Hi Talker,
I took Hebrew in seminary and studied Genesis in particular. From what I've learned, Genesis 1 and 2 do indeed have two different creation stories with conflicting details
The stories were probably written centuries apart, chapter 2 being older and quainter (God is portrayed like an glorified man with Adam in the garden, and he seems a little dense, not being able to figure out the animals wouldn't be a suitable companion for Adam. The woman is plan B!)
When reading the Hebrew scriptures one cannot be too literal. The Hebrews were into story and metaphor to reveal truth.
Chapter 2 climaxes with the man and woman becoming "one flesh". That is the point of the story. It answers the question of why marriage is special. God ordained it and it's grounded in creation. In both chapters, it's not the (conflicting) details of creation that matter, but the point that each chapter is trying to make. With much of the Hebrew Scripture you have to "Think Hebrew" which means thinking story or parable. Jesus and the later rabbis carried on the tradition with their parables. When Jesus told the story of the Prodigal Son in Luke 15, the question was not did this story really happen?" but what does it mean?
Blessings, DH
Hi DH,
Makes sense, sounds good, and you covered it nicely. Liked your "think Hebrew", comment, as that is how I approach most hard to comprehend reads, by trying on the writers hat. Just never thought to do the same with a Hebrew hat. Or would it be yarmulke, under certain conditions?
Be Well