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Reading Genesis 1–2: An Evangelical Conversation is unavailable, but you can change that!

Old Testament scholars come together in this one-of-a-kind book to share diverse views on Genesis. Seven specialists in Old Testament theology and interpretation come together to offer a variety of needed biblical perspectives and insights on how to interpret the first two chapters of Genesis correctly. Evangelical scholars, college and seminary professors (and their students), and pastors will...

“they”: “Let us make humankind in our image as our likeness, that they may rule” (v. 26). The Gen 2–4 account uses singular verbs and pronouns for the man and the woman, as if they were individuals. The canon of Scripture overall develops it this way too, beginning with Gen 5:1–3 and following it all the way through Scripture with important historical and theological implications (see, e.g., 1 Chr 1:1; Luke 4:38; Rom 5:14). Yes, there was an original Adam and Eve, who were the progenitors of the
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