I have come across a great new book: Genesis Interpretation A Bible Commentary for Teaching and Preaching, by Walter Brueggemann. It was written 1982, but is very relevant for today - especially with the new frontiers opening in genetics. In Brueggemann's view, Genesis 1 - 11 are a complete thought, so focusing exclusively on Genesis 2 and 3 misses the whole idea. I am plodding my way through this book, just finishing up the Genesis 2:4b - 3:24 chapter (the chapters are long), so I can't comment on the results yet.
Some insights after reading the beginning of the book:
Some insights after reading the beginning of the book:
- the work (Gen. 1 - 11) is likely linked to the Royal Court - which sponsored scientific and philosophical investigations of life, perhaps commissioned during Solomon's reign.
- the work (Gen. 1 - 11) is neither mythological - confining meaning to the world of the gods, nor scientific - giving creation its own intrinsic meaning.
- Creator and creation have to do with each other decisively. Neither can be understood apart from the other.
- Creator/ Creation/ Create/ Creature - not equal to "cosmos" or "nature" rather "Creator creates creation"
I will write more on this later.
No comments:
Post a Comment