Genesis 1-3: Perspectives on Historical, Literary, and Cultural Contexts

 
Genesis 1-3 in Context:
Historical, Literary, and Cultural,
Contemporary Perspectives
 
Michael Goheen
Vancouver, B.C., Canada
 
Thesis and structure of talk
 
To properly understand Genesis 1-3 we
must place it in its original context
Historical context
Literary context
Cultural context
Then we can draw conclusions for
today
 
Historical context
 
Moses addresses Israel after calling at
Sinai
Who is this God?
What does he want with us?
How can we make sense of our calling?
 
Literary context
 
Exodus describes liberation from
Egypt (Ex 1-18); encounter with God
at Sinai (Ex 19-24)
Genesis functions as prologue to give
background and make sense of that
narrative.
 
Literary structure of Genesis
 
Genesis 2.4-11.26
5 toledoths
Nations
Theme: Curse of sin;
‘Great hamartiology’
which reaches
pinnacle in Babel—
society and culture
twisted by human
rebellion
 
Genesis 11.27-50.24
5 toledoths
Israel
Theme: Promise of
blessing (Gen 12:2-3
etc.) repeated
throughout account
 
Relating Gen 2-11 and 12-50: Abraham and
Israel for the sake of the world
 
 
The whole primeval history . . . seems to break off in shrill
dissonance, and the question . . . arises even more urgently: Is
God’s relationship to the nations now finally broken; is God’s
gracious forbearance now exhausted; has God rejected the
nations in wrath forever? That is the burdensome question that
no thoughtful reader of ch. 11 can avoid; indeed, one can say
that our narrator intended by means of the whole plan of his
primeval history to raise precisely this question and to pose it
in all its severity. Only then is the reader properly prepared to
take up the strangely new thing that now follows the
comfortless story about the building of the tower: the election
and blessing of Abraham. We stand here, therefore, at the
point where primeval history and sacred history dovetail, and
thus at one of the most important places in the entire Old
Testament.
 (G. Von Rad)
 
Approaching Genesis 1
 
Genesis 1.1-2.3: Preface for whole story of
Genesis
 
While 2.4-3.24 initiates that story [of his dealings with mankind
and with the “fathers” of Israel] . . .  1.1-2.3 sets it within its
fundamental theological, cosmological, and anthropological
context. . . . It supplies the fundamental view of God, humanity,
and world within which alone the subsequent narrative makes
sense. (J. Stek)
 
 
The reason why this chapters is at the beginning of the Bible is
so that all of God’s subsequent actions—his dealings with
humankind, the history of his people, the election and the
covenant—may be seen against the broader canvas of his work
in creation. (C. Westermann)
 
Approaching Genesis 1
 
Genesis 1.1-2.3: Preface for whole
story of Genesis
Two cautions: Ways modern people
think of creation vs. way ancient near
eastern people think of creation
Human society and culture is focus vs.
physical world
Made known by drama or story about origin
of human life vs. scientific account
 
Story about human life
 
 
“In religious cosmologies the primary focus is ‘on
describing the cosmos from the point of view of what
assumptions are necessary if human beings are to live
optimally in the world’ and so include a value
judgment about what ‘living optimally’ is. However,
the physical and biological scientific enterprise is
principally directed to describing and making models
of or hypotheses about nature, and so empirical
reference and feedback are its main aim; it does not
place  human concerns at the centre of its attention and
intention.” (A. Peacock)
 
1.1-2.3 as backdrop to Genesis
 
God is God of all nations; creator of all
peoples, the whole world; God is God
unlike any of the gods of the nations;
King and creation is his kingdom
 
God creates his kingdom
 
Creative words portrayed as royal decrees
God names day, night, sky, land, seas
God assigns spheres of rule to sun and moon
God
s plan to create man is in royal court
Humankind considered vice-regent
 
Kingdom: God ruling over all creation including
the whole breadth of human cultural and societal
life. (cf. Mark 1.14-15)
 
1.1-2.3 as backdrop to Genesis
 
God is God of all nations; creator of all
peoples, the whole world; God is God
unlike any of the gods of the nations;
King and creation is his kingdom
Focus is creation of human beings to
develop society/culture/community
that images God  (1.26-28)
 
Creation and human society
 
“To the ancients, human society organized in a particular
place was the emergent. To moderns, on the other hand,
creation issues in the physical world, typically the planet
fixed in the solar system. Community and culture do not
come into consideration. If life is discussed in connection
with creation, it is usually life in the most primitive
biological sense.” (R. Clifford)
“The natural world, the realm of human conduct, and the
organizational structures of society, were all believed to
lie within this one sustaining order of wisdom that had
been laid down at the creation of the universe.” (R.
Clements)
 
Human culture, creation order,
wisdom
 
Ancient near east would see all of human society
and culture as part of creation
“. . . underlying all human cultural activity is a
substrate of created reality which both makes
possible that activity and sets normative standards
for it.” (A. Wolters)
To conform to those normative standards for
economics, politics, etc. is wisdom
“. . . wisdom . . . was wrought into the constitution
of the universe” and human wisdom is “ethical
conformity to God’s creation.” (J. Fleming)
 
Creation as home for humankind
 
World created as habitable for
humanity to live in
 
 
“. . . the world becomes habitable for
human beings; man, male and female,
stands for society 
in nuce.
” (R.
Clifford)
 
Literary Structure of Genesis 1
 
Stage One
 
In the beginning God created the heaven and
the earth.
 
The earth was dark, formless, and empty
 
‘Very Good’ Cosmos
Stage Two: Gen. 1.3-2.3
 
Darkness banished by creation of light (day 1)
Formlessness removed by creation of sky, dry land
and seas (days 2-3)
Emptiness remedied by creation of creatures to
dwell in four ‘areas’ (days 4-6)
Accomplished by commands of God
Powerful word
Good word
Wise word
Then humanity created as climax
Literary Structure of Genesis 1
Stage Two: Gen. 1:3-2:3
Forming                     Filling
Commands   
Day
   Creation           Commands   
Day
   Creation
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
 
1 (v. 3)                 Light
 
2 (v. 6)                 Sky
 
3 (v. 9)                 Land & seas
 
4 (v. 11)               Vegetation
 
5 (v. 14)    
      
    Sun, moon, stars
 
6 (v. 20)    
     
     Birds & fish
 
7 (v. 24)              Animals
 
8 (v. 26)              Humankind
 
God rested
 
Genesis 1 and book of Genesis
 
Genesis 1: World way God intended it
to be
Genesis 2-11: World as
humankind/nations corrupted it
Genesis 12-50: Way God intends to fix
it through community
 
How did God intend world to be?
 
World
Creation of God
Very good
Ordered by God’s word
Climax: Humanity at centre as vice-regents to rule and
develop world into society and culture reflecting God’s image
Humankind
Created to know/enjoy/respond to glorious Creator God
As they care for, discover, and develop creation as stewards
In community
Develop society, culture
All for the revelation of God’s glory
 
Cultural context
 
 
Moses
 concerns were exclusively religious.
His intent was to proclaim knowledge of the
true God as he manifested himself in his
creative works, to proclaim a right
understanding of humankind, the world, and
history that knowledge of the true God
entails—and to proclaim the truth concerning
these matters in the face of the false religious
notions dominant throughout the world of his
day.
 (John Stek)
 
Genesis 1:
 
Challenge to or polemic against
pagan stories
 
Pagan myths
 
gods
     
vs.
 
humanity
  
vs.
 
world
    
vs.
 
Genesis One
 
God
 
humanity
 
world
 
Creation as kingdom of God
 
— King
— realm
— subjects
— vice-regents
— decrees
 
God
world
creatures
humanity
word
 
Genesis 1:
 
Challenge to or polemic against pagan
stories
Teaching about God, human beings, world,
history
 
 
To be sure, the function of Genesis 1 is not exclusively
polemic . . . But an attentive reading of the whole against
the background of the several myths of the ancient Near
East discloses a view of God, humanity, and the world that,
whatever its more or less incidental affinities with
conceptions abroad in Israel
s environment, stands in
striking opposition to almost all that those religions had in
common.
 (Stek)
 
Rich teaching of Genesis 1
 
 
Genesis 1: ‘doctrine in narrative mode . . .that is both
consistent with all the accounts of creation in the ancient
world and appropriate to the function of Genesis 1 as
prologue to a narrative of God’s engagements in human
history.’
 
 
‘All the myths of creation which may have been known by
the author were, in fact “doctrine” in the form of stories’
(Stek)
 
 
Whoever expounds Gen., ch. 1, must understand one thing:
this chapter is . . . doctrine.
 It is so rich in meaning that 
it
cannot be easily over-interpreted theologically.
 (Von Rad)
 
Conclusions for today
 
Genesis 12-50 tells the first part of a story
– that will continue throughout the rest of
the Bible and finds its centre in Jesus – in
which God acts to restore his creation.
Genesis 1 teaches much about God,
human life, world
 
Conclusions for today
 
Genesis 12-50 tells the first part of a story – that will
continue throughout the rest of the Bible and finds its
centre in Jesus – in which God acts to restore his
creation.
Genesis 1 teaches us much about God, human life, world
Genesis 1 (and 2) shows us God
s original intention for
his creation.
A weak doctrine of creation subverts Christian life
Creation meant to be a good home for human beings
Human culture and society is central to God
s creational purpose
Creation is good when human beings conform themselves to God
s
word/order or live under decree of King in all aspects of their
communal lives (wisdom)
Creation includes human society, institutions, culture, etc. and not
just non-human creation.
 
Conclusions for today
 
Genesis tells the first part of a story in which
God acts to restore his creation.
Genesis 1 teaches much about God, humanity
and the world
Genesis 1 (and 2) shows us God
s original
intention for his creation.
Genesis 3-11 shows us how human rebellion has
polluted, twisted, distorted, corrupted God
s
world—especially human society and culture.
Often minimize gravity, scope, and power of human sin
Scope: idolatry; Rom 1.18ff.
 
Corporate idolatry
 
Basic sin of idolatry
 
“ . . . all sin is an expression of the basic sin of idolatry,
of putting something else in the place of God.”
 
(Paul
Marshall)
Pauline analysis of Roman culture (Romans
1.18-32)
Worshiped and served created things
: Communal
and cultural pursuit of idolatry
God gave them over
: God gives over culture to its
idolatry
 
Conclusions for today
 
Genesis tells the first part of a story in which God acts
to restore his creation.
Genesis 1 teaches us much about God, human life,
world
Genesis 1 (and 2) shows us God
s original intention
for his creation.
Genesis 3-11 shows us how human rebellion has
polluted, twisted, distorted, corrupted God
s world—
especially human society and culture.
God chooses a community to embody his original
intention for the sake of the nations.
To embody God
s original intention for human life
Across the spectrum of human culture/society
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Properly understanding Genesis 1-3 requires placing it within its original historical, literary, and cultural contexts. Explore the significance of Moses addressing Israel, the literary context of Genesis within Exodus, the structural themes of Genesis, and the transition from primeval history to the story of Abraham and Israel.

  • Genesis
  • Biblical interpretation
  • Historical context
  • Literary analysis
  • Cultural perspectives

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  1. Genesis 1-3 in Context: Historical, Literary, and Cultural, Contemporary Perspectives Michael Goheen Vancouver, B.C., Canada

  2. Thesis and structure of talk To properly understand Genesis 1-3 we must place it in its original context Historical context Literary context Cultural context Then we can draw conclusions for today

  3. Historical context Moses addresses Israel after calling at Sinai Who is this God? What does he want with us? How can we make sense of our calling?

  4. Literary context Exodus describes liberation from Egypt (Ex 1-18); encounter with God at Sinai (Ex 19-24) Genesis functions as prologue to give background and make sense of that narrative.

  5. Literary structure of Genesis Genesis 2.4-11.26 5 toledoths Nations Theme: Curse of sin; Great hamartiology which reaches pinnacle in Babel society and culture twisted by human rebellion Genesis 11.27-50.24 5 toledoths Israel Theme: Promise of blessing (Gen 12:2-3 etc.) repeated throughout account

  6. Relating Gen 2-11 and 12-50: Abraham and Israel for the sake of the world The whole primeval history . . . seems to break off in shrill dissonance, and the question . . . arises even more urgently: Is God s relationship to the nations now finally broken; is God s gracious forbearance now exhausted; has God rejected the nations in wrath forever? That is the burdensome question that no thoughtful reader of ch. 11 can avoid; indeed, one can say that our narrator intended by means of the whole plan of his primeval history to raise precisely this question and to pose it in all its severity. Only then is the reader properly prepared to take up the strangely new thing that now follows the comfortless story about the building of the tower: the election and blessing of Abraham. We stand here, therefore, at the point where primeval history and sacred history dovetail, and thus at one of the most important places in the entire Old Testament. (G. Von Rad)

  7. Approaching Genesis 1 Genesis 1.1-2.3: Preface for whole story of Genesis While 2.4-3.24 initiates that story [of his dealings with mankind and with the fathers of Israel] . . . 1.1-2.3 sets it within its fundamental theological, cosmological, and anthropological context. . . . It supplies the fundamental view of God, humanity, and world within which alone the subsequent narrative makes sense. (J. Stek) The reason why this chapters is at the beginning of the Bible is so that all of God s subsequent actions his dealings with humankind, the history of his people, the election and the covenant may be seen against the broader canvas of his work in creation. (C. Westermann)

  8. Approaching Genesis 1 Genesis 1.1-2.3: Preface for whole story of Genesis Two cautions: Ways modern people think of creation vs. way ancient near eastern people think of creation Human society and culture is focus vs. physical world Made known by drama or story about origin of human life vs. scientific account

  9. Story about human life In religious cosmologies the primary focus is on describing the cosmos from the point of view of what assumptions are necessary if human beings are to live optimally in the world and so include a value judgment about what living optimally is. However, the physical and biological scientific enterprise is principally directed to describing and making models of or hypotheses about nature, and so empirical reference and feedback are its main aim; it does not place human concerns at the centre of its attention and intention. (A. Peacock)

  10. 1.1-2.3 as backdrop to Genesis God is God of all nations; creator of all peoples, the whole world; God is God unlike any of the gods of the nations; King and creation is his kingdom

  11. God creates his kingdom Creative words portrayed as royal decrees God names day, night, sky, land, seas God assigns spheres of rule to sun and moon God s plan to create man is in royal court Humankind considered vice-regent Kingdom: God ruling over all creation including the whole breadth of human cultural and societal life. (cf. Mark 1.14-15)

  12. 1.1-2.3 as backdrop to Genesis God is God of all nations; creator of all peoples, the whole world; God is God unlike any of the gods of the nations; King and creation is his kingdom Focus is creation of human beings to develop society/culture/community that images God (1.26-28)

  13. Creation and human society To the ancients, human society organized in a particular place was the emergent. To moderns, on the other hand, creation issues in the physical world, typically the planet fixed in the solar system. Community and culture do not come into consideration. If life is discussed in connection with creation, it is usually life in the most primitive biological sense. (R. Clifford) The natural world, the realm of human conduct, and the organizational structures of society, were all believed to lie within this one sustaining order of wisdom that had been laid down at the creation of the universe. (R. Clements)

  14. Human culture, creation order, wisdom Ancient near east would see all of human society and culture as part of creation . . . underlying all human cultural activity is a substrate of created reality which both makes possible that activity and sets normative standards for it. (A. Wolters) To conform to those normative standards for economics, politics, etc. is wisdom . . . wisdom . . . was wrought into the constitution of the universe and human wisdom is ethical conformity to God s creation. (J. Fleming)

  15. Creation as home for humankind World created as habitable for humanity to live in . . . the world becomes habitable for human beings; man, male and female, stands for society in nuce. (R. Clifford)

  16. Literary Structure of Genesis 1 Stage One In the beginning God created the heaven and the earth. The earth was dark, formless, and empty

  17. Very Good Cosmos Stage Two: Gen. 1.3-2.3 Darkness banished by creation of light (day 1) Formlessness removed by creation of sky, dry land and seas (days 2-3) Emptiness remedied by creation of creatures to dwell in four areas (days 4-6) Accomplished by commands of God Powerful word Good word Wise word Then humanity created as climax

  18. Literary Structure of Genesis 1 Stage Two: Gen. 1:3-2:3 Forming Filling Commands Day Creation Commands Day Creation 1 (v. 3) Light 1 5 (v. 14) 4 Sun, moon, stars 2 (v. 6) Sky 2 6 (v. 20) 5 Birds & fish 3 (v. 9) Land & seas 3 7 (v. 24) Animals 6 4 (v. 11) Vegetation 8 (v. 26) Humankind 7 God rested

  19. Genesis 1 and book of Genesis Genesis 1: World way God intended it to be Genesis 2-11: World as humankind/nations corrupted it Genesis 12-50: Way God intends to fix it through community

  20. How did God intend world to be? World Creation of God Very good Ordered by God s word Climax: Humanity at centre as vice-regents to rule and develop world into society and culture reflecting God s image Humankind Created to know/enjoy/respond to glorious Creator God As they care for, discover, and develop creation as stewards In community Develop society, culture All for the revelation of God s glory

  21. Cultural context Moses concerns were exclusively religious. His intent was to proclaim knowledge of the true God as he manifested himself in his creative works, to proclaim a right understanding of humankind, the world, and history that knowledge of the true God entails and to proclaim the truth concerning these matters in the face of the false religious notions dominant throughout the world of his day. (John Stek)

  22. Genesis 1: Challenge to or polemic against pagan stories

  23. Genesis One Pagan myths God gods vs. humanity humanity vs. world world vs.

  24. Creation as kingdom of God God world King realm subjects vice-regents decrees creatures humanity word

  25. Genesis 1: Challenge to or polemic against pagan stories Teaching about God, human beings, world, history To be sure, the function of Genesis 1 is not exclusively polemic . . . But an attentive reading of the whole against the background of the several myths of the ancient Near East discloses a view of God, humanity, and the world that, whatever its more or less incidental affinities with conceptions abroad in Israel s environment, stands in striking opposition to almost all that those religions had in common. (Stek)

  26. Rich teaching of Genesis 1 Genesis 1: doctrine in narrative mode . . .that is both consistent with all the accounts of creation in the ancient world and appropriate to the function of Genesis 1 as prologue to a narrative of God s engagements in human history. All the myths of creation which may have been known by the author were, in fact doctrine in the form of stories (Stek) Whoever expounds Gen., ch. 1, must understand one thing: this chapter is . . . doctrine. It is so rich in meaning that it cannot be easily over-interpreted theologically. (Von Rad)

  27. Conclusions for today Genesis 12-50 tells the first part of a story that will continue throughout the rest of the Bible and finds its centre in Jesus in which God acts to restore his creation. Genesis 1 teaches much about God, human life, world

  28. Conclusions for today Genesis 12-50 tells the first part of a story that will continue throughout the rest of the Bible and finds its centre in Jesus in which God acts to restore his creation. Genesis 1 teaches us much about God, human life, world Genesis 1 (and 2) shows us God s original intention for his creation. A weak doctrine of creation subverts Christian life Creation meant to be a good home for human beings Human culture and society is central to God s creational purpose Creation is good when human beings conform themselves to God s word/order or live under decree of King in all aspects of their communal lives (wisdom) Creation includes human society, institutions, culture, etc. and not just non-human creation.

  29. Conclusions for today Genesis tells the first part of a story in which God acts to restore his creation. Genesis 1 teaches much about God, humanity and the world Genesis 1 (and 2) shows us God s original intention for his creation. Genesis 3-11 shows us how human rebellion has polluted, twisted, distorted, corrupted God s world especially human society and culture. Often minimize gravity, scope, and power of human sin Scope: idolatry; Rom 1.18ff.

  30. Corporate idolatry Basic sin of idolatry . . . all sin is an expression of the basic sin of idolatry, of putting something else in the place of God. (Paul Marshall) Pauline analysis of Roman culture (Romans 1.18-32) Worshiped and served created things : Communal and cultural pursuit of idolatry God gave them over : God gives over culture to its idolatry

  31. Conclusions for today Genesis tells the first part of a story in which God acts to restore his creation. Genesis 1 teaches us much about God, human life, world Genesis 1 (and 2) shows us God s original intention for his creation. Genesis 3-11 shows us how human rebellion has polluted, twisted, distorted, corrupted God s world especially human society and culture. God chooses a community to embody his original intention for the sake of the nations. To embody God s original intention for human life Across the spectrum of human culture/society

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