Purely as a biblical - not scientific - answer, Genesis tells us that the world was pre-existing and uncreated, not that it was already inhabited. Many scholars have examined the Hebrew text and say that Genesis really is telling us that the world was already there when God began his creation.
For more information, please visit: http://christianity.answers.com/theology/the-story-of-creation
Genesis 1:1, in the begging God created the Heaven and the Earth. And the Earth was covered in darkness and without void.
The order of creation in Genesis 1:1-2:4a is important to scholars because it provides further evidence that this account is not really true. This account holds that light was created before the sun, moon and stars; that grass grew before the sun existed; and so on. We now know that light comes from the sun - without it, the Earth would be so cold that even the air would freeze, and in total darkness. And without the sun, grass could not grow.The order of creation in Genesis 1:1-2:4a is so different to that in the second creation account, beginning in Genesis 2:4b, that they must be entirely separate myths. In the first account, man (both male and female) was created at the end of creation, after creation of the animals. In the second account, man (Adam) was created before creation of the animals, while Eve was not created until afterwards.For more information, please visit: http://christianity.answers.com/theology/the-story-of-creation
A sega genesis is worth about 10$-25$ without the cords.
There are two creation stories in Genesis, plus fragments of a third in Job and the Book of Psalms. The original creation story of Genesis is now the second one, starting at verse 2:4b (the second sentence of verse 2:4). The early Jews are believed to have encountered an early version of what is now the first creation story, in Genesis 1:1-2:4a, during the Babylonian Exile. It was assimilated and added to Genesis, without removing the second creation story, probably because the older story was popular and it would have caused dissent to have removed it.Leon R. Kass (The Beginning of Wisdom: Reading Genesis) says that pious readers, believing that the text cannot contain contradictions, ignore the major disjunctions between the two creation stories and tend to treat the second story as the fuller, more detailed account of the creation of man (and woman), but he says we must scrupulously avoid reading into the second story any facts or notions taken from the first (and vice versa) if we mean to understand each story on its own terms.For more information, please visit: http://christianity.answers.com/theology/the-story-of-creation
The creation setting refers to the environment or context in which something is created. It can include factors like time, place, resources, and conditions that influence the creative process and outcome. Creating in different settings can lead to varied results and experiences.
He obeyed without hesitation and without questioning it (Genesis ch.12).
If you beleive the bible, Yes. God created the universe in six days and rested on the seventh. For more information read Genesis the first book in the Bible. Other religions believe different things.
Generally, Moses in the 15th century BC is credited with 'compiling' the first five books of the Old Testament - the Torah in which Genesis is book one. There are 11 genealogies in this writing beginning with God Himself in the 1st chapter and then Adam in chapter 2, and so on. These different 'inputs' of the same account lead many to think there are 2 creation accounts, while many others (especially in more recent times) see these as different 'perspectives' of the same single Creation account.
The first things described as good are, in this order: Light*The separation of continents and oceansThe creation of plants.(The light was not the same as that of the sun. Rather, it was light that God created before the sun, and which emanated from a point in space without any physical source; like what we might term a "white hole.")See also:Is there evidence for Creation?Can you show that God exists?Seeing God's wisdom
Scholars detect many similarities between the Babylonian creation story in the Enuma Elish tablets and the first creation story in Genesis 1:1-2:4a. They say that Babylonian creation myth must have been added to the Book of Genesis by the Priestly Source during the Babylonian Exile.In both Enuma Elish and Genesis the primordial world prior to creation was formless and empty, with just a watery abyss (Tiamat in the Enuma Elish, tehom, the "deep", a linguistic cognate of tiamat, in Genesis 1:2). The sequence of creation is identical: light, then firmament, dry land, luminaries, and man. In both, the firmament, conceived as a solid inverted bowl, is created in the midst of the waters to separate the heavens from the earth (Genesis 1:6-7, Enuma Elish 4:137-40). Day and night preceded the creation of the luminous bodies, whose function is to yield light and regulate time. In Enuma Elish, the gods consulted before creating man, while Genesis has: "Let us make man in our image..." In both accounts, the creation of man was followed by divine rest._____________A key difference between the stories is that Enuma Elish is a tale of military conquest that elevates Babylon's patron deity to supreme rulership in the council of the gods. This is a nationalistic tale that provides theological support for Babylonian international supremacy. The story in Genesis one, by contrast, is told without a single reference to bloodshed, battle, city or temple. This makes perfect sense if it was told by Jewish exiles in Babylon after their city and temple had been violently destroyed by a Babylonian army.
According to tradition, God was speaking to the angels, out of a sense of humility. Since Mankind was to be the goal and the crown of Creation, God wanted to "share the merit" (Rashi commentary, Genesis 1:26). When it came around to the actual act of creating Man, however, it was God alone who did it, without assistance (Genesis 1:27, which uses the singular verb). See also:Is there evidence for Creation?Can you show that God exists?Seeing God's wisdom
Genesis 1 reminds us of what we're already instinctively aware of: that this universe came into being through a deliberate, intelligent act of creation. By God. Genesis 1 is, like much of the Torah, written in a very brief, stylized fashion and should be perused with in-depth commentary, but its underlying message is that we're not alone. God is with us.