Difference between revisions of "Two Accounts of Creation: Bereshit 1–2/2/en"
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<h1>Two Accounts of Creation</h1> | <h1>Two Accounts of Creation</h1> | ||
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<point><b>Commands to man: to conquer or to guard??</b> Chapter 2 which focuses on man's life once he moves into the Garden includes the specific instructions related to the garden.  Such directives have no place in the general account of Chapter 1 which, instead, includes the timeless command to multiply and subdue the earth.</point> | <point><b>Commands to man: to conquer or to guard??</b> Chapter 2 which focuses on man's life once he moves into the Garden includes the specific instructions related to the garden.  Such directives have no place in the general account of Chapter 1 which, instead, includes the timeless command to multiply and subdue the earth.</point> | ||
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<point><b>Names of Hashem</b><ul> | <point><b>Names of Hashem</b><ul> | ||
<li>Radak, following <multilink><a href="BereshitRabbah13-13" data-aht="source">Bereshit Rabbah</a><a href="BereshitRabbah13-13" data-aht="source">13:1,3</a><a href="Bereshit Rabbah" data-aht="parshan">About Bereshit Rabbah</a></multilink>, suggests that throughout Chapter 1, when creation was not yet complete, God's full name is not used.  Only in Chapter 2, when the entire world exists, does the narrator use Hashem's full name.<fn>Radak also points to Ibn Ezra who explains similarly, that only with the epitome of creation, the formation of man and his soul, is the full name of Hashem used.  He also points out that since Hashem created via his angels, the creations in Chapter 1 are attributed to them, using the noun "אֱלֹהִים" (which can refer to Hashem's messengers).</fn></li> | <li>Radak, following <multilink><a href="BereshitRabbah13-13" data-aht="source">Bereshit Rabbah</a><a href="BereshitRabbah13-13" data-aht="source">13:1,3</a><a href="Bereshit Rabbah" data-aht="parshan">About Bereshit Rabbah</a></multilink>, suggests that throughout Chapter 1, when creation was not yet complete, God's full name is not used.  Only in Chapter 2, when the entire world exists, does the narrator use Hashem's full name.<fn>Radak also points to Ibn Ezra who explains similarly, that only with the epitome of creation, the formation of man and his soul, is the full name of Hashem used.  He also points out that since Hashem created via his angels, the creations in Chapter 1 are attributed to them, using the noun "אֱלֹהִים" (which can refer to Hashem's messengers).</fn></li> | ||
<li>Cassuto asserts that the name Elohim is a general term used to refer to God while Hashem is His proper name. Thus, in the general description of the material world the more distant term, "Elohim" is used.  In the detailed description of His personal interaction with Adam, the proper name "Hashem" is used.<fn>Cassuto suggests that Chapter 2 does not suffice with "Hashem" but combines the terms "Hashem-Elohim" to teach the reader that the two are one and the same.</fn></li> | <li>Cassuto asserts that the name Elohim is a general term used to refer to God while Hashem is His proper name. Thus, in the general description of the material world the more distant term, "Elohim" is used.  In the detailed description of His personal interaction with Adam, the proper name "Hashem" is used.<fn>Cassuto suggests that Chapter 2 does not suffice with "Hashem" but combines the terms "Hashem-Elohim" to teach the reader that the two are one and the same.</fn></li> | ||
</ul></point> | </ul></point> | ||
− | <point><b>Verbs Used (עשה/ברא versus יצר)</b></point> | + | <point><b>Verbs Used (עשה/ברא versus יצר)</b> – This position would likely not attribute any significance to the differene</point> |
+ | <point><b>Creation via speech?</b></point> | ||
</category> | </category> | ||
<category name="">Two Facets of Creation | <category name="">Two Facets of Creation |
Version as of 05:34, 18 June 2015
Two Accounts of Creation
Exegetical Approaches
Literary Device
The repetition of the creation story with its varying details is a literary device in which the Torah first presents a general overview and then proceeds to speak in more detail about important individual components.
- Man: first or last? Since the entire purpose of retelling the creation story in Chapter 2 is to move into a discussion of Adam and the particulars that relate to him alone, this account veers from the true order and begins by telling of his creation.
- Vegetation: before or after man?
- Rashi, following R. Asi in Bavli Chulin, harmonizes the two accounts by suggesting that the vegetation appeared on the earth on day three, but did not grow until after man's creation on day six.1
- Cassuto suggests instead that most vegetation was created before man, as described in Chapter 1. Chapter 2:5 is speaking only about very specific plants (שִׂיחַ הַשָּׂדֶה and עֵשֶׂב הַשָּׂדֶה) that were created afterwards. These terms refer to wheat and barley, which were only necessary after man sinned and could no longer benefit from the Garden of Eden. As Chapter 2 leads into the story of the sin, this fact is mentioned now.2
- Animals: before or after man? Radak explains that the word "וַיִּצֶר" in verse 19 refers not to the present creation of the animals but what Hashem had already done in Chapter 1.3 The fact is simply repeated to introduce Adam's naming of them.
- Radak, following Bereshit Rabbah, suggests that throughout Chapter 1, when creation was not yet complete, God's full name is not used. Only in Chapter 2, when the entire world exists, does the narrator use Hashem's full name.4
- Cassuto asserts that the name Elohim is a general term used to refer to God while Hashem is His proper name. Thus, in the general description of the material world the more distant term, "Elohim" is used. In the detailed description of His personal interaction with Adam, the proper name "Hashem" is used.5
Two Facets of Creation
The two chapters describe different aspects of the same creation. Since man and the world at large have contradictory, but nonetheless, coexisting facets, each aspect of the world is spoken of separately. This appraoch has been developed in two similar, but distinct ways:
Creative and Majestic Man vs. the Man of Faith
Chapter 1 focuses on man in his creative capacity and his search for dignity through control over his environment while Chapter 2 describes the submissive man of faith and his search for redemption. As each prototype approaches his surroundings differently, the description of the creation of each and his world differs.
Natural World versus Revelatory World
Chapter 1 depicts the world in its natural state, with God's justice at its core, while Chapter 2 portrays a world of revelation and God's attributes of mercy.
Distinct Events
While Chapter 1 describes the creation of the world and the entire human species, Chapter 2 speaks of a different, later creation, the planting of Gan Eden and the formation of the individual, Adam.
- "כָל מֹצְאִי יַהַרְגֵנִי" – Kayin's lament after his punishment for killing Hevel that "all who will find me will kill me" only makes sense on the backdrop of other existing humans.
- Progeny – If there were no other people in the world besides Adam, Chavvah and their children, whom did Kayin marry and how did he bear children?12
- "וַיְהִי בֹּנֶה עִיר" – After Kayin bears his child, Chanokh, the verse states that he built a city. A city connotes an area inhabited by many, not just Kayin's immediate family.