The below excerpt, at the bottom of this post, is from a link in a previous post.
usccb.org/bible/genesis/0
USCCB >
Bible
Genesis – Introduction
Personally, I would have preferred more blood and guts as an introduction to The True Creation Story.
Here is an example. Please know that I do not do Noah.
“The origin of something was thought to explain its present meaning, e.g., how God acts with justice and generosity, why human beings are rebellious, the nature of sexual attraction and marriage, why there are many peoples and languages.”
That is a wonderful sentence. However, I would appreciate down-to-earth citations from the first three sacred chapters of Genesis. Everyone is on their own when it comes to Chapter 4.
Here is another thought provoking sentence.
“Ancient Near Eastern thinkers did not have our methods of exploring serious questions.”
This next sentence has me wondering what happened to the words “Divine Revelation”?
“Instead, they used narratives for issues that we would call philosophical and theological.”
Obviously, there are a lot of folks who would look at the Bible and think to themselves – This is a good introduction.
Nonetheless, when I read the first sentence: “How should modern readers interpret the creation-flood story in
Gn 2–
11?”
Why ask? When the stronger sentence would be – Modern readers can interpret the True Creation Story according to Catholic doctrines.
There are a few other sentences which make wonder…
Below is the very interesting excerpt. I would guess that CAF members and guests, plus myself, would need time to think through the excerpt which has a lot of interesting information. There is no doubt about that
usccb.org/bible/genesis/0
USCCB >
Bible
Genesis – Introduction
“How should modern readers interpret the creation-flood story in
Gn 2–
11? The stories are neither history nor myth. “Myth” is an unsuitable term, for it has several different meanings and connotes untruth in popular English. “History” is equally misleading, for it suggests that the events actually took place. The best term is creation-flood story. Ancient Near Eastern thinkers did not have our methods of exploring serious questions. Instead, they used narratives for issues that we would call philosophical and theological. They added and subtracted narrative details and varied the plot as they sought meaning in the ancient stories. Their stories reveal a privileged time, when divine decisions were made that determined the future of the human race. The origin of something was thought to explain its present meaning, e.g., how God acts with justice and generosity, why human beings are rebellious, the nature of sexual attraction and marriage, why there are many peoples and languages. Though the stories may initially strike us as primitive and naive, they are in fact told with skill, compression, and subtlety. They provide profound answers to perennial questions about God and human beings.”