by jimwalton » Sun Jan 07, 2018 4:01 pm
> "God created" tells us how: they came about through the force of his will and the fact that he uttered the magic words, in a matter of six days.
The word "created" in Genesis 1 is בָּרָא (bara’). If you trace through the rest of the OT, the objects of *bara'* are unusual things, in the categories of abstractions (purity, righteousness), people groups (the nations, Jerusalem). It is never talking about manufacturing or making a thing. It doesn't refer to materials, but something more abstract, as in English we might say, "I created a masterpiece," or "I created havoc." The thrust of the verb is not that God manufactured something out of something or out of nothing, but that God assigned roles and functions. Chronology has no place here. The setting is unlocalized and general. It expresses *that* God created, not *how*.
You can read "material" all you want, but that's not what the Bible is talking about. Even in the ancient cosmologies, their concerns were with role and function, not with material creation. Sumerian cosmology is stories about the gods giving organization to the earth. Ancient Egyptian creation stories are about the gods determining the function of the cosmos. This document was written in an ancient context with an ancient mindset. The text is claiming that God made everything just right and set it up to function properly within his purposes.
> You are merely saying "it's allegorical"
I never said it was allegorical; it is certainly not. It's not an allegory at all. It's about function and role. I've already walked you through the days of Genesis 1 to substantiate my point. But I'll add to it. Look at Genesis 1.2. If Genesis 1 were about material manufacture, we would expect the text to begin with nothing; if it were about order the universe by assigning function, that is, by brining order to chaos, we would expect the text to begin with the cosmos in a chaotic state, and that's just what it does. Genesis is interested in an organized world, as against a chaotic world, and not in the metaphysical question of something against nothing.
In the ancient Near East, the existence of chaos was a central concern. Within the cosmos, the raging sea and darkness are the forces of chaos. Within human existence, the most common representatives are death and warfare. In the mythology of the ancient Near East, the gods demonstrate their power by defeating or holding at bay the forces of chaos. Sometimes this motif accompanies creation narratives, as in the Babylonian Enuma Elish. Other times it simply displays the emerging status of the deity being featured, as in the Myth of Anzu or the Ugaritic Baal Epic. The book of Psalms often portrays Yahweh as defeating or neutralizing the forces of chaos (e.g., 74:13-17; 89:9-10; 104:7-9). Genesis does not portray any battle, nor does it indicate chaotic forces being held back, but there is a clear establishment of order from disorder. That disorder is described in verse 2 starting with the Hebrew terms *tohu* and *bohu* (NIV: "formless and empty").
No one suggests that Genesis 1.2 indicates that matter had not been shaped or that the cosmos described in v. 2 is empty of matter. By logic alone the words can be seen to concern functionality, and analysis of the Hebrew confirms the conclusion that these terms indicate that the cosmos was empty of purpose, meaning and function—a place that had no order or intelligibility.
> The Bible is completely unnecessary.
I beg to differ. The Bible is explaining the role and function of the cosmos: to glorify God, and to be a suitable temple for his presence to dwell. No human-made structure suited his grandeur and majesty, so God created his own "temple"—the cosmos. It's like Solomon's Temple: the temple, the holy place, and the holy of holies. The cosmos is his temple, the earth is the holy place, and the Garden of Eden was the holy of holies, where God would meet with his priests and priestesses, Adam & Eve. So in one sense, the world was made for us, but in another, God made the world for himself. Ancient mythology said that humans were created to be the slaves of the gods. The Bible argues very differently: We were created noble to care for sacred space. These are things science can't tell us. Science can tell us how old the cosmos is, how old the earth is, and how it came about, but the Bible tells us what it is for—its role and function.
> "God created" tells us how: they came about through the force of his will and the fact that he uttered the magic words, in a matter of six days.
The word "created" in Genesis 1 is בָּרָא (bara’). If you trace through the rest of the OT, the objects of *bara'* are unusual things, in the categories of abstractions (purity, righteousness), people groups (the nations, Jerusalem). It is never talking about manufacturing or making a thing. It doesn't refer to materials, but something more abstract, as in English we might say, "I created a masterpiece," or "I created havoc." The thrust of the verb is not that God manufactured something out of something or out of nothing, but that God assigned roles and functions. Chronology has no place here. The setting is unlocalized and general. It expresses *that* God created, not *how*.
You can read "material" all you want, but that's not what the Bible is talking about. Even in the ancient cosmologies, their concerns were with role and function, not with material creation. Sumerian cosmology is stories about the gods giving organization to the earth. Ancient Egyptian creation stories are about the gods determining the function of the cosmos. This document was written in an ancient context with an ancient mindset. The text is claiming that God made everything just right and set it up to function properly within his purposes.
> You are merely saying "it's allegorical"
I never said it was allegorical; it is certainly not. It's not an allegory at all. It's about function and role. I've already walked you through the days of Genesis 1 to substantiate my point. But I'll add to it. Look at Genesis 1.2. If Genesis 1 were about material manufacture, we would expect the text to begin with nothing; if it were about order the universe by assigning function, that is, by brining order to chaos, we would expect the text to begin with the cosmos in a chaotic state, and that's just what it does. Genesis is interested in an organized world, as against a chaotic world, and not in the metaphysical question of something against nothing.
In the ancient Near East, the existence of chaos was a central concern. Within the cosmos, the raging sea and darkness are the forces of chaos. Within human existence, the most common representatives are death and warfare. In the mythology of the ancient Near East, the gods demonstrate their power by defeating or holding at bay the forces of chaos. Sometimes this motif accompanies creation narratives, as in the Babylonian Enuma Elish. Other times it simply displays the emerging status of the deity being featured, as in the Myth of Anzu or the Ugaritic Baal Epic. The book of Psalms often portrays Yahweh as defeating or neutralizing the forces of chaos (e.g., 74:13-17; 89:9-10; 104:7-9). Genesis does not portray any battle, nor does it indicate chaotic forces being held back, but there is a clear establishment of order from disorder. That disorder is described in verse 2 starting with the Hebrew terms *tohu* and *bohu* (NIV: "formless and empty").
No one suggests that Genesis 1.2 indicates that matter had not been shaped or that the cosmos described in v. 2 is empty of matter. By logic alone the words can be seen to concern functionality, and analysis of the Hebrew confirms the conclusion that these terms indicate that the cosmos was empty of purpose, meaning and function—a place that had no order or intelligibility.
> The Bible is completely unnecessary.
I beg to differ. The Bible is explaining the role and function of the cosmos: to glorify God, and to be a suitable temple for his presence to dwell. No human-made structure suited his grandeur and majesty, so God created his own "temple"—the cosmos. It's like Solomon's Temple: the temple, the holy place, and the holy of holies. The cosmos is his temple, the earth is the holy place, and the Garden of Eden was the holy of holies, where God would meet with his priests and priestesses, Adam & Eve. So in one sense, the world was made for us, but in another, God made the world for himself. Ancient mythology said that humans were created to be the slaves of the gods. The Bible argues very differently: We were created noble to care for sacred space. These are things science can't tell us. Science can tell us how old the cosmos is, how old the earth is, and how it came about, but the Bible tells us what it is for—its role and function.