E-Book, Englisch, 215 Seiten
Reihe: The Essentials Set
Iii Old Testament Essentials
1. Auflage 2013
ISBN: 978-0-8308-7194-0
Verlag: InterVarsity Press
Format: EPUB
Kopierschutz: Adobe DRM (»Systemvoraussetzungen)
E-Book, Englisch, 215 Seiten
Reihe: The Essentials Set
ISBN: 978-0-8308-7194-0
Verlag: InterVarsity Press
Format: EPUB
Kopierschutz: Adobe DRM (»Systemvoraussetzungen)
Tremper Longman III (PhD, Yale University) is Distinguished Scholar of Biblical Studies at Westmont College in Santa Barbara, California. He is the author or coauthor of over twenty books, including How to Read Genesis, How to Read the Psalms, How to Read Proverbs, Literary Approaches to Biblical Interpretation, and Old Testament Essentials, and is coeditor of A Complete Literary Guide to the Bible.
Autoren/Hrsg.
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1 / Creation
LOOKING AHEAD
MEMORY VERSE: Genesis 1:1-2
BIBLE STUDY: Genesis 1–2
READING: God Creates the Cosmos
Bible Study Guide
After reading Genesis 1–2, spend some time reflecting on this passage with the following questions in mind before looking at the Reading.
- Notice that there are two separate accounts of creation here (Genesis 1:1–2:4a and Genesis 2:4b-25). Please write a brief description of the similarities and differences between the two accounts. What is the main subject of each?
- In Genesis 1:2, the earth is described as “formless and empty.” How do you picture that in your imagination?
- Fill in the following boxes with what God created on each of the six days. Do you notice any relationship between the boxes for days 1-3 and those for days 4-6?
DAY 1 DAY 2 DAY 3 DAY 4 DAY 5 DAY 6 - The psalmist proclaimed:
What are mere mortals that you should think about them,
human beings that you should care for them?
Yet you made them only a little lower than God
and crowned them with glory and honor. (Psalm 8:4-5 NLT)
In the first creation account (Genesis 1:1–2:4a), what are the indicators that human beings are the high point of creation, “a little lower than God”?
How about in the second account (Genesis 2:4b-25)?
- All six creation days are said to have an evening and a morning, but the sun, moon and stars are not created until the fourth day. How does this affect your understanding of the creation “days”?
- Human beings are said to be created in God’s image. Do your best to explain what it means to be created in the image of God.
- What is the significance of Adam being created from the dust of the ground and the breath of God (Genesis 2:7)?
- Why did God create Eve?
- What is the significance of the fact that Adam and Eve were naked and felt no shame?
Reading: God Creates the Cosmos
“In the beginning God created the heavens and the earth” (Genesis 1:1). These opening words of the Bible are foundational and radical. Considered both in their ancient context and today, they are indeed earth-shaking and life-transforming.
After all, we are fascinated by stories of beginnings, and the creation story provides insight on some of the biggest questions we have. Who are we, and where did we come from? What is our place in this big universe? Were we made for a purpose? Why do we yearn for relationship? What is our connection with the rest of the universe? And then there are the biggest questions of all. What about God? Who is he, and can we have a relationship with him?
Let’s first explore Genesis 1–2 in its ancient context. The biblical story of creation was written in the light of these ancient rival claims of creation, not in the light of modern scientific ideas.
There were many rival creation accounts at the time. Take, for instance, the Babylonian story . In this story a god and a goddess are just there at the beginning. They are primordial, not created. Their names are Apsu, the god of the salt water, and Tiamat, the goddess of the fresh waters. The waters, in other words, were there at the beginning. This idea is also found among the Egyptians, who believed that the waters, represented by the god Nun, were there before anything else. In contrast Genesis teaches that God created the waters. At first there was nothing and then “the earth was formless and empty, darkness was over the surface of the deep, and the Spirit of God was hovering over the waters” (Genesis 1:2). From nothing to a watery mass to, after six days, an ordered and functional creation.
In the Babylonian account the ordered universe came about through conflict between the creator god and the god of the primordial waters. In the the mingling of the waters of Tiamat and Apsu brought forth the next generation of gods. These gods disturbed the sleep of Tiamat and Apsu, and Apsu determined to kill his divine children. But before he could carry out his plan, Ea, the god of wisdom, discovered his plot and delivered a preemptive strike. This victory was short-lived, however, since Apsu’s death enraged Tiamat, who was more formidable than Apsu. Ea knew he was no match for her, so he called for a hero to step forward to save the gods from Tiamat and her demonic horde, which was led by the chief demon, Qingu. Marduk volunteered for the dangerous task on condition that if he won, he would become the king of the gods. And he did indeed vanquish Tiamat and became the most important god of the Babylonians. The Canaanites had a similar picture of a conflict between the creator god Baal and the god of the waters, named Yam. In Canaan as well as Babylon, conflict introduces creation.
Back to the Babylonian story, Marduk then took Tiamat’s body and split it in half “like a shellfish.” With the upper half, the god made the heavens, and with the lower the oceans. He then pushed back the lower waters and gave them boundaries, and in this way land was created. After this, Marduk executed Qingu. After this, he took some clay from the ground and mixed it with Qingu’s blood, thus creating human beings.
Those who first heard Genesis 1–2 would have had these rival accounts ringing in their ears when they read how their God, alone and not with other gods, created the world from nothing. The “formless and empty” earth represents the watery mass to be sure, but God did not by conflict turn that watery mass that he created from nothing into an ordered and functional earth, but by his divine decree over six days and then a final seventh on which he rested.
Again, it is important to read the Bible’s depiction of creation against the background of its original setting rather than against modern scientific ideas, though the creation account will have implications for how we understand the science of origins.
The connection with the ancient Near East, however, is a reminder that we are not getting a literal description of how God created but rather an assertion of the statement that God, not the gods of Babylon, Egypt or Canaan, created creation. This understanding is also highlighted by the obviously figurative language used in Genesis 1–2. Let’s begin with the days of creation. On first glance it appears that these are literal twenty-four-hour days. After all, right from day one they are described as having an “evening and morning.” Closer examination, though, shows that the author of Genesis could not have thought of these days as literal days with literal evenings and mornings. After all, such days require a rising and setting sun, a moon as well as stars, and these are not created until the fourth day.
The depiction of the creation week is a literary presentation of the great truth that the biblical God, and no others, created creation. The days have an interesting structure in that the first three days describe the creation of realms that are filled by the inhabitants of those realms in the second set of three days.
| DAY 1 | DAY 2 | DAY 3 |
|---|
| light and darkness | sky and waters | land |
| DAY 4 | DAY 5 | DAY 6 |
|---|
| sun, moon and stars | birds and fish | animals and human beings |
A second example of the highly figurative nature of the description of creation in Genesis 1–2, as well as its interaction and critique of pagan notions of creation, is found in the account of the creation of Adam in Genesis 2:7, “the LORD God formed the man from the dust of the ground. He breathed the breath of life into the man’s nostrils, and the man became a living person” (NLT). Remember that the described the creation of humans from the ground and the blood of a demon god. It is no accident that there are similarities and differences between the Bible and the writings of the ancient Near East; writing like this was a way of denying the Babylonian account that gave such a low view of humanity as connected to the demonic and thus inherently evil. To be created from the breath of God, on the contrary, expresses a profound understanding of the dignity of humanity.
While Genesis 1–2 teaches us little about God created creation, it wonderfully proclaims important foundational truths about God, ourselves and our relationship to God. Let’s explore some of the leading ideas.
About God
God created creation. Everything that exists exists because of God; everything and everybody else are creatures totally dependent on God. We owe our...




