John Day investigates disputed points of interpretation within Genesis
1-11, expanding on his earlier book From Creation to Babel with 11
stimulating essays. Day considers the texts within their Near Eastern
contexts, and pays particular attention to the later history of
interpretation and reception history.
Topics covered include the meaning of the Bible's first verse and what
immediately follows, as well as what it means that humanity is made in
the image of God. Further chapters examine the Garden of Eden, the
background and role of the serpent and the ambiguous role of Wisdom; the
many problems of interpretation in the Cain and Abel story, as well as
what gave rise to this story; how the Covenant with Noah and the Noachic
commandments, though originally separate, became conflated in some later
Jewish thought; and the location of 'Ur of the Chaldaeans', Abraham's
alleged place of origin, and how this was later misinterpreted by
Jewish, Christian and Islamic sources as referring to a 'fiery furnace
of the Chaldaeans'. These chapters, which illuminate the meaning,
background and subsequent interpretation of the Book of Genesis, pave
the way for Day's forthcoming ICC commentary on Genesis 1-11.