Biblical texts and the sciences are in my view distinct concerns. If I am right, Genesis 1 ought not to be read like a science book, and their relation is not one of tension since the Bible is communicating something much more important and something other than what the sciences, by their nature, have the ability to address.
I have considered these three questions for some time.
1. How do we read Genesis 1.
2. Is evolutionary theory true in terms of the grand narrative?
3. How do 1 and 2 relate.
The search has led me to the present considerations.
Genesis 1 needs to be taken up seriously on exegetical grounds, distinct from the questions concerning Darwinism. I have read Genesis 1, over and over. I have found that there is a spectrum of interpretation amongst Christians in all places and at all times. This much is clear:
Genesis 1 offers us a framework that is concerned with teaching that God created an ordered world from disorder through his Word and for humankind. The days correspond as follows:
Day 1: Light and Darkness/Day 4: Sun, Moon, and Stars
Day 2: The sky and the waters/Day 5: The birds and fish
Day 3: The formation of land/Day 6: The formation of animals and humans
Day 7: God Rests.
Of the main points so it seems, is that God created the heavens and the earth by his Word and by his Breath (ruach/Spirit, breath). That he alone is the Author. The world is functional because God created it by his ordination and providence to be as such. Nothing is divine nor worthy of worship but was rather created by God who alone is worthy of worship. To its original audience, it would have read as a powerful polemic against pagan and idol worship. Man was worshiping images and even humans as gods. But Genesis 1 turns this on its head. The sun, the moon, animals, and humans were not worthy of worship. Man and women are created in God's image though man makes god's in their own image.
The concern here seems to be of communicating that God alone is creator and that he formed for himself a world (Day 1-3), created the functionaries, (Days 4-6), thus making it functional for us and so "took up his rest" in the world with the humans that he made in his image. Importantly, "it is good" since it is sourced in God, and God delights in the world that he has made. So why do people take the text literally?
I see no relation between the scientific questions concerning Darwinism and the Bible since we are offered a theological framework for apprehending how God relates to the world that he has made following the seven day week of the ancient Hebrews that was already acknowledged before the receiving of the Torah. The first chapter of Genesis then, I believe, is something of a catechism for teaching the Hebrews first, and then us second, our place in the created order and God's relation to humans and creation.
Also, what is your take on evolution? Here there are many perspectives, I am no biologist, and I do not know who is telling the truth or if anyone knows the answer. I lean towards evolution but I have my doubts about the grand narrative. Importantly, the Biblical texts and the sciences are in my view distinct concerns. If I am right, Genesis 1 ought not to be read like a science book, and their relation is not one of tension since the Bible is communicating something much more important and something other than what the sciences, by their nature, have the ability to address.