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Harrelson, Walter Genesis to Revelation ISBN 13: 9781501848315

Genesis to Revelation - Softcover

 
9781501848315: Genesis to Revelation

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Genesis to Revelation: Genesis Participant Book

By Walter Harrelson

Abingdon Press

Copyright © 2017 Abingdon Press
All rights reserved.
ISBN: 978-1-5018-4831-5

Contents

1. Creation (Genesis 1–3),
2. Cain and Abel (Genesis 4–5),
3. The Flood (Genesis 6–8),
4. Noah and His Descendants (Genesis 9–11),
5. Abraham Settles in Canaan (Genesis 12–15),
6. Abraham Speaks With God (Genesis 16–19),
7. Abraham and His Descendants (Genesis 20–24),
8. Esau and Jacob (Genesis 25–27),
9. Jacob and Laban (Genesis 28–31),
10. Jacob in Canaan (Genesis 32–36),
11. Joseph's Journey to Egypt (Genesis 37–41),
12. Joseph and His Brothers (Genesis 42–45),
13. Jacob and His Family Reunited (Genesis 46–50),
Glossary of Terms,


CHAPTER 1

CREATION

Genesis 1–3


DIMENSION ONE: WHAT DOES THE BIBLE SAY?

Answer these questions by reading Genesis 1

1. Who creates the heavens and the earth? (Genesis 1:1)

2. What is the earth like when God begins creating? (Genesis 1:2)

3. What does God create on each of the first six days?

Day What God creates on this day

One (Genesis 1:3-5)
Two (Genesis 1:6-8)
Three (Genesis 1:9-13)
Four (Genesis 1:14-19)
Five (Genesis 1:20-23)
Six (Genesis 1:24-27)

4. What does God command the first creatures to do? (Genesis 1:22)

5. What position do the human beings occupy in creation? (Genesis 1:28)

6. After God creates the human beings on the sixth day, what does God think of creation? (Genesis 1:31)


Answer these questions by reading Genesis 2

7. What does God do to the seventh day? Why? (Genesis 2:3)

8. From what does God make the first man? How does God give the man life? (Genesis 2:7)

9. Where does God put the man? (Genesis 2:8)

10. What command does God give the man when God places him in the garden? What will happen if the man disobeys the command? (Genesis 2:16-17)

11. When God decides that it is not good for the man to be alone, what does God do first? (Genesis 2:18-19)

12. From what does God make the first woman? (Genesis 2:21-22)

13. According to God's instructions, what takes place when a man and woman unite? (Genesis 2:24)


Answer these questions by reading Genesis 3

14. What does the serpent tempt the woman to do? (Genesis 3:1-5)

15. What knowledge comes to the man and the woman when they eat the fruit? (Genesis 3:7)

16. When they hear the sound of God in the garden, what do they do? (Genesis 3:8)

17. Whom does God question first? (Genesis 3:9)

18. What does God do to the serpent who tempted the woman? (Genesis 3:14)

19. What is the woman's punishment? (Genesis 3:16)

20. What is the man's punishment? (Genesis 3:17-19)

21. What does God make for the man and the woman before sending them out of the garden? (Genesis 3:21)


DIMENSION TWO: WHAT DOES THE BIBLE MEAN?

* Genesis 1:1. We can translate the opening sentence of the Bible in many different ways. The New International Version translates it, "In the beginning God created the heavens and the earth." Other translations attempt to show the dynamism of this act. The New English Bible translates, "In the beginning of creation, when God made heaven and earth." The 1985 English edition of Tanakh: The Holy Scriptures, published by the Jewish Publication Society, reads, "When God began to create heaven and earth." These translations show us that Creation is something dynamic. God introduces a process that begins with Creation.

* Genesis 1:2. The second verse shows us that God calls into being a swirling, watery chaos — lacking all order and capacity for sustaining life. The Hebrew word translated "the deep" refers to this watery chaos that exists before God speaks and begins the process of establishing the creation as we know it.

* Genesis 1:3. The first act of Creation is the commanding word that light appear. This appearance of light, before God creates the sun, troubles many readers. The ancient Israelites distinguished between the light of day and the light of the sun. After all, they observed that on cloudy days, when the sun was not shining, light was still visible. So the sun was not the same thing as day, but was a characteristic of the daytime. The sun distinguished between day and night.

* Genesis 1:5. You may find it difficult to imagine God's making the whole creation in only six days. Through the centuries, many interpreters have thought that the length of the day at the time of Creation was much longer than the twenty-four hours of our day. That thought seems highly improbable. The Hebrew writer was thinking of a day of the usual length, beginning at sunset and ending at sunset on the following day. The fact that God created the world in less than a week is one way of showing God's remarkable power.

* Genesis 1:6-10. The early Israelite and most of the people of the ancient Near East envisioned the world as an inverted bowl. This bowl separated the heavens from the earth and the underworld. The earth rested upon pillars that extended down into the deep waters below earth. This same firmament or "expanse" kept the swirling waters in the heavens from flooding the earth.

* Genesis 1:26. The phrase, "Let us make man in our image" gives interpreters difficulty. Surely, God is not speaking of other gods who assist him in the Creation; that would be polytheism. Other commentators suggest that this phrase refers to the Trinity. Of the many explanations offered, the best one seems to be that God is surrounded by beings who do his bidding. They make up the divine assembly in the heavens. We read about this divine assembly in Chapter 1 of Job and in Psalm 82.

* Genesis 2:4. Did you notice that Genesis 1 uses the general name God? But beginning with 2:4 the text speaks of the LORD God. These two terms, Lord and God, combine two ways of referring to God that we shall meet often in the Book of Genesis. The word translated "the Lord" is the ancient personal name for the deity, which in Hebrew is Yahweh. The other word is the general term for God, which in Hebrew is Elohim. A combination of the two is unusual, and it may point to two different traditions about the Creation that have been woven together. The combination Yahweh Elohim ("the Lord God") is not used after Genesis 3.

* Genesis 2:8-14. The word Eden means "delight" or "garden of God." In verses 10 through 14 the four rivers probably are the Nile, the Tigris, the Euphrates, and (less certainly) the Ganges in India.

* Genesis 2:20. In ancient Israel, to name something defined and fixed its nature and character. Names expressed the essential features of that which was named. In giving the man the ability to name, God also gives the power to define and fix the very nature of these creatures of earth.

* Genesis 3:24. The cherubim placed at the east of the garden to guard the tree of life were winged creatures that belonged to God's heavenly council. The word is plural. We do not know how many stood guard over Eden.


DIMENSION THREE: WHAT DOES THE BIBLE MEAN TO ME?

Dimension Three provides three major ideas that have meaning for our lives today.


Genesis 1:1–2:3 — The Bible and Science

Relating the findings of science to the Creation story in Genesis puzzles many persons. Often persons too easily say either that Genesis 1 has nothing to do with science because it is a religious story, or that the story of Creation in the Bible contradicts the findings of modern science. Neither is quite right.

The Genesis story is good science for the time in which it was written. It explains how the world as we know it came into being at the bidding of a preexisting reality. The Genesis story shows that everything in all the world draws its being from, and has its continued existence through, God's action. Scientific explanations of the development of life on our planet or within our solar system correspond fairly well with the biblical story.

The Genesis story is not in basic conflict with scientific theories because the Bible's account focuses on God's relationship to his creation. The story is one of fundamental religious significance, born in faith and nurtured in faith. Have you had difficulty reconciling the biblical account of Creation with scientific theories?

"God saw all that he had made, and it was very good" (Genesis 1:31). What does this sentence say about our world? What does it say about God's relationship to our world? What does it say about the people in our world? What does it say about you?


Genesis 2:4-17 — Personal Relationship With God

As you read Genesis 2:4-17, you probably realized that this account of Creation differs from the one in Genesis 1. Many biblical scholars think the stories were written by two different persons or groups, each stressing particular features of the story of Creation. Perhaps a third group or individual combined the two stories. If this is the case, the present accounts of Creation found in the two chapters of Genesis give two important aspects of the Creation, each valuable in its own right. Genesis 1 tells the story in an orderly and measured way, giving great attention to detail. Genesis 2 gives us a more intimate picture of the first human pair and the ideal life they initially had with God in the garden.

But both stories are examples of sublime faith in the living God, the source and ground of life and its meaning. Both stories also place human beings at the center of God's concern and show that God lays a great responsibility upon the human community. We are to care for the whole of God's universe. The human being is responsible to God in a unique way. What insights into your personal relationship with God do you gain from Genesis 2:4-17 that you did not gain from Genesis 1–2:3?


Genesis 3 — Original Sin

Genesis 3 tells how sin comes into the world. What is the sin of the woman and the man? The Hebrew text of Genesis 3:6 reads "she also gave some to her husband, who was with her." The serpent tempts the woman, and the man who stands with her is tempted at the same time and in the same way. Human history begins with temptation in this account. Genesis 3 does not explain the origin of sin. It does relate sin to realities outside us (the serpent), and also to realities within our minds and hearts. Sin arises from without us and from within us. It affects us all.

Many persons throughout the history of the Christian church believed that Adam's sin infected the whole of history thereafter. Does the Genesis story support this idea? If so, how does the sin of the first human pair affect later generations? How do we transmit sin?

The best explanation of the mystery of sin seems to be that every generation and every individual re-enacts the first sin. Each generation begins with the same gracious God that we see in Genesis 3. The story in Genesis 3 helps us see how sin is the free act of the first human pair, yet at the same time an act that has some of its origin outside the realm of human freedom. The mystery of sin is there, and where people are, sin is. Why do you think the writer of Genesis included this story? How do you interpret the story of Eden, of life in the garden?

CHAPTER 2

CAIN AND ABEL

Genesis 4–5


DIMENSION ONE: WHAT DOES THE BIBLE SAY?

Answer these questions by reading Genesis 4

1. What are the names of Adam and Eve's two sons? (Genesis 4:1-2)

2. What are the occupations of these two sons? (Genesis 4:2)

3. Whose sacrifice does God reject? (Genesis 4:5)

4. Who kills whom? (Genesis 4:8)

5. What does Cain say to God about his brother? (Genesis 4:9)

6. What does God do to Cain? (Genesis 4:11-12)

7. How does God protect Cain? (Genesis 4:15)

8. What is the name of Adam and Eve's third son? (Genesis 4:25)


Answer these questions by reading Genesis 5

9. How old is Adam when Seth is born? (Genesis 5:3)

10. Excluding Abel, who lives for the shortest number of years? (Genesis 5:23)

11. Who walks with God? (Genesis 5:22, 24)

12. Who is the oldest person to live before the Flood? (Genesis 5:27)


DIMENSION TWO: WHAT DOES THE BIBLE MEAN?

* Genesis 4:1. The name Cain in Hebrew resembles the verb qanah in sound. Qanah means to create or produce. However, this verse does more than explain that the Lord assists in the birth. The story of Cain's birth makes the point that the Lord intervenes to make this birth possible. At the time of birth, women often selected a name for the child that expressed their gratitude for God's gift of a child. This gratitude reflected in name choice was especially the case when the parents finally conceived after a long period of barrenness.

In the second part of verse 1, the writer uses the name for God that the NIV (New International Version) translates as "the Lord." In ancient times the Hebrew word was Yahweh. In Exodus 3:13-15 and Exodus 6:28, God tells Moses this personal name. Moses is to use the name of Yahweh, or the Lord, in calling the Hebrews out of Egypt. Some scholars think that early Israelites told differing stories as to when Israel's God was first called by this personal name.

In Genesis 1, we find the general name for God — Elohim. Most of Chapters 2 and 3 combine the general name and the personal name. Genesis 4:1 uses the personal name alone for the first time as Eve expresses her gratitude to God for allowing her to bring forth a son.

* Genesis 4:3-7. This brief story of the first sacrifices to God does not explain why either Cain or Abel make sacrifices. They are not commanded to do so, but make a free offering of their goods to God. Abel is a shepherd, and thus he offers an animal from the flock. Cain is a farmer, and naturally he makes an offering from his crops. The background of this story of the first act of worship by human beings may be the conflict between the life of the farmer and the life of the shepherd. Cain and Abel are much more than individuals here. They stand for two ways of life — the life of the settled agriculturist and the life of the roaming shepherd.

* Genesis 4:9. "Am I my brother's keeper?" is an insolent statement by Cain that plays upon Abel's vocation as a shepherd. We might translate the expression to read, "Am I to shepherd the shepherd?"

* Genesis 4:15. We do not know what kind of mark God puts on Cain. It was probably a tribal mark to identify Cain as belonging to the Lord in some special way. Most importantly, this mark signifies God's protection of Cain from harm.

* Genesis 4:17. The Bible does not tell us where Cain finds a wife. This account indicates that God creates other families after the creation of Adam and Eve and the birth of Cain and Abel. Late Jewish and Christian traditions assumed that Adam and Eve had daughters, whom the sons married.

* Genesis 4:17-26. The genealogy that appears at the end of Chapter 4 is quite similar to the longer genealogy in Chapter 5. These genealogies give us important information about the ancient Near Eastern world. They do not talk simply about individuals, but about peoples — about divisions of time. The king lists from the ancient Near East also divide the world into such lists. In these lists, the kings are said to have lived for staggeringly long periods of time. Some of these Mesopotamian lists show kings to have ruled for 72,000 years!

This genealogy follows the ancient pattern of identifying ten generations before the coming of the great Flood. For Genesis, those ten were (to fill out the list in Chapter 5): Adam, Seth, Enosh, Kenan, Mahalalel, Jared, Enoch, Methuselah, Methushael, Lamech, and Noah. Several of the Mesopotamian lists give ten pre-Flood kings.

* Genesis 5. The long genealogies of Chapter 5 account for the entire period of time that elapses from the beginning of the Creation until the Flood. If we count the year of Creation as year one, then the Flood begins in the year 1656, which is the year of the death of Methuselah. Noah is 600 years old when the Flood begins. He is the only ancestor listed in these genealogies of Genesis 4 and 5 who is still alive at the time of the Flood.

The two genealogies — one in Chapter 4 and one in Chapter 5 — show that the writer had some knowledge of the ancient Near Eastern world. But the lists are certainly not simply borrowed from older Mesopotamian lists. These genealogies show the continuity from Adam and Eve through Cain and his wife. The sin of the first two generations marks the later generations, but they do their own sinning, as we will soon learn.

Of this entire list of ancestors who live before the Flood, only Enoch is faithful to the will of God — and Enoch lives for the shortest number of years! Enoch is an object of fascination in later tradition. The fact that he walks with God, and that God takes him (apparently without his dying) means that Enoch has a special opportunity to learn about the heavens, about the universe and its operations, and about life beyond the grave. Enoch is a central figure in much of the literature written between the Old Testament and the New Testament (from about 200 BC to AD 100).


(Continues...)
Excerpted from Genesis to Revelation: Genesis Participant Book by Walter Harrelson. Copyright © 2017 Abingdon Press. Excerpted by permission of Abingdon Press.
All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site.

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