Follow Him: A Come, Follow Me Podcast - Genesis 1-3, Moses 2-3, Abraham 4-5 -- Part 1 : Dr. Joshua M. Sears
Episode Date: January 1, 2022Were the creation accounts intended to be archeological, geological, or scientific texts? Dr. Joshua Sears joins the podcast and teaches us about Ancient Near Eastern Cosmology and the purpose of crea...tion texts. We learn what "accommodation" means when discussing scripture, and what are "the terrible questions?"Show Notes (English, French, Spanish, Portuguese): https://followhim.co/episodesFacebook: https://www.facebook.com/followhimpodcastInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/followhimpodcastYouTube: https://www.youtube.com/c/FollowHimOfficialChannelThanks to the followHIM team:Steve & Shannon Sorensen: Executive ProducersDr. Hank Smith: Co-hostJohn Bytheway: Co-hostDavid Perry: ProducerKyle Nelson: MarketingLisa Spice: Client Relations, Show Notes/TranscriptsJamie Neilson: Social Media, Graphic DesignWill Stoughton: Rough Video EditorAriel Cuadra: Spanish TranscriptsKrystal Roberts: French TranscriptsIgor Willians: Portuguese Transcripts"Let Zion in Her Beauty Rise" by Marshall McDonaldhttps://www.marshallmcdonaldmusic.com/products/let-zion-in-her-beauty-rise-pianoPlease rate and review the podcast.
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Welcome to Follow Him, a weekly podcast dedicated to helping individuals and families with their
Come Follow Me study.
I'm Hank Smith and I'm John by the way.
We love to learn, we love to laugh, we want to learn and laugh with you.
As together we follow him.
Hello everyone, welcome to another episode of Follow Him.
My name is Hank Smith. I'm your host.
I'm here with my prolific co-host, John, by the way.
Hi, John.
Hi.
Anytime somebody wants to describe me with the word pro, that sounds nice.
I'm kind of an amateur pro.
My amateur prolific host, John, by the way.
We are ready to jump into the old testament with you.
Uh, in the Proof of Great Price today, John, we have an expert with us, one of the most delightful people I know.
Who is it?
Oh, that's great. Yes, we have Josh Sears with us. I have a little bio here. Joshua Sears grew up in Southern California, served in the Chile Osoornal mission. He received
a bachelor's in ancient near Eastern studies from BYU where he taught the Missionary Training Center
and volunteered as an EMT. That is an EMT at the MTC at BYU. He received an MA master's degree
from Ohio State University and a PhD in Hebrew.
That is so cool at the University of Texas at Austin. His research interests include
Israelite prophecy, marriage and families in the ancient world, the publication, history
of Latter-day Saints scripture. He has presented at regional and national meetings of the
Society of Biblical Literature, BYU Education Week, Sydney B.Sperry Symposium, and the Leonardo Museum Conference on the Dead Sea Scrolls.
His wife Alice is from Hong Kong and plays in Bells at Temple Square, and they live in Linden, Utah. They have five children from, ages 12, down to two.
BYU is lucky to have Josh, and I know the students adore him. Josh, this
week's Come Follow Me lesson is a lot. We have two chapters from Genesis, two
chapters from Moses, two chapters from Abraham. Let me first ask you, how do you,
when you're teaching your students at BYU, how do you have them approach texts,
like the Old Testament, the Pearl of Great Price. Like how do you how do you introduce them?
So they're coming at it in the right way.
I guess for me, I like to start with the biblical text
like Genesis, look and see what that does.
That's been around the longest.
That's our common ground with other Christians with Jews.
So kind of start with that as a foundation.
Then I look at the I would look at the Moses and Abraham text as being, you know, modern
revelation coming through the profit shows of Smith where he's taken that Genesis based
text and he's expanded it.
He's reworked it.
He's given new insights.
He's given commentary.
He's given us a lot of great stuff to work with for a latter day setting.
So starting with the Genesis is kind of your first step there and then you branch out from there into these amazing things that Joseph gave these new spins on it.
Okay, I like that idea and then maybe even I would say you could say, okay, here's what book of
Moses added, here's what book Abraham had it and then you could even say, here's what profits today.
Maybe he'll even add it. So you kind of give them in the order they came.
Yeah, and that's a great thing about scriptural texts, right?
Is they're not static and frozen, they're dynamic.
They can change and evolve and meet new circumstances,
new needs as different prophets are interpreting,
expanding, revising.
So that's the kind of wonderful thing
about the word of God being living, right?
Is that it has this kind of flexibility
to speak to people in different ways at different times.
Isn't that one of the main, what's the word tenets of textual criticism?
Is the earliest text is the most accurate, but one would believe in living
profits. A profit can come along and say, hmm, let me clarify that or let me
expand that. And that's another way we can say it's dynamic, isn't it?
Which is a whole different way of looking at it.
Yeah, President Oaks talked about that in the end sign several years ago that it's important to look
at the meaning of what it meant back then, but a text isn't, he says, limited to just what it meant
back then, but it also includes what it can mean for us today. And I like that you said, we share
this. So the book of Genesis we share with
with our Jewish friends so they're looking at the same kind of text we are out of the Torah
and and I suppose there's
Lots as as many creation stories as there are cultures on earth, you know and and these are all I think we're looking at creation stories in Genesis and in Moses and even some in Abraham today, aren't we?
Yep, we are we've got that's why we have stuff from Genesis Moses and Abraham's they're all parallel, right?
They're all telling the same story in different ways
Josh, I want to squeeze a little more out of you here
so You're a latter-day saint at BYU
Then you go through this through this massive biblical studies education.
How do you look at Genesis differently than when, you know, say you were just home off
a mission?
That's a great question.
I would say that biblical scholars in general look at Genesis very differently than we did
a couple hundred years ago.
And sometimes people frame this as, oh, you know, you've got what Genesis means versus
new stuff like science and things that are challenges there.
And that's not what I'm talking about.
I'm talking about the fact that in the last couple hundred years, we have basically rediscovered
Genesis's cultural environment, the ancient Near East.
So these are all Israel's neighbors, right, Egypt, Babylon, Assyria, Canaan.
We have done a lot of archeology.
So we've dug up these sites.
We have discovered thousands of documents, texts
from the ancient Near East, from inside Israel,
from around Israel.
We've disciples,
the scripts that had been lost that we've learned to read,
like we've learned to read Egyptian
in the last 200 years.
We've learned to read the Cuneiform script, you know, the little wedge-shaped things that write in the clay tablets
in Mesopotamia. And we've learned to read these languages and we can read these documents.
And that's just led to this explosion of new understanding of what Genesis and the rest of
the Old Testament is talking about because the Israelites don't live in a little bubble,
right? They're not in a vacuum. They participate like in a broader pop culture. And so there's
inside references and frameworks and common understandings that they share not in a vacuum. They participate like in a broader pop culture. And so there's inside
references and frameworks and common understandings that they share with all these people. And now that
we can see all the stuff going around, we can better understand the Old Testament. We see the
conversations it's participating in. I think that is a crucial understanding. Because if you don't,
you're going to look at Genesis from 2021. Let's put it against evolution.
Let's put it against biology.
But that was not their world.
They lived in a world of cosmologies,
of Babylonian cosmology, Egyptian cosmology.
Yeah.
And they make references to things that these other cultures
believe in and think about.
And you see General Conference speakers doing this today,
right?
President Ucdorf made a joke about Chubbacca. He remembered a few years ago about your family member who
wears the Chewbacca costume. He gave a talk all about Bill Bo Baggins and the Hobbit.
He remembered President Falsk, gave a talk based on that book, The Little Engine that could. Thomas
says, Monson gave a talk and talked about the movie Home Alone. So they do this, right? And we have
references to prom and other things that are just modern kind of stuff. So they do this, right? And we have references to prom and other things
that are just modern kind of stuff. So they're always assuming that their audience understands these
things because it's part of our common frame of reference. And the Israelite prophets are writing
doing the exact same thing. They're making references to stories and events and just worldviews
that their neighbors have and they're participating in all this dialogue. So now that we can see
so much more of what was going on, all of a sudden, things in the
Old Testament that didn't make sense, just kind of pop out and you go, oh, that's what
they're talking about.
One of the things we understand better now looking at the Old Testament is their cosmology,
which is a fancy word for basically how you imagine the universe, how is the universe
structured.
So today our cosmology is that the earth is a sphere and we rotate
around the sun in an orbit, right? We're one of nine or so planets orbiting the sun depending
on the whole Pluto thing. And then we're a solar system. And the solar system is one of
billions of stars in the Milky Way galaxy. And that's one of who knows? I'm going to
galaxies. Right. So that's our cosmology. That's how we understand the structure of the universe
today. In the ancient world of the ancient ancient Near East, where the Israelites live,
they didn't think in those terms at all.
And, you know, the way they describe their cosmology has always been in the Old Testament.
But we can, some again, some of these references to what they're talking about pop out a little bit easier
now that we can read what everybody else is saying saying and we see what the Israelites share with them.
So this is gonna sound a little weird at first,
but bear with me while I describe this.
And I'm excited.
I like how someone introduces that way.
This is gonna sound a little bit weird,
but let's do it anyway.
If you Google the term phrase,
it ancient Israelite cosmology
will come up with pictures and things to look at.
So I'll just try to describe it here.
So basically for the Israelites, the earth is flat.
And the universe is made up not of empty space the way we tend to think of a space.
There's water everywhere.
Kind of just chaos water that's not doing much.
And basically we're living in a giant air bubble.
It's like an inverted snow globe. So the water's on the outside and you live inside the snow globe.
And you've got a solid dome that's resting over the flat earth that keeps all that water that's
up there from crashing down and, you know, destroying everything. Then you've got these pillars that
are beneath our flat earth kind of holding it in place
so that the water underneath isn't gushing up to drown us that way.
Then meanwhile, the sun, moon, and stars are all underneath that solid dome and they
move in rotation underneath it to give us light and things like that.
So that is how people in the ancient Near East see the world.
That's how the Israelites see the world and that's what's assumed throughout the Old Testament.
Many, many references that have bits and pieces of this.
And that's exactly what you see going on in Genesis 1.
So for example, in verse 6, let there be a firmament.
That's the solid dome in the midst of the waters.
That's because everywhere's water
and let it divide the waters from the waters.
Because we've got these, you know,
this is where we split apart the water to make the air pocket
so the water is above and water is below. Genesis 1, 1, 6, yeah and then
seven says God made the firmament and divided the waters which were under the
firmament from the waters which were above the firmament and it was so right.
So you get this there and when you know what you're looking for it's pretty obvious what it's talking about. Most people though, the reason this is surprising
is because our cosmology is so ingrained in our brains that when we read this, we tend
to superimpose how we understand the universe onto this. So we kind of make it fit our understanding
of what's going on rather than kind of let them speak for themselves with their worldview.
Yeah, that is crucial.
I think we're, you're giving our listeners, and John and I hear a skill set that is crucial
going into the Old Testament, that let them speak for themselves in their world, instead
of superimposing your world upon it, right? Let's just make this clear, Josh.
They truly believe, and they're not, these are not dumb people. These are intelligent people.
But they, this is their worldview. I live in this inverted snow globe and the stars, moons, on our inside of the snow globe and outside of that is the
chaos waters below me is the chaos waters.
And that's how I understand my world.
And I like that you point out that they're not dumb.
You know, this is based on the best that you could understand at the time because they
don't have telescopes and things like that, right?
So if you're standing out in a big field and you look around you, you're going to see the earth kind of look
like a big flat circle all around you. The sky is going to look like it has a dumb shape
and you do see the sun, moon and stars kind of move in all around you, so that just makes
intuitive sense that that's what's going on. That's what they observe.
Yeah, and I would say that you don't know how the rain is falling, right?
So the water is up there.
Occasionally it gets through, I guess.
Yeah.
Well, in the in the in the solid dome, you've got these little trap doors that God can open
called the windows of heaven.
And he can open those and let a little water down to help you there.
So when God, like in our Malachi, our tithing passage is, I'll open for you,
the windows of heaven and pour out a blessing.
We take that as metaphorical. They took it a little more literally. Wow. That there's
actually little windows up there. And in the flood story, we usually think of it rained
for 40 days and 40 nights, right? But what it actually says, you go to Genesis 7, you do
get that coming from up there, but it also says that the foundations of the deep were broken
up. So those bounds holding the water under the land are being ripped open. So you got water coming
up from below too. So you got water coming from down below. It's like holes in the snow globe
getting punctured and this water is rushing in now. And that's that's where you get the flood coming
from. It's both from above, but also from below. There's another spot when when Abinadi in
Mosaic 13 is kind of quoting the 10 commandments to King Noah and the wicked priest
He says don't make graven images
You know things where true in the heaven above which are in the earth beneath or which are in the water under the earth
And so that sounds like
There they're cosmology right there the waters under that's in Mosiah 1312
They're cosmology right there. The waters under that's in Mosaic 1312.
They can see for three realms. You've got that realm. It's up above there. You've got the land where you are and then the water underneath the land there. So those are the kind of three layers they always talk about.
I have a quote here from James Talmud from an address called the Earth and Man 1931.
called the Earth and Man, 1931, 90 years ago. James Talmud says, let us not try to rest the scriptures in an attempt to explain away that what we cannot explain.
The opening chapters of Genesis and scriptures related there too, I would
think he's talking maybe about Moses and Abraham, were never intended as a
textbook of geology, archaeology, earth science,
or man science.
Holy Scripture will endure while the conceptions of men change with new discoveries, which
Joshua mentioned earlier, are all the new discoveries.
And then he said this, we do not show reverence for the scriptures when we misapply them through
faulty interpretation.
And I think Josh, what you're giving us here is a skill that will help us avoid faulty interpretation.
Any thoughts on that?
Yeah, what you see happen a lot today
is that people think we've got this big battle
between, say, on the one hand, scientists and science, right?
And being true and faithful to the word of God and Genesis
and people see these as pitted against each other.
And so that comes up in debates about evolution or the age of the earth and things like that.
And I think the fundamental problem with doing that is that Genesis isn't speaking the same
language as what the scientists are. These aren't even in conversation.
So to force them into a debate is just not going to work from the get go.
Right. If you're talking to someone who believes they live in an inverted snow globe
Get not stupid. I know that sounds like I'm making fun, but I'm not and then start talking about evolution
Number one you would speak their language and do the what are you talking about right? Yeah, and other Talmud just quote
You see this repeated in more recent church publications too. So I got this one here. This is from the new era February
2016 Church publications too. So I got this one here. This is from the new era February 2016.
And it says, the details of what happened on this planet before Adam and Eve aren't a huge doctrinal concern of ours. The accounts of the creation in the scriptures are not meant to provide
a literal scientific explanation of the specific processes, time periods, or events involved.
So that's from just a few years ago. So it's the same sentiment,
right? That you got to be careful not to use this to make scientific claims because that's not
what it's trying to do. It really was getting into my Hebrew Bible training that gave me better
tools to kind of understand this because even sometimes people who are trying to defend science
don't really understand how scripture is working and so they make some faulty assumptions there too.
It takes a really good understanding of both.
So it's not just members, it's just not believers who do this.
It's scientists too and they say, look what the Bible says.
They don't understand its cosmology either.
Now, this brings up a problem though that I hope to address here.
Some people, and this can be Latter-day Saints, this can, this is happened for other Christians.
Anybody who's religious reading this text, when you're told, and especially if you haven't heard this before and haven't
really had time to process it, that scripture, you know, sacred revealed scripture that we
have in our canon teaches something that sounds so wildly inaccurate as a flat earth, you
know, surrounded by water and all this, that can be really challenging because people think, well, are the Scriptures wrong
then? And that can, back in, back in the real trial. So I think we got a, this takes some
stepping back to, to think about what is God trying to do with different scriptures
and what's he not trying to do? There's a great passage in the doctrine and covenants,
section one. So I know we just left Ian C C behind last year, but we're going to go back an entire year to section one
here. So look at section one verse 24. Remember that this is the preface to the
Doctrine and Covenants. So the Lord's kind of talking about the nature of this
book. Verse 24, behold, I am God and have spoken it. These commandments are of me
and we're given unto my servants in their weakness
after the manner of their language that they might come to understanding. And I think this is
such a crucial concept. It's like he's saying here that, you know, if the language were different
or the weaknesses were a little stronger, I might speak differently to these saints, but I'm making
sure that this is in a way that they can understand,
adapted to their weakness because I want them to understand. That's the goal right there.
I'm going to speak to them in their language. Could we change that word? I'm going to speak to them
in their cosmology. Yeah. And so you think about in Genesis 1, what is God trying to do? I think
the assumption is often that he's trying to explain
how the earth and the universe physically came into being.
And I don't think that's actually what he's trying to do here.
I think what he's trying to do is explain who he is,
what his nature is, explain who people are,
our relationship to each other, how do we relate to God,
and kind of what's our purpose here on earth. Those are the doctrines that Genesis 1 is trying to teach and it succeeds beautifully.
It does its job. And there's a lot of ways in which it corrects false ideas that were
in the Israelites' culture and it reveals beautiful things. So why is it using this kind of
what would say is a wrong cosmology to do that?
Well, I've got a friend who's a later date and historian Ben Spackman,
and he caught me onto this word that Christian theologians
have been using and it's called accommodation.
And accommodation is a concept that says that when God speaks
to us, he's got to kind of dumb it down,
and speak from our framework so that we can understand.
It's the same thing the doctrine and covenants is talking about. So we have this idea in our
scriptures. We just don't often have like a single word to use to describe it. So that's why I
think accommodation is a useful term. So we can wrap our minds around the vocabulary word.
So you have other Christians talking about how accommodation is God, not just simplifying it down,
but also adopting our fallen frameworks in some cases in order to
communicate things. Because if he were to speak at the level he understands, it would just go over our heads.
Josh, I do this as a parent all the time. And this is good pedagogy in the book of Mormon. Remember,
Ammon going to King Lomoni? And Ammon just can't start teaching everything he knows about God because
he's got a start where Lamoni is at. So he says, do you understand God and Lamoni goes,
I don't know what you're talking about. And then you know this, Ammon's like, well, you believe
in a great spirit, right? Lamoni is like, yeah, and he's like, okay, well, that's God. Now,
there's probably differences between the Lamanite concept of a great spirit and the Nephite
concept of God, but it's it's close enough for right now.
We're going to roll with that for now.
We can flesh out the details later, but for now, we're going to roll with this.
And I imagine God's doing much the same thing here, Genesis 1 with the cosmology.
The Israelites have a cosmology already.
This is how they see the world.
And rather than fight that and confuse them by explaining black holes and nuclear fusion
and solar systems and all these things, they have no concept about. He's like, you know what? My real priority here is teaching you
about your value and your worth and your purpose and our relationship. So I'm going to harness
your cosmology and role with that for the time being. It's wrong, but what the heck? I'm
teaching, you know, I'm priorities here. I want to get at these doctrinal ideas and
the cosmology works to explain that as is. And it's really not
going to help them to try to get into the details of how the cosmology really works because
in the end, how is that that's not going to help them as much as knowing about the nature
of God. Right. You know, when people say, well, is Genesis wrong then? And like, well,
you got to stop and define what you mean by wrong. If you're talking about the scientific,
you know, modern perspective of how the earth was made, then yeah, it's wrong. But if that's not what Genesis is even trying to do, it's
kind of unfair, just to say it's wrong, right? For what it was trying to do, it's right.
Yeah, I was thinking about, I think you nibbly calls them the terrible questions. And as you are
describing that, Josh, I thought, yeah, God is trying to answer the questions of who is God?
Who are you? Why are we here?
It's not how did I create everything. It's who am I? Who are you? Why are we here? What are we supposed to do?
And the text reaches those goals without
you know,
refuting the big bang or endorsing the big bang or anything. That's not the purpose of the text, you know, and maybe we can get that later
but the truth is about God and about who we are is more
important to God right now in that text.
Yeah.
And here's another analogy.
When I went to high school, I remember being in science class and learning about the
nature of the atom.
And we learned that there's a nucleus with the protons
and neutrons, and then that the electrons orbit
around the nucleus in the same way
that planets orbit around the sun.
So that was fine.
And you can use that to do things like,
okay, if you got an atom here and an atom here
with this many electrons and they're outer orbit,
and that means they'll stick together
and form molecules, right?
So we did a lot with that.
Then I got to BYU and took Chem 105, which was for me a really hard class. And I learned that that model, the
atom, it's called the Bohr model, is not only inaccurate, it's been inaccurate since the
1920s. And so I remember feeling so confused, why did my high school science teacher teach
me something that we've known was wrong since far before that teacher was born? And I
asked this to the teaching assistant in class, and I'll never forget what she said.
Two things is what she said.
Number one, the board model is a lot easier for high school students to understand than
nuclear physics, which is basically the modern conception is electrons are in these probability
clouds, right?
And they're somewhere in there, but you can't always tell.
So a modern model, the matem Looks like a balloon animal right with these clouds sticking out everywhere. But she said
that's that's harder for high school students for one. But number two, maybe more importantly,
that bore model is extremely useful for doing a lot of things. You can make a lot of predictions
in chemistry and physics using that older model. Eventually it stops working when you get to more advanced stuff.
That's why you have nuclear physics today.
But it does quite a lot.
You get quite a lot of traction out of it.
That's another reason why you just do that in high school because it might be wrong
ultimately, but it is very useful.
I think in the similar way, the Israelites' cosmology might have been wrong, but it was very useful. God with minimal
messing with their paradigms here could teach them quite a bit using that. And sometimes that's just
good pedagogy. Well, this is great. In the Come Follow Me manual, it says, one thing that creation
story teaches us is that God can make something magnificent out of something unorganized.
That's helpful to remember when life seems chaotic.
And I think that's a big meaning we can draw without trying to get really specific about
the science, but look what God can do with all of this.
And maybe we've got three different books here.
Should we start in Genesis and start looking at some specifics?
Let's do it.
Okay. So we'll take this from the top.
And so like I was saying earlier, some things in here we understand a little bit
better because we can read about these texts from all the other cultures around Israel.
And we can read about creation stories in Egypt from Babylon, from the Canaanites.
And so when you do that,
you see some common themes kind of developed
that help us put Genesis in kind of the context
of their ancient understanding there.
So one thing for the Israel and their neighbors
is when they picture pre-creation,
what things were like before,
they're not picturing nothingness
in the sense of just empty space.
There's always going to be stuff there, there's matter there, but it's unorganized.
It's just kind of chaotic, has no purpose, it's just crazy, and they visualize this as being like we said water,
kind of just primordial watery chaos.
So the nothingness is made up of just chaos water that's unstructured and unorganized
and that's what they're imagining. The chaos. Okay. Yep. And so when God or the gods, depending
on your cultural story here, create what they're doing is they've got to bring order to that chaos
that's going on right there. And in a lot of these other cultures, that happens via big cosmic
battle that happens when you've got the creator god who's in battle with of these other cultures, that happens via a big cosmic battle that happens
when you've got the crater god who's in battle
with the forces of chaos, often represented
by a giant dragon or sea monster.
And you have this big dramatic battle.
And you know, they would read these stories out loud
at festivals and things.
So it's supposed to be kind of, you know, exciting
and interchaining too.
But you'll have a big conflict.
And you get this from Babylon and other places.
And you're like,
oh, on the age of your seats, you know, being excited, who's going to win here?
The forces of chaos or the God who's trying to bring order and harmony to the universe.
And when the God prevails in the battle, that's where creation can really happen.
And we can start organizing things here and structuring things.
And it's not just a story to them, right, Josh?
I mean, it's not just a story to them.
They are, they're hearing their creations.
Yeah, they're living this.
They're recreating it as they tell these stories over and over, right?
Okay.
And what Genesis 1, what biblical scholars conclude is that it is in dialogue with these
other stories.
They're aware of these stories.
Again, it's their pop culture, right?
They know about this stuff.
And so Genesis 1 is in dialogue and responding to these other stories.
And in some cases, it pushes back
against those stories and their assumptions,
in a way to what we'd call correcting false doctrine,
to say, nope, that's not how it went.
It's actually like this.
And then like we said with the cosmology thing,
there's other ways in which it kind of just rolls
with the assumptions.
So again, God kind of deciding here,
what am I going to roll with for now,
and what am I going to push back on?
So Genesis 1 is kind of doing both in different ways. So let's look and see now we'll start at
verse 1 and kind of just work through this here. So in the King James version we start off in verse
1. In the beginning God created the heaven and the earth. Looking at this here, in Hebrew, it seems what's going on, if I'm going to kind of like
retranslate this a little bit here.
The most common understanding today is that verses 1 and 2 are setting up a background
scenario to get ready for where the actual main action starts in verse 3.
So it's not like you have the creation of the heaven and earth in verse 1 and we're over
and done with and then we move on
Verses one and two are setting up
um the situation here. So Modern translations might say something like this
uh when in the beginning God created the heaven and the earth
dot dot dot like it's still going
And at and verse two is kind of keeps that thought going you know and at that time
Again before creation the earth was without form and void, and darkness was upon
the face of the deep, and the spirit of God moved upon the face of the waters.
In verse three, you get now your first moment of actual action.
Then God said, let there be light.
Versus one and two were setting the stage.
Right there.
A lot of modern translations are read like that.
It's not God created the earth, and then the earth was without form.
He's trying to set up a story.
So we got this word created in verse one, the Hebrew word there is Barah, which even
Latter-day Saints who don't know Hebrew might recognize, because Joseph Smith rings it
up, right?
In Navu there, he talks about the word Barah.
And if you look in your footnote of your scriptures down there, it says Hebrew shaped fashion created always divine
activity. And that's a good description there. This word is used about 50 times in the Old
Testament, and it's always God doing it. So it's a divine thing to do. And it means to
shape or fashion to organize, to separate, to designate things like that. So Christians,
several centuries ago came up with this theological idea of
creation ex-Nilo, right out of nothing, which not only Joseph Smith pushed back on that for
theological reasons, you know, he said there's no such thing as immaterial matter and all that,
right, that God is organizing matter that's right there. And that's the same worldview that the
ancient Israelites have, right, that it's not that there was nothing there,
but what God's role in creation was,
was organizing this stuff.
And that's what created is getting at here in the Hebrew.
So then, verse two,
the earth is without form and void.
So in Hebrew, that's a little rhyming phrase.
Without form is tohu and void is bohu,
so they rhyme.
And there's the word and is va, so all together it's tohu, va, bohu.
Josh, I'm so glad you're talking about this because I think that whenever there's a translation,
we miss things like that. Isn't that true? And that makes it so fun. I was talking with Hank about sometimes the writers,
I think, are not so much architects as they are artists or something in between. And that was
artful to do though. Say the words again. That was cool.
Tohu, va bohu. Yeah. And it reminds me of, I want to say Proverbs 31, which is an acrostic poem, who can find a
virtuous woman, she's like this.
And, but if you saw it in Hebrew, you would see it's going through the Hebrew alphabet
in order.
But you wouldn't see that in English.
Yeah, these writers are poets.
They love their language and they play with it all the time.
And it's part of the message.
I'm glad you point that out because there's things that are hidden in plain sight that we don't see
because it was originally in a language where they used the language itself as art.
Thank you for that. That's cool.
And there's other ways in which they do this. Like verse one, a house kind of a book end to
the end of this story, which is chapter 2,
verse 1, right there. God created the heaven in the earth, chapter 2, verse 1, thus the heavens
and the earth were finished, so you get these bookends going on right there. Okay. So there's all
sorts of ways they tied this together, they're subtle, but fun. So this form, though, without form
and void, that is a really important phrase right there, because it's setting up the twin problems that Genesis 1 is going to deal with here.
So that phrase without form, the Tohu, the meaning of that in Hebrew, it means like wild desert
like, or having no order to it. So it appears other times in the Bible describing like,
just a desert waste kind of area. So it's just kind of this place that's uncultivated, uncultured, uncivilized, just kind of wild.
That's what we're getting at, the environment. And the word void there, bohu, what that means is
it's like waste or empty or unpopulated. Okay. So our twin problems here of this uncreated
state is that the environment is wild and waste and that it's not populated
Right there. So those are two things and as we go through the days of creation
What we're gonna do is create these environments that have an ordered structure and we're gonna populate them
So it's gonna deal with this. I can't tell you how many times I've walked into my daughter's room and said here is matter unorganized
This is there you go. This is without organization and or population, right?
And then we got darkness was upon the face of the deep. So the deep here in Hebrew is to home.
And this is referring again to that primordial kind of watery chaos stuff right there, right?
Even in English, the deep, you know, it's water. It's like the ocean deep water right here. And
again, this is before creation has happened yet. We haven't said let there be light or any like that, right? This is what the things are like before creation gets going is you've got the
darkness and the watery chaos stuff going on here. But then you get the spirit of God moving upon
the face of the water. So God's presence now is going to start doing its thing right here.
The word spirit there can also mean breath or wind, so you just get this
sense that he's just like sweeping over, you know, this watery chaos there and good stuff is about
to happen. You know, God's presence is here. Okay, so now we've got six days of creation, right?
The seventh day is kind of special, but the six days are very, very structured. Okay? And again, that's why it's problematic to use these to make scientific inferences about
the physical development of the earth because these are not per se physical, literal description.
There are literary theological presentations, solving theological problems here of the
wildness and the unpopulatedness of everything.
So you've got six days and they're divided into sets of two.
Days one, two, three, and days four, five, six.
And the reason that's important is because in days one, two, three,
we're dealing with the Tohu problem, where we're wild and waste.
It's the creation of various realms, various environments.
And then in days four, five, six,
it's the creation of the populations
that will inhabit those environments. And they're lined up so that day one lines up with day four,
day two lines up with day five and day three lines up with verse, or day six. So it's a very
structured, highly correlated sort of thing here. So we'll work you through how those all line up
right here. John, I'm trying to still get Josh to show me something I haven't seen before.
How those all line up right here John I'm trying to still get Josh to show me something I haven't seen before
My word were two verses in I'm like I thought I'd read this
Pretty sure yeah, this is great. Okay, so they line up with the form and void
Problem once gonna be solved by day one two three problem two. Yeah, what was problem one again? No
It was the wild and ways ways that the environments are not structured. Okay, and that's gonna be solved by day one, two, and three.
And then the other problem was.
Lack of inhabitants.
And that's gonna be solved by days four, five, and six.
Perfect, you got it.
Oh my word.
And as everybody knows, I mean, these days of creation,
the way they're so structured is everybody recognizes that, right?
Each day starts with end God said, and day ends with you know counting off the days. It was the
first day, it was the second day. So they got this tight structure there. Okay, so diving into this,
you got to talk about in the Israelite point of view, how does God create? So we talked about it
being you know organizing things. And that's really again what it's about. It's not taking something from nothingness to physical manifestation.
In this ancient Israelite concept, creating means that you bring order to the chaos and
you structure things and give them purpose and meaning. That's what's going on. So what
the way that God does that is he separates things out, divides them.
He gives them a purpose or function and he names them.
And all of those are three related things and they're all all interconnected.
And that's what that's how you create.
That's how you bring order to the cast.
So separate them out.
Number one, to give them a function or purpose in an ordered system and three part of
that you give them a name.
So you see all of those constantly throughout those days. So for example, on the separating things out, look how much that
language appears here in Genesis. So in day one, God divides the light from the darkness.
Day two, He divides the waters from the waters. In day three, he gathers the waters into one place, so it's separate
from land. Day four, he divides the day from night. In day five, you have the animals
reproducing after their kind, right, not like the other kinds, but like their own kind.
So there's a division there. And it keeps going with that. So constantly dividing, separating.
That's what he's doing.
That's how things come to have a purpose and meaning is they're separated out from other
things.
So the other thing you see in here is he's constantly naming things, calling things,
right?
Like in day one, he calls the light day, he calls the darkness night.
In day two, he calls the Firmament Heaven.
In day three, he calls the dry land earth,
and then he calls the water sea.
So as he creates these environments,
he separates them out.
They have a function to perform, and he names them.
I'm writing this down, separated out.
Thank you, too.
Give it a purpose, give it a purpose, and a name.
Yep, and in their mind, that's how God creates. We've got all this matter there, right?
But you've got to give it order. It's got to be a system where everything has a purpose.
It has a function. There's a role to play. And that's what God's doing here.
Hey, can I throw something out that I heard once that I just thought was kind of fun?
And that is on the third day. He says twice. God saw that it was good at the end of verse 10 and that
in the end of verse 12.
And so the third day is called good twice.
And I read in the religion to 11 manual that I think was in there, that Jews today like
to have weddings on Tuesday because it is a twice blessed day. And I was excited to remember that my wife and I
were married on a Tuesday, which is called good twice.
So just thought I'd throw that.
Of course you were.
Of course you were.
Romantic without even being meaning to be romantic.
Without even knowing it.
Yeah.
Yeah, you picked up on the fact that day three
has a bonus creation, it has two things he does on one day. And that corresponds right because these days are parallel with day six also has
a bonus creation. And when we get there, we'll see why they each have a bonus creation and how those
are parallel to each other, what they do. Let's see day six at Saturday. I was married on a
also. Okay. Splest. So day one, we've got, you know, let there be light in there was light.
He's dividing light from darkness right there.
So here again, we're talking about realms and environments, but if everything was just
darkness before, now God's light is infused there.
So what's being divided is basically the light in the dark here, and in the ancient Ereast
and the Hebrew Bible, light is often used to represent the presence of God, right?
So now we've got this environment
where God is directly present.
And we can say, you know, that's one
that's our first most basic form of division here.
It's the presence of God coming into this space here.
Day two, then we have, like we talked about earlier,
separating water from water.
So that's the division going on.
We have these waters that are above and waters below
and that firmament, the solid dome,
is kind of holding back everything
so that now we live in the air bubble, right?
So we've got the realm of the sky above you now.
We've got the sea, is the waters below.
So that's kind of our environment at day two,
is that sky above and the water below that we've separated out now so that they're not all crashed together. Day three there, we have the
waters being gathered together and separated out from dry land. So day three is verses nine through
thirteen. So we get the land as our new environment in day three, but then there's a bonus act of
creation in day three where we get the plants. Okay, that's our bonus. And even the plants are divided up and separated, right?
So in verse 11, let the earth bring forth one grass, two, the herb bearing seed, and three,
the fruit tree yielding fruit after its kind. So even plants are subdivided into the,
it's all about separation, division, identifying purpose and function here.
Okay, so that's our three days that have
kind of our establishment of the environments. So we're solving our To-Who problem that without
form part from verse two, right? Now we've got our corresponding days. We're going to fill these
with, you know, a population in each of these. So day four, starting in verse 14, going through
verse 19, this is God says, let there be lights in the
firmament of the heaven to divide the day from the night, let them be for signs and for seasons
and for days and for years, and he talks about these two great lights, the lesser,
greater light to rule the day, the lesser light to rule the night, the sun and the moon,
and then you've got the stars as well. So these are the population of this kind of a realm
up above everything right there, right?
The inside of our inverted snow globe is now populated.
And in the Hebrew Bible, stars are often considered
to be like hosts, they're described as a population.
So it's calling them in the inhabitants of the sky here,
it's not like kind of crazy in there their frame of reference
Oh, that reminds me of of Job the morning star saying together. It was yep good
Yeah, the personification of the stars there you're you're exactly right man John. It's like a great scripture a lot
Okay, then day five is versus 20 through 23 okay now remember back in day two
We got the sky and the sea,
those environments there.
So now we're gonna populate the sky and the sea there.
So we've got, in verse 20, the waters are bringing forth
all the water creatures, right?
And we've got the foul that fly above the earth
in the open firmament of heaven.
So you see the mention there of the waters below
and the firmament again.
And then we get all these different creatures creating after their kind, so they're further subdivided
as well right there. So now we've got our population for, you know, that sky above you
there and the the waters beneath. And then verse six. So, you know, day three was the land,
the dry land. So now as we would expect, verse six has the land.
For day day six, right, Josh? day six. Yeah, so starting in verse 24
Let the earth bring forth living creatures after his kind cattle and
creeping things and
Beast of the earth after his kind. So again further subdivisions of those
that are right there and then just like verse day three had its bonus, you know of the plants day six gets a bonus creation
which is humans, right?
In verse 26, let us make man after our image all there.
And then, so why do we have the bonus creation of plants
corresponding with the bonus creation of people?
It explains that just to jump ahead down in verse 29.
God said, behold, I have given you the humans,
every herb bearing seed, which is upon the face of all the earth
and every tree, in which is the the face of all the earth and every tree
And the which is the fruit of the tree yielding seed and for you it shall be for meat meaning. Yeah, so that matches exactly with
Yeah, the plants were there to be the food for the humans. Yep
So the bonus creations are parallel
They are yeah, hey could this be a good time to talk about is
They are. Yeah. Hey, could this be a good time to talk about is man having dominion over animals and things like that? Can we maybe define what does it mean verse 26 to have dominion? Is it kind of like a stewardship as well?
Yeah, I think that's how we would see it is more of a stewardship the word dominion sounds
Kind of tyrannical, but I don't think that's the intention there, right?
sounds kind of tyrannical, but I don't think that's the intention there, right?
The idea, you know, man is created in this image of God, they're reflecting him and they're supposed to be stewards over the earth just the way he has been, right? Okay. So take care of it. Exactly.
So yeah, I think you'd want to use this more in terms of like protecting your environment,
rather than just wholesale taking advantage of it. Right. Like, yeah, I just use it all up.
And instead, it's no take care of it.
Be careful with it. Man, Josh, this is amazing.
Genesis 1 is entirely different in my eyes. Do we have anything more here that you
want to show me? Let's say I'm finding a new room in my own house every
every verse here. I love this. Well, I guess we should point out,
again, remember I said that there's ways in which Genesis is pushing back on the ancient
and recent kind of understandings of some things, correcting the false doctrine, right? So it's
important to notice here in the other creation myths, a lot of them that we can find around,
the Israelites. Humans don't come across looking all that great. Like in the Babylonian
story, the humans are created as slaves to a like a lower tier of deities and they're meant to just
do the menial tasks and then they get really annoying and the gods are frustrated that they created
these guys and that's what they want to send a flood to like destroy them because they're so noisy
and obnoxious and smelly. So humans often don't have a very good place in all this in these
other stories. So Genesis is striking in how much people are like the point, right? God
creates all sorts of things and says it's good. But then with people, he steps back, you
know, this is very good, right? People are the climax of the story. They're the point
of creation. They're creating God's image.
They're meant to have this dominion stewardship
over the rest of the earth.
This is a huge elevated view of humanity
compared to what the Israelites would have been used to
from their culture.
And I think that's really, really important.
That is crucial.
That should be a major takeaway, don't you think,
Josh of chapter one?
You come away from this feeling really good about yourself.
And you know, other stories, human existence
to describe is a lot more pointless and bleak.
I'm so glad you brought this up.
Of there are parts of this that are pushing back
against other creation narratives out there.
That is, I never considered that before.
And this one elevates man a little bit more
than some of the others.
Yeah, another example of how it's pushing back is, remember I was talking about that,
and a lot of these other creation stories, um, creation has to follow a big,
climactic battle where, you know, the gods have to fight these forces of chaos.
You notice there's no battle here. Right. It's very orderly.
Gods in complete control. He just says, let there be, and the universe
just responds without pushback. Right? And that's a different perspective too.
They would have heard of God's fighting each other in order to create. And here's God. He just,
his, just the breath of God. I was thinking that there in our theology, there was, there was war in heaven, but that's not the same thing about a war as a part of the
creation story. Well, I think you could find some connections to that. And I should make a caveat
that just because there's no cosmic battle here in Genesis 1 that the author of this text is
trying to say God's in complete control, the Israelites did have a tradition of God
fighting these forces of chaos at the beginning,
so you do find that motif elsewhere in the Old Testament, just not here. So I'll show you one
quick examples. So Isaiah 27 verse 1. Do you want to read that, Hank? If I can, man, if I can
pronounce these words in that day, the Lord with His sword and great and strong sword shall punish
In that day, the Lord with His sword and great and strong sword shall punish Leviathan, the piercing serpent, even Leviathan, that crooked serpent, and he shall slay the dragon
that is in the sea."
Yeah, so if you're used to these stories from the other cultures about God fighting a giant
serpent from those chaos waters, this sounds really familiar.
And can you read the footnote down there, footnote C in the LDS scriptures?
Sure.
I.E.
A legendary sea monster representing the forces of chaos that oppose the creator.
Yeah, so it's in there.
Again, I'm not making this up, but and there's places in the Psalms, in Job, other places
in the prophets where that motif does come in
You know you slew Rayhab all those things they have a concept of this and it pops up elsewhere
But it seems that the author of Genesis here is trying to
Not go that route right they're trying to make a different point
So instead that they're suggesting that this was completely orderly and that God's in complete control
That's what they want to emphasize here
But elsewhere it is meaningful that God can conquer those forces of chaos. That's another way to
talk about how powerful he is. And I think John's right in that we definitely could link this in to
our motif of that conflict that happened in the pre-mortal council there, right? And how,
you know, God wins. Yeah. Right. That's a takeaway from this.
God wins. Yeah, right. That's that's a takeaway from this. This is awesome. This this is a brand new book that just came out from the Religious Study Center at
BYU. It's called From Creation to Sinai, the Old Testament through the lens of
the Restoration edited by Dan Bellnap and Aaron Shade. This just came out and
this is in a lot of ways a landmark book. It's really really thick and big. It's
got I think 17 chapters written by some of our best Old Testament scholars that we have.
And it covers all sorts in an academic, but restoration lens. It covers all sorts of stuff.
And chapter one is by Dan Bellnap. And it is all about the opening chapters of Genesis.
It's titled in the beginning Genesis one through three. And it is all about the opening chapters of Genesis. It's titled, in the beginning, Genesis 1 through 3
and it's significance to the Latter Day Saints.
And it goes over all this stuff there too
in a really rich way.
So if people are looking to dive deep into this background stuff,
this is not a good book.
If you're trying to, you know, quick and dirty tips
with your kids for family and evening,
but if you want to dive deep into some of this stuff,
this book that just came out is fantastic.
Okay. It has this.
Before we move on, I wanna ask you
about what you said earlier with,
okay, in the Babylonian cosmology,
humans are just kind of pitiful slaves
in the Egyptian cosmology, I don't know,
their accidents, their just their spectators.
And here in this cosmology, humans are the purpose. To me, that could have
a lot of that could speak to our day as well. Yeah, exactly. You know, in 26 God said, let
us make man in our image after our likeness. And that's a big deal here. The word image
here at Selam, and it does mean a physical representation.
This isn't kind of like, oh, you're ethical like God or things like that. It's a very physical
representation used here that you're creating in his image, which corresponds with, you know,
how a Latter-day St. C. this too, right? We're created physically and literally in the image of God.
and literally in the image of God. And God, in verse 28, blesses them, to be fruitful and multiply
and all these things and gives them the stewardship over the earth. So this is a very elevated view,
I think, and it hits, you know, what our restoration scripture teaches that God prepared the earth for us. We're not an afterthought, We're not just one of many creations. We are his children and we are special in his sight.
We are fundamentally different from his other creations
as wonderful as they are.
Now, if I'm with my teenagers teaching Genesis one,
that might be my core lesson.
Is you matter, right?
You matter in this creation, this plan.
And it reminds me of Lehigh talking to Jacob II, and kind of making this incredible dichotomy
of all of God's creations, things that act and things that are acted upon.
And we are the things that are supposed to be the ones that act.
And just about everything else is acted upon, right?
And Elder Bednar gave a whole talk about that once too.
Is that Ring of Bell?
And that we don't say he makes me this or she, no, we're created to act and to choose
God not to just be acted upon.
Well, we get another way to make this personal too.
So we just went over, you know, how
creation looks from an ancient Israelite perspective about the separating the identifying
purpose and the naming and all that, right? So in addition to just being like, okay,
well, let me think like an ancient Israelite and make sense of why the text is structured
this way. If you want to make this personal and individual now step away from ancient
history, I think this has a lot to teach us. I know a lot of times when we pray, we want God to kind of poof, give us a
blessing out of somewhere and just drop it on our lap or poof make our problems disappear,
right? Just go away, become nothing. You must have heard me pray last night. Yeah.
And you know, if Genesis is suggesting that his creative
activity isn't poofing things out of non-existence into physical reality or vice versa, but his
creative act is to organize and give purpose and meaning to and name and things. I think that might
have some interesting things to teach us. You know, there's people going through a lot of really hard stuff. You think of people
that are experiencing mental illness, people that are experiencing loss, people that are
going through just these really excruciating trials. One of the things that can make those
worse than anything is not being able to have any sense that there's any purpose to any
of this, that it's all meaningless, it's meaningless suffering. There's no value or purpose behind it. And if, or people even who
struggle with faith, wondering if God is even there listening to them, like the, the idea that
existence is pointless is terrifying. And when we're going through these hard things, I think it's
so important that we turn to God, because what we see here is a God who is able to organize things into significant ways
out of what looks like chaos and nonsense at the beginning there.
He can take our stories, our narratives that we tell about ourselves and our lives and
out of what seems to be random events or pointlessness, he can
grant us meaning and purpose and direction.
And suddenly things make sense.
Or maybe there's blessings that have been there all along, but you get that insight all of
sudden that flash of inspiration where you recognize the blessing because now he's
kind of separated out from all the noise in your life and named it as a blessing for you.
You make you connect those dots and then that just comes to your mind.
So I think his ability to sift in our lives, what's significant from what's not and things
that are blessings and things from all the noises.
That's a really significant aspect of his creative activity which continues with us today. John mentioned this, but in the Come Follow Me manual, that's the opening paragraph for
this week's lesson, right?
That one thing the creation Torah story teaches us is that God can make something magnificent
out of something unorganized.
That's helpful to remember when life seems chaotic.
Heavenly Father and Jesus Christ are creators, and their creative work is with us is not finished. And I think
that's so important, remember, if we feel like we're adrift, like we have no purpose, like
things are nuts, he can give shape and order and meaning to our lives in a way that's just
going to be beautiful. Josh, tell me again, Tohu, I'm going to write it down.
The va is an and, yeah, so the full phrase is Tohu, Va Bouh. That's going to be so, Josh, I think my phrase for my problems is going to be tohuh, va bohuh.
I'm going to, when I hit a problem that I don't understand, I'm going to be like, yes, this is tohuh, va bohuh.
And now what do I need to do?
I need to go to God, let him teach me how to separate it, give purpose to it, name it, that this is an important part of my life.
So I don't know. I'm going to use it, John. Whenever I reach up here,
whenever I run into a problem, I'm going to text you, Tohu Vaubo.
Love, love, love.
Right.
I have, I have got a problem. And that means I'm going back to God to, to give me purpose behind this.
Josh, I think you're so right.
Someone who is struggling with mental illness needs to know there's, there, there is a purpose
behind this that this is doing something.
Mm-hmm.
And often that means him not changing our circumstances, right?
It's not the snapping things in and out of existence, but it is defining and giving order
to and structure and, and meaning to these things.
And that sometimes makes just all the difference.
Wow.
Wow.
One of the things the gospel does is even when we don't
know what it is, when we can say to ourselves,
there must be a reason.
A loving, that there is a loving God, he loves me.
It's kind of, you know, first Nephi 11, 17, I know,
I know he loved his children.
Nevertheless, I do not know the meaning of all things.
And what's the second Nephi?
Is the second Nephi nine, he do it,
not anything save it be for the benefit of the world.
And so we can kind of go, I don't get it,
I don't get why right now, I don't get why this.
But I'm gonna press forward
because there must be a bigger purpose that I see.
And Josh, you gotta help me with this
because I can't remember who it was,
but some sort of somebody proposed the idea
of God creating the world like a clock
and then backing up and just kind of disinterested,
gee, I wonder what's gonna happen?
Have you heard that idea before?
Man, it's a deal.
Yeah, the whole universe is a big machine.
Yeah, and he's just gonna,
he's just interested, just,
I'll create a wow,
wonder what's gonna happen and backs off,
instead of wanting to bless us,
wanting to help us and having our ultimate good in mind,
which is a whole different mindset.
Yeah, that's kind of a great conception
of the universe where you get that.
In the Hebrew term of the universe,
it's not like that because the way it describes
the relationship between the crater and its creations
is it's very much a relationship
and it's framed in covenantal terms.
He's invested in this, he's an active dynamic part of this
and it's not like he creates and takes off.
So Josh, would it be fair to say that
that ancient Israelite hears what we call Genesis 1
and walks away thinking,
hey, I matter, I'm important.
I think that's exactly what they're supposed to hear.
They're supposed to take away this elevated view of humanity, this elevated view of God that, you know, he's better than the
gods of Egypt or Babylon or the Orcanean wherever.
This is this is a big picture that this God is all powerful.
Wow.
Wow. You just kind of stepped us into the world of Genesis. And I'm very grateful. Really. What do we do next, Josh?
Well, I just want to note that this, this count of the creation.
So the division between chapter one and two, like you might know,
the chapter breaks are added like centuries and centuries later.
And they're often not in good spots.
And Josh, you're right. We kind of when we hit a chapter break, we almost do a memory wipe. We don't even remember the previous chapter. We just kind of say, okay, stop.
Go to bed that night and you know, pick it up five days later.
Right. And we don't remember anything from the last chapter when they should be connected,
right? In many places. So the chapter breaks in the wrong spot. Like if you're going to have a chapter break here,
you want to put it down like in verse four.
That's that's where the division would be.
Like either beginning of verse four, halfway down,
verse four, somewhere there.
Because chapter two versus one, two, three are continuing
the same structure and story that we've had going the whole time.
So you, including the seventh day, right?
You don't want to forget about that. They just like, yeah, now another chapter for that one. and story that we've had going the whole time. So you, including the seventh day, right?
You don't want to forget about that.
They just like, yeah, now another chapter for that one.
Yeah, there's literary bookends that link
the beginning of chapter one with what you got
at the opening of chapter two here.
So notice chapter one, verse one,
you know, in the beginning, God created the heaven and the earth.
Chapter two, verse one, thus the heavens and the earth
were finished and all the hosts of them.
And notice again that even there it's getting out those two problems. We talked about the Tohuva Vohu,
right? The earth and the heavens and the earth were finished. That's the environments and
all the hosts of them, the populations again. So we're solving those twin problems of the
uncreated state. And then versus two and three or about that seventh day, and they kind of
link back to verse one, too. And this is getting really kind of nerdy in the details now. But like chapter 1, verse 1 in Hebrew has 7 Hebrew words.
And then the second verse has 14 Hebrew words, so 7 times 2. And then if you look at chapter two versus two in the first half of verse three,
it's also got a set of seven words, seven words, seven words, kind of right there. So even the
number of words people have seen kind of a bookend to show the beginning and the end of this
structure there. So that's fun stuff. Yeah, and seven is wholeness and completeness, right? Right. Yeah. Seven in their culture
has this sense of wholeness, completeness. And so they're kind of by framing everything
around that, you know, you got seven days, you got these sets of verses where it's in
seven words. You got seven announcements that creation was good. There's just seven
all over the place in here. So it's the details in here. You can tell someone really was carefully crafting this
You know, you might even say they're inspired right?
What happens at verse four is it a brand new story is it
So what you see is that starting in verse four and going on
It's basically a different account of creation. It doesn't just keep going, it kind of takes
it from the top and starts all over again. And it talks about things in a different order,
it talks about things in a different way, it uses different vocabulary terms. So people have
spent a lot of time trying to ask why that is. Why is, you know, chapter one and basically chapter two,
so different. Biblical scholars often have the theory that these were written by two different people, and that later an inspired editor here came together and like stitch these two accounts together side by side so you could learn from both of them. in some Latter-day Saints have looked at a passage in the book of Moses, where God explains he created everything spiritually before they were physically created on the earth. So they
have proposed that maybe Genesis 1 is more of a spiritual creation and chapter 2 is more
of that physical creation. There's other explanations too, but whatever way you want to go with
those explanations for why the differences are there, it is worth noting that clearly there
are differences in how chapters one and two are telling
the story of this. I think maybe the footnote committee subscribed to that. You see the summary
at the beginning, the prior spirit creation is explained. Yeah, so that kind of spiritual versus
physical, I think when Bruce Armour Conkey, that's what he went with. And so when he writes the chapter, he's hitting there, that's how he's dealing with that.
Some of the differences that people see are, for example, in chapter one, it talks about God
creating, and the Hebrew term there is Elohim. And in chapter two, it talks about the Lord
creating, and with the small capitalsitals and the Hebrew there is Jehovah.
So that's like chapter 2 verse 4 in the day that the Lord God made the heavens and the earth.
So you're saying that's a different in Hebrew that's a different God than in the beginning God
created the heaven the earth from verse from chapter 1. Well, or at least it's a different
term that they're using. Okay. Right?
And we should stop and explain this maybe because this will be handy for people for the rest
of the Old Testament about what it means with those capitals.
Right.
At least, too.
So in Hebrew, the name that the Israelites had for the God of Israel, the God that they're
sacrificing to, that they're, you know, worshiping that's talking to Moses and Isaiah, and Hebrew
they say his name Yahweh. And that's the name that we have in English as Jehovah
it's just our kind of English-sized pronunciation of that. The history is complicated but we don't
need to get in that. So basically Yahweh and Jehovah it's just the original pronunciation versus the
kind of modern English pronunciation and you see that name Yahweh pop up a lot in terms you are
familiar with because when they pair the name with other words, they often shorten it to an abbreviated form Yah.
So for example, you guys have heard the phrase hallelujah, right?
Hallelujah means all of you praise like in command form there and who you praising Yah, right? Short for Yahweh. Or for example Isaiah or Elijah, their names have that
YAH kind of in there. So you see that short and form pop up a lot in different
names and expressions right there. So I'm watching for the small caps. Well what
happens is Jews after the Old Testament kind of before you get to the New Testament,
they develop a tradition that the name is too sacred
to say out loud.
So they start when they're reading their scriptures
and they come to the name,
they'll say the phrase,
the Lord in Hebrew, out of an eye instead.
So, you know, on the,
then the page in front of them,
the words will say,
Yahweh spoke to Moses,
but then out loud,
they'll say the Lord spoke to Moses
in order to avoid saying the name.
So then when the King James Bible translators are making the English translation, they decided to keep up that Jewish tradition.
So when that name Yahweh appears, they'll use the title of the Lord as a euphemism,
but they put the small capitals in there as a wink and a nod to let you know, haps. You know, secret all the way here. Yeah,
the, the, the, it's a name here, not the title of the Lord.
And so the small caps is tipping off to that. When it really does say the Lord,
because that's also a term, it'll just be in regular lower case letters.
It's just plain and simple, nothing fancy there.
But those small capital letters,
are you little tip from the translators to let you know what's really going on. So you can see the Lord in the capitals
and think to yourself, oh, that's the name Jehovah. Okay. That's what you want to be thinking
in your brain. Is it always paired with Lord God? Or is it sometimes not always? It is here in Genesis
two, but other places it's just the Lord all by itself, Jehovah. And that's only in your King James
version, right? I don't know if the others, if we need to be-
Different languages and translations do it differently.
And for example, the church has its own translations
in Spanish and Portuguese, right?
That they came out with in 2009 and 2015.
So these are relatively recent.
The Spanish translation ditches that Jewish tradition.
It says, hey, Ova, Jehovah, all over the place left and right,
whereas the Portuguese one takes a different track,
and it says, you know, Elsen Yorne,
you know, the small capitals the whole way through.
So it's more like the English there.
And you read, yeah, different translations and
different languages and cultures just have
their own kind of preferences they developed with this.
So it just depends on what tradition you're following there.
You know, I taught at the MTC and I taught Spanish.
And I remember these missionaries
that get their Spanish Bible and that flip it open
and they see, hey, hey, hey, like all over the place
because that name appears over 6,000 times
in the Old Testament.
It's on almost every page, I think.
So they see it all over and they're just, you know,
dumbstruck at first, they're like,
because for them, Jehovah's are relatively rare word.
They don't use it a lot.
So when they see that it's all over the Old Testament, they go, what in the world is going on? It kind of takes them back at first. And then that kind of teaches them that the name has been
there all along. It's just hiding behind that, you know, euthanistic title in English.
Well, that's good to know when Hank, when we have students who have served in a Spanish-speaking
mission, and we can kind of point that out in their
scriptures. And Josh, I seem to remember in your bio, you've done some work with the publication of the
scriptures. Yeah, I published an article on the church's Spanish Bible translation. I can
analyze it. Did that. So, and they bring up with another just point here that's handy for people in the doctrine of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, of course, who is Jehovah?
Jesus.
It's Jesus Christ, right? The living Christ that small capitals the Lord there means Jehovah
Means Jesus Christ that opens up a whole new world for you to you know see Jesus Christ in the Old Testament
You have to kind of connect those dots and do that pairing, but once you do it's amazing
Because we often have lessons or say oh you want to go closer to Jesus in the Old Testament this year. Well, watch for the types and shadows, watch for the symbolism, watch for the messianic prophecies.
You know, they'll pop up every so often.
And I'm thinking, you don't even have to do all that hard work.
I mean, that's good stuff too.
But, you know, if you're in your mind, yeah, if you're, if you're, you see the Lord and you're thinking Jesus Christ right there,
you don't have to go looking for all the hidden symbolism everywhere.
He's everywhere.
He's on Sinai talking to Moses,
given the tin commandments.
He's leading them out of Egypt.
Jesus is talking to Abraham and Isaiah and Jeremiah.
He's the one they're discussing in the Psalms.
He's everywhere directly on the surface, not hiding.
And that's just an exciting thing.
You know, as a Latter-day Saint, to be able to put that all together
and see him there and watch how he acts in his role as the premortal God of Israel.
Please join us for part two of this podcast.
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