Posts tagged: genesis

Genesis 9

By , October 12, 2011 12:04 pm

Genesis 9

Now that everyone and everything is dead, God wants Noah and his boys (oh, and wives, but whatever) to fill the earth again.  He promises to be nicer next time, but still has some rules.  These are mostly about blood.

Oh, but look, a rainbow!  God says that this minor trick of light refracting off water droplets is REALLY his promise to NOT KILL EVERYONE AGAIN!  What a guy! The implication is that water refraction didn’t work before that moment.  Either that or he simply co-opted a common natural phenomenon.

Now, in the next bit of the narrative we get an intriguing story of a drunken Noah and a sadistic bit of punishment.  Apparently, the great and holiest of men that God could find gets so drunk he passes out naked.  His son, Ham sees him as such (no other narrative about this, mind you).  When Noah finds out, he freaks out.  No explination as to WHY Noah finds this bad, but he curses Ham’s son, Canaan, to be a slave.

Yes folks, he decides that because Ham was “wrong” that Ham’s son, his own grandson and all his descendants since up to now that is how curses work, should be punished.  The children pay for the sins of the father.

Noah declares Canaan a slave of Shem and Jepheth and has God extend Jepheth’s lands, presumibly to take over Canaan’s.

And Noah lived to be 950.

Genesis 8

By , September 5, 2011 9:19 am

Genesis 8

So after a good part of a year of ensuring that all the people of the earth are good and drowned God apparently remembers Noah and lets the waters recede.  The receding waters put the ark on Mount Ararat as they continue to recede.  It’s another 40 days before Noah sends out birds to find land.  The narrative is a bit confusing here.  It seems to be using different events to mark when the earth was dry.

Noah sent out a raven, and flew around until the “water had dried up” Gen 8:7 but then sent out a dove to figure out the same.  The raven isn’t mentioned again, but the dove is sent out 2 more times until it doesn’t return.  This is about 14 days.  Then it says that between the 1st day of the 1st month and the 27th day of the 2nd month is was completely dry.  This may not be contradictory, but it is confusing.

In the end, Noah sacrifices a few of the ONLY ANIMALS ON EARTH to God, who finds the aroma of burning flesh and only then promises to not kill us all again, despite how evil we are and deserve it (even from childhood).

Genesis 7

By , March 30, 2011 3:01 pm

Genesis 7

Now that Noah has his marching orders. we get to re-read them a few more times.  We get it, Noah, sons, wives, animals, flood.

In this chapter the animal count is 7 of the clean and 2 of the unclean.  Again, we the reader have no clue which is which, but it seems to be enough that Noah does.  And all this when Noah was 600 years old!

This chapter is particularly hard to parse.  Lots of repetition or re-wording.  It seems say the same thing, but in enough of a different way as to seem confusing.  Maybe knowing the original language would be better, but just on the face of it the reading is almost opaque.  One of the problems is sequence.  When did it start raining and when did Noah and his sons (and wives) go into the ark?  After 7 days, after 40?  Did it start raining before they went into the ark, or did they sit in there for 7 days before the rain came?

Either way, they entered the ark and it rained for 40 days (after the 7, or 33 more?) and the ark floated and all the mountains were covered for a depth of more then 20 feet. Gen 7:20 That is an absolutely STAGGERING volume of water.  We should STILL be cleaning out basements from that kind of flood.  OH, well, God must have magicked it away.

So, from Gen 7:21-23 it brags about how much life God kills (excepting Noah and the floating super-zoo).

One hundred and fifty days.  That was the extend of God’s water massacre.  Hitler took years to kill millions, God did in a few months.

Genesis 6

By , March 21, 2011 5:07 pm

Genesis 6

This is apparently the first time God starts giving a damn about daughters.  It’s also when he decides to wipe out almost all of mankind.  It’s hard to think this is just a coincidence.

The opening of the chapter has a lot of oddities that need mentioning.  The narrative seems to be making a distinction between “sons of God” and “men”.  We are again seeing that not all people are accounted for as part of Gods creation.  Daughters of men were beautiful and the sons of God married any of them that they chose.  Apparently this bears mentioning because God doesn’t like this.  It’s all a rather confusing jumble of non-sequitur.  Next is some seemingly random line about “Nephilim” and how their sons were heroes.  Who the hell are the Nephilim? (I’m assuming some kind of angel, but it’s not mentioned in the story so far)

Either way, we quickly get to the meat of the chapter: God is unhappy.  Read in the light of when I just mentioned, God is apparently unhappy that the daughters of “man” have corrupted his “sons” and made them wicked.  Again, it’s confusing about if he made all the men who exist, or just the line of Adam, but either way, he’s decided to wipe them ALL out.

God has decided that all men must die, and is throwing in all the animals for good measure.  W. T. F?

Yet, of all the men on earth, one is OK.  Noah finds favor is God’s eyes.  He was righteous and blameless.  We don’t know how or when he did differently, but God thinks that he should be saved and all other should die.  The exception is Noah, his wife, his sons and their wives.  Apparently this corrupt world was able to produce 3 women outside of Noah’s family worthy of rescue.  How fortunate!  Not an infant, not a girl, not even a puppy is worth saving of the whole earth.

Noah gets instructions about building an ark and bringing 2 of every kind of animal, male and female (presumably to breed more later).

Genesis 5

By , February 22, 2011 1:54 pm

Genesis 5

There really isn’t much to talk about in this chapter.  It’s just a listing of the male lineage from Adam to Noah’s 3 sons, Shem, Ham, and Japheth.

There really are only 3 things notable about this narrative:

  1. There is no mention of Cain or Able.  I understand not mentioning Able, since he didn’t have children.  Cain did get a big mention in the last chapter, so I guess he’s covered, but it’s all so inconsistent.
  2. Only sons seem deserve mentioning.  And only the first born.  ”other sons and daughters” is repeated for most in the lineage, but the only names named are sons.
  3. The people lived very long lives.  I’m very curious where this longevity claim originates.  I highly doubt anyone actually lived 900+ years, so why would they be attributed that way.  A couple simple conjectures come to mind, such as glorifying of venerated figures or wanting to show how much better people must have been so close to creation.

In any event, this is a boring chapter.  The only thing that might be good to take away is the number of generations and maybe the supposed time that has passed.  The age of the universe since creation is often quoted as 6,000-10,000 years.  That number comes, in part, from the ages of the people mention in this chapter.  I calculate that at the end of this chapter the universe is 1557 years old over 12 generation.  Adam would have been alive to see Methuseluh born, his Great, Great, Great, Great, Great, Great, Great grandson.  I think I got that right.

Panorama Theme by Themocracy