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Creation, Un-Creation, Re-Creation: A Discursive Commentary on Genesis 1–11 is unavailable, but you can change that!

Joseph Blenkinsopp provides a new commentary on Genesis 1–11, the so-called “primeval history” in which the account of creation is given. Blenkinsopp argues that, from a biblical point of view, creation cannot be restricted to a single event, nor to two versions of an event, as depicted in Genesis 1–3. Rather, it must take in the whole period of creation arranged in the sequence of creation,...

antedates it and is basically not its own; one which results in conditions and situations which can render human life painful, morally disordered, even at times intolerable. The first eleven chapters of Genesis purport to be a history of early humanity. They include a lot of genealogical and chronological data which give the impression that the sequence of events takes place in real time: according to the biblical time chart, a little under two millennia. The principal characters
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