Sunday, 21 April 2013

Genesis

This is the first chapter in the Eccles Bible project, where we explain the Bible in simple terms to an atheist called Richard, who knows something about science, but does not really understand life.

Big Bang

Let there be light! Genesis 1:3.

Now, I am not taking a fundamentalist everything-is-literally-true or even a sola scriptura approach in this project. And Richard, old man, if you get to the end of my course and become a protestant rather than a catholic, that's fine too. A great improvement on atheism, I can assure you. Indeed, I'm mostly going to be using the King James Bible: I know you think it's a great piece of literature - although mysteriously, your wife tells me that there are lots of holes in your personal copy, where the words God, Jesus, Christ, Heaven, Devil, Sin etc. have been excised with a pair of scissors (and, oddly, the word Rome, too).

Now there are several problems that Richard finds with Genesis, because he assumes it is intended to be read as a completely literal account of events.

God created the world in six days, ending up with man, and - as an improvement - woman.

Stephen Hawking explains everything

Stephen Hawking explains the mathematics behind Genesis, Chapter 1.

Well, it seems that what the authors of Genesis are suggesting is that the universe did come into being, somehow or other, and that gradually different creatures emerged, until one of them became identifiable with the intelligent, thinking, wise beings we see around us today - those who read the Daily Mail and watch Top Gear, and use these media as ways of understanding the deeper mysteries of life.

Top Gear

So God created man in his own image. Genesis 1:27.

Apples, talking snakes, etc. What a load of rubbish!

Now, stop being silly, Richard. The Adam and Eve story as a legend, all to do with Man's attempts to defy the will of God. It does not need to be literally true in every particular to convey a message to us.

Fall of man

Man's downfall. Genesis 3:6.

What's more, although mainstream Christians tend not to believe in the literal truth of a story involving talking snakes, there is no particular reason why a talking snake could not exist - after all, we have talking birds and talking mammals....

gorilla and snake

A talking gorilla (L) and a talking snake (R).

The rest is all primitive stuff about bronze-age goatherds.

Well, we have to admit that several of the characters in Genesis (and there are many interesting ones, such as Abraham, Isaac, Jacob, Joseph, and so forth) would have lived in the bronze age, and some of them would have owned goats. But then, Richard lives in the plastic age and wrote a D.Phil. about chickens, so we don't seem to have moved on significantly.

Let's get on to Jacob, and see what he has to say.

Esau

Behold, Esau my brother is a hairy man, and I am a smooth man. Genesis 27:11.

Well, yes, that's one thing he said, although not necessarily the most important.

Look, I'm a busy man. What is the point of Genesis?

Well, Richard, it's the beginning of Man's story. It shows that people are not perfect, and they commit sins. The best people are trying to understand who God is and what He wants (a question not completely answered to everyone's satisfaction even now). We first encounter Israel - initially an alias for Jacob, but then a name for his many descendants - which will become quite important later on, especially when we get to see God's plans.

Jacob's ladder

Jacob (alias Israel) has an odd dream. Genesis 28:12.

Now you see the problem that Genesis poses for materialists and secularists. First, you have to go for the meaning behind the legends, rather than worrying whether Methuselah literally lived for 969 years or only 96. Second, there are the underlying themes that God is out there and that sometimes we actually do wrong things - even you, Richard. There, there, don't cry, dry your eyes... here's a handkerchief. Now, give us a big blow! Well done.

Richard Dawkins

A fellow of New College, Oxford, discovers that he is a sinner.

Let's take the later part of Genesis as "oral tradition," which someone finally wrote down. It seems probable that Abraham and co. really did exist, and did roughly the things attributed to them. When we eventually get onto the New Testament, we'll see something more in the line of eye-witness accounts, and literal truth will be more important.

So, our story today ends with the people of Israel settling in Egypt. This turns out not to be what they really wanted, but we'll find out more about this when we get on to Exodus.

Egypt

So Joseph died... in Egypt. Genesis 50:26.

15 comments:

  1. darling eccles, I know a hair-dresser and a fews bishes who should sign up to the catechism according to Eccles :) xx Jess

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  2. I suppose Chapter 2 (Exodus) could be dedicated to a different pusson, Jess.

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    1. wot a good idea, darling eccles. I can't wait till we gets to Moses, and when we gets to King David, it may give Richard D some ideas :) xx Jess

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  3. As a Biblical scholar, I can only say, Brava.

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  4. It was never the same after Gabriel left.

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  5. I am pleased you are not taking a "sofa scriptura" approach. The Bible is usually best absorbed in a more uncomfortable position, kneeling at an IKEA prayer desk or sitting on a wooden milking stool. Sofa scriptura is for Tony Blair Islington Catholics.

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  6. Genes is all about our origins. Dawkins is nothing but a little monkey where this is concerned.

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  7. At last! You have produced photographic evidence of first light from Genesis.

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  8. Heresy disguised as humour. For a saved pusson you put very little faith in the inerrant Word of God. Genesis is history. If Adam and Eve was a fable where did original sin come from? +Pell made your mistake in an actual tv debate with Dawkins. Now start again... in the beginning

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    1. As an old joke goes: "It wasn't the apple on the tree but the pair on the ground that caused Original Sin..."

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    2. Creul words, bruvver. I aint tryin to stop anyone believin in de existence of poeple called Adam and Eve. I said "legend" not "fable."
      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Legend

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    3. Bruvver, it was modernist historical critical tripe from start to end. The Holy Ghost inspired the Bible,I can deal with your faux dyslexia if at least your'e authordox.

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    4. Tryin to express it in terms an athiest would understand, bruv. Aint gonna talk about de Holy Ghost until later.

      Come to think of it, perhaps I shuold have started with Relevation and gone backwards? Too late now.

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    5. You could start wiv de throne of de Pop in Relevations, as Bruvver Bosco is at my place - but p'raps that's a bit postmodern? Jess xx

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  9. "Now, stop being silly, Richard. The Adam and Eve story as a legend, all to do with Man's attempts to defy the will of God. It does not need to be literally true in every particular to convey a message to us."

    Fine enough if you mean like conveying truth the way Silmarillion or Narnia books or Divina Commedia do.

    But unlike Dante, Tolkien or CSL, Moses had a perfectly truthful God as principal author and omnipotent redactor. Meaning, God really took care no mistakes were there even about fact in the account.

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