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Author's Bias | Interpretation: conservative | Inclination: dispensational | Seminary: none
The Creation narrative is an example of the ancient Hebrew literary style of repetition. Instead of duplicate accounts, these
two narratives are complementary. Genesis 1 is an outline of creation events and ends
with the climax of man who was created in the likeness of God. Genesis 2 is more specific
with the details of man, his original state, his home, and his helper. And in establishing man's sinless original state, the account sets
up the coming sin and Fall of man.
When examining the structure of Genesis 1, a complete literary unit is seen with
parallelism.
A. Introduction (Gen 1:1-2)
B. Creation of light; 1st day (Gen 1:3-5)
C. Creation of sea and sky; 2nd day (Gen 1:6-8)
D. Creation of dry land and plants; 3rd day (Gen 1:9-13)
B'. Creation of sun and moon; 4th day (Gen 1:14-19)
C'. Creation of birds and fish; 5th day (Gen 1:20-23)
D'. Creation of land animals that eat plants; 6th day (Gen 1:24-31)
A'. Epilogue: God's rest; 7th day (Gen 2:1-3)
This literary unit begins with an introduction and ends with an epilogue. The creation of light is paralleled with the
creation of the sun and moon. The creation of the sea and sky is paralleled with the creation of birds and fish. And the creation of dry
land and plants is paralleled with the creation of land animals that eat plants. The account is a structurally complete narrative.
The presence of the tôledôt suggests that the Genesis 2 account was not designed
to be a narrative account of creation. Instead of a duplicate account, it appears to be a repetition of
Genesis 1 to emphasize the details of man and his creation. And another parallelism
in the form of a chiasm can be seen:
A. Man, placed in the garden, is prohibited from the fruit of the tree of the knowledge of good and evil
(Gen 2:8-17)
B. Woman is created and the first humans are naked and unashamed (Gen 2:18-25)
The Sin and Fall (Gen 3:1-19)
B'. Woman is named Eve and the first humans are naked and ashamed (Gen 3:20-21)
A'. Man is forced from the garden, because he disobeyed the prohibition (Gen 3:22-24)
The purpose of the chiasm is to call attention to the real and theological impact of the Original Sin.
The structural design and literary beauty of Genesis 1 and 2 suggest that this is a purposeful and single Creation account told in
parallel and complementary passages; it is not two accounts told by two different authors as proposed by destructive critics.
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