So, this week's passage: Genesis 1:1-2:4.
By the way, there are a couple of places you can find texts online in various translations:
Oremus Bible Browser - New Revised Standard Version, which is what we use in worship, and a couple of others.
Bible Gateway - nearly every other translation, including the New International Version, the New American Standard, the New Living Translation, several older translations, and versions in many other languages.
Now, on to the text...
This is one of the most easily recognizable and oft-referenced passages in the Bible, which means that people tend to have a cultural familiarity with it but often don't really pay much attention to the substance. In addition, it's been somewhat overused (and abused, in my opinion) by those who stake all faith on its literal, historical, and scientific factuality.
Apart from its baggage, I think it's one of the most beautiful and evocative passages in the Bible, full of the poetic cadence of "and it was evening and it was morning..." and the vivid imagery of the world springing to life. It sets up the great, overarching story that is to come. We begin with this picture of the fledgling world, fresh and verdant, where everything is just as it should be - where everything is, as God pronounces it, good.
I'm not sure yet who is out there reading this, but I'd rather get some discussion going than expound on my opinions about the passage. So, a few questions to get us started:
1) How do you see this picture of the world as it comes into being? What images or themes seem especially important?
2) What does this passage suggest to us about God's nature?
3) What does it suggest about God's intent for the world?
4) Where do you see glimmers of this picture of the world in our current world? Where do you see differences?
5) Why do you think this passage is in the Bible? How does it speak to us in our present reality?
The creation/evolution debate also sparks some interesting consideration of whether this passage (and more broadly, the Bible as a whole) is true, what it might mean for it to be true, and what the concept of truth means, especially in relation to Scripture. Perhaps I'm opening Pandora's box with that topic, but we can't really study the Bible without thinking through how we deal with the historical accuracy of the events portrayed in it. So, feel free to comment.
Looking forward to reading what you - whomever you are - might have to say.
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