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Stefan Stenudd           Author, Artist, Aikido instructor
MYTH
Myth of Creation
The Logics of Myth
Psychoanalysis of Myth
Genesis 1: The first creation of the Bible
Enuma Elish: Babylonian Creation
Cosmos of the Ancients
Aristotle - life and work
Aristotle's Poetics
Ideas and learning
The Taoist source
About the writer

GENESIS 1
The first creation of the Bible

1 Genesis 1
2 The seven days
3 Good for man
4 Commentaries
5 Augustine of Hippo
6 Martin Luther
7 Some conclusions

Books by Stefan Stenudd:
Cosmos of the Ancients, by Stefan Stenudd.
COSMOS OF THE ANCIENTS
The Greek philosophers' theories about the gods, the myths, and cosmology.
More about the book here.


Murder, by Stefan Stenudd.
MURDER
Thoughts on life, death, and the meaning of it all - by Stefan Stenudd.
More about the book here.


All's End, by Stefan Stenudd.
ALL'S END
A science fiction novel by Stefan Stenudd, about the quest for a perfect world.
More about the book here.


QI - increase your life energy.
QI
Increase your life energy
The book about the life energy qi, with exercises on how to awaken and use it.
Get the book at Amazon.

Aikido - the book by Stefan Stenudd.
AIKIDO
The Peaceful Martial Art
The book about aikido principles, philosophy and basic concepts.
Get the book at Amazon.

Aikibatto - the book.
AIKIBATTO
The book about the aikibatto sword and staff exercises, practical and spiritual aspects of the sword arts, equip­ment for training, etc.
Get the book at Amazon.



Genesis 1








The first creation of the Bible.
This article was originally written for a seminar at the Department of History of Ideas and Learning, Lund University, as a part of my dissertation in progress on creation myths and their patterns of thought. Transforming the text to webpages, I have excluded footnotes, or edited them into the text.

7   Some conclusions



Both Augustine and Martin Luther have as their main perspective on Genesis 1 that it must confirm their faith, in all of its details. They accept that there are confusing elements that they are unable to explain, but they refuse to settle for sometimes obvious solutions, which challenge their Christian beliefs in any way. The text is the truth, in their minds, so they just have to try to figure that unquestionable truth out.
     Without this prerequisite, a reading of Genesis 1 hints at other explanations. The plural Elohim, supported also with some of the verb forms, strongly indicates that the root of this creation myth is to be found in some kind of polytheism. More gods than one were at the scene, when the world was created. This is quite plausible, since it is the case with most creation myths – also the ones being the closest to Genesis 1 in place and time. Monotheism is extremely rare, and almost as rare is a world creation taking place with only one god present. Gods are usually the first to appear and to multiply. This seems to have been the case also with whatever cosmogony Genesis 1 is based on.

King James Bible 1611
The title page of the first edition of the King James Bible, 1611.

     Since the process described in Genesis 1 is leading up to the creation of man, who is to rule and use just about all that was created beforehand, this is likely to be the part of a possibly more complex cosmogony – that part which tells the story of how man and his world appeared. Another part, lost or edited out along the way, may have described the appearance of gods, and the design of their domain.
     The distant and impersonal nature of the gods, Elohim, and the undramatic way in which mankind is created, indicates a mythology where the gods have a world of their own, and where they are rather indifferent to the appearance and continued adventures of human beings. This is quite a common setting in mythologies. The divine world is one of enough tidings and drama to keep the gods occupied, without their need to interfere the least with human affairs.
     The continued interaction between Jahve in Genesis 2 and mankind, seems way out of character for Elohim of Genesis 1, who has a very detached way of igniting the process of creation. It seems to be rather automatic after the very first act – that of bringing light to the world. Light separates the sky from the sea, its heat removes water and exposes land, and it is the main force in making life emerge from the sea, the air, and the earth.
     This initial step of bringing light is the most characteristic ingredient of Genesis 1, and a spectacular opening at that. The seemingly endless chaos of darkness and a primordial ocean is suddenly interrupted by light, like dawn repaints the landscape afore the naked eye. Each dawn the world is recreated, in as much as it again manifests itself. Each dusk the primordial dark chaos returns. This is a very ancient way of seeing the cyclic order of creation. And the creator god can have been none other, originally, than the sun.

Let there be light! Illustration by Gustave Doré.
"Let there be light!" Bible illustration by Gustave Doré, 1866.

     The mode of creation by ordering it is also quite characteristic for Genesis 1, not even recognizable in its sibling Genesis 2. "Let there be" can be seen as expressing a wish, but it also implies passivity. This god is not making the world as much as observing while it emerges. He wishes it, it happens, he watches it, and he is pleased. This is quite near the role of the spectator, and very far from the craftsman of Genesis 2 and most other creation stories. This detachment and passivity would make more sense if Elohim were just witnessing a process going on by itself within nature.
     Mainly, the distanced and detached process of Genesis 1 makes it clear why the Bible needed another creation story, with passion, drama, and personal interactions – that of Genesis 2. A people would find it very hard indeed to feel chosen and defined, with just Genesis 1 as the story of their coming into being.

GENESIS 1
The first creation of the Bible

1 Genesis 1
2 The seven days
3 Good for man
4 Commentaries
5 Augustine of Hippo
6 Martin Luther
7 Some conclusions


© Stefan Stenudd



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Cosmos of the Ancients, a book by Stefan Stenudd. Cosmos of the Ancients
This book tells what the Greek philosophers thought about the myths, the gods, and cosmos. What they lacked in scientific knowledge, they compensated with brilliant reasoning. Written by Stefan Stenudd.
Get the book at Amazon.

More about the book here.

Stefan Stenudd
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Tao Te Ching - the Taoist source.
TAOIST SOURCE
The Taoist source. The complete Tao Te Ching and Chuang Tzu.


More on this website:
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Greek Philosophers
Aristotle and his Poetics
The Taoist source
Qi - life energy
Fiction by Stenudd
Art by Stenudd
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