Day one: God creates the heavens and earth and light. From the light
he separates day and night, but no mention of dark being created.
Hmmm, sounds like someone has an issue with night.
Day
two: God separates the "firmament" (which the notes tell me is a solid
dome) or Heaven from the upper and lower waters. So if I'm reading that
right, Heaven is a physical place that divides water. Now the old
story about the Tower of Babel makes a bit more sense, since it appears
it is a place man can indeed travel to. They taught us in my Sunday
School that Heaven was more of an ethereal concept, had no substance,
but a kind of merging of our souls with God. That does not appear to be
the case here, though. I don't see anything in this chapter about the
waters above, but the waters below:
Day three: God gathers the waters under Heaven to one place and dry land appears. God calls forth vegetation.
Day
four: God creates light in the firmament (like a lightbulb?). He
separates day and night and the seasons and the years. He gives light
to the earth. So does that mean the light created on day one had
nothing to do with the lower waters and the earth until now? Or is the
author reminding us that the light and day and night extended to the
earth? The two lights in the firmament consist of a greater and a
lesser, which rule the day and the night (like a dimmer switch?)
Day five: God creates the sea creatures and birds.
Day
six: God creates land creatures and man "in our image" and "after our
likeness". There's the polytheism Asimov identified that might be a
remnant of a polytheistic past by the Hebrews. God gives man dominion
over all creatures and creates male and female. God give the vegetation
to man and the creatures for food, but does not give the creatures to
man for food. Take note, PETA!
Asimov tackles the
physical location of the Garden of Eden. This is another one that I
remember from Sunday School was supposed to be a mystery. I recall
seeing books and documentary programs about the actual location of it,
some placing it in such odd spots as Atlantis or Mars. Asimov posits
the radical theory that the Garden was exactly where the Bible says it
was, Eden, which is the name for the Valley of the Euphrates River,
which is how it was referred to at the time Genesis was believed to have
been written. Coincidentally or not, this is the same area that one of
the earliest civilizations came forth, the Sumerians. Perhaps the
location of the beginning of man was the result of oral histories of the
Sumerians that have since been lost?
God's first law/commandment: Eat all the plants you want, leave the animals alone, man.
My ability to follow: Luckily, the notes say God gave us permission to eat animals in the time of Noah, so I think I'm ok on this one.
Tomorrow, the second telling of the story of Creation!
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