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Although the second creation story departs from the first in content, tone, mood and orientation, 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). 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. We should therefore recognise and understand these differences, as well as the similarities.

Similarities

The two stories (Genesis 1:1-2:4a and 2:4b-25) are similar in that they describe God as performing creation, acting entirely alone. In this, they differ from most other creation stories from the Mediterranean region and Near East. There is no mention of Lady Wisdom being with God and participating in the creation (see Proverbs 8:22-34, which describes how Wisdom was with God at the time of creation) or of Jesus being present (See John 1:1-3).

Neither account explains why God created the world. Some Near Eastern creation accounts portray a great struggle between a god and the chaos monsters, and indeed the Book of Job does contain a fragmentary account of this, with the Leviathan being one of the two chaos monsters God defeated), but there is nothing of this in the two accounts as they have come down to us.

Neither account seems to claim that the world was created out of nothing, ex nihilo. Although Genesis 1:1 is usually translated into English as "In the beginning God created heaven and earth," biblical scholars say that a more accurate translation is "When God began to create ..." There was a pre-existing watery chaos and the ocean was already present, resting on dry land which appeared on day 3 when God gathered the waters together, and a wind moved across its surface. Similarly, the second story begins with a pre-existing world in which every plant of the field was already in the earth, but God had not yet made it rain.


Differences

It has been suggested that the first account, with its emphasis on the ocean, arose in a culture that was familiar with the oceans, while the second account originated in an arid environment similar to the Palestinian hinterland, home to the Hebrew people.

The first account is attributed to the Priestly Source ('P Source'), who preferred the name El Shaddai ('God Almighty') for his God. In line with this, God could create every thing merely by a command, speaking everything into existence in six days. The Yahwist's God, in the second account, is less powerful. He needed clay to make Adam (Genesis 2:7) and breathed life into his nostrils. In Genesis 2:19, God also created the beasts of the field out of clay, in a similar manner. In verse 2:22, God made Eve out of a rib he had taken from Adam. In this story, God shows that he was unable to make living things out of nothing.

In the first story, the animals come first and man is then to be their ruler, but in the second, the beasts only come after Adam was created, as his possible companions.

In the first story, man is made directly in the image of God (1:27) but in the second he is made of clay and divine breath (2:7), and only becomes god-like at the end - "now the man is become like one of us" (3:22) - and only after his act of disobedience.


For more information, please visit: http://christianity.answers.com/theology/the-story-of-creation

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What are the similarities between Babylonian and Christian creation myths?

Christianity has two creation myths: Genesis 1:1-2:4a and 2:4b-25. The similarities are more apparent between the Babylonian creation myth and the first Genesis creation story, which was written by the Priestly source during the Babylonian Exile.The sequence of creation is very similar in both the Enuma Elish and Genesis chapter 1. In both cases matter existed before creation began. Both accounts begin with darkness, and there was the light of day before there were sun, moon and stars. In both cases, there was the waters above and the waters below, with a barrier (Genesis 1:7 - 'firmament') separating them. The sequence of creation is similar, and followed by rest. There were differences, in the fact that God acted alone in creation and therefore there could be no divine rivalry associated with creation, nor the need to overcome chaos monsters. The many points of similarity is considered by some to be conclusive proof that one story was derived from the other or that both were derived from a still older original. The similarities between the Babylonian Enuma Elish and the first creation story in Genesis are actually greater than the similarities between the first Genesis creation story and that starting at Genesis 2:4b, where there is already light in the world when God began to create, and the sequence of creation is very different.In the second creation story in Genesis, God's powers are more limited and he can not make living things out of nothing, having to fashion Adam and the animals out of dirt, and Eve out of Adam's rib. Only God is mentioned as the creator, but he is not alone, as he says of Adam after he ate the fruit of the Tree of Knowledge of Good and Evil, "now the man is become like one of us" (Genesis 3:22). There were other gods (consistent with pre-Exilic polytheism) to whom God related as an equal, but they played no part in creation. The name of the Garden of Eden has been connected with Akkadian edinu, which means "provider of abundance," which would be a transparent etymology for the name of a divine garden. The Sumerian myth talks of a forbidden fruit and of a curse for eating it, and even has a woman created to heal the man's rib, from which the Genesis story of Eve is a reversal.For a more detailed explanation of the Christian creation stories and their modern interpretations, please visit: http://christianity.answers.com/theology/the-story-of-creation