Genesis 1 enumerates 7 days for the creation. It painstakingly documents the shift from one day to the next with the repetitive phrase, "and there was evening, and there was morning, the Xth Day."
I don't think those time frames are literal. Get out your torches and pitchforks.
Just to be clear, I DO think the chapter is about the literal creation of the world. This isn't one of Aesop's fables.
But I read something recently that suggests to me that the enumeration of 7 days itself... that is probably a poetic device. What I read was a translation of another ancient story, named Aqhat. This story was engraved on stone around the time that Moses lived, and unearthed in Ugarit in modern days by archaeologists.
The story contains a section that looks very similar to Genesis 1's week of creation. I've included the sectoin at the bottom of this post so you can read it for yourself. As you do, take note of the progression over a period of 7 days, and of the repetitive language that painstakingly documents the shift from one day to the next. The main character dresses, goes to offer sacrifices to the gods, praying that he might conceive a son, and then undresses, goes to bed, gets up the next day and repeats it all again.
It seems that this repetition over a period of 7 days is a literary form. It expresses the passage of time - of a long time. The repetition causes the reader/hearer of the story to experience the passage of time. If you read below, you will suffer alongside the main character as he waits and persists in petitioning the gods for a son. You might be happy to know that he is granted his request.
Then Danel, the man of Rapau,
from Stories from Ancient Canaan, by Coogan & Smith
I don't think those time frames are literal. Get out your torches and pitchforks.
Just to be clear, I DO think the chapter is about the literal creation of the world. This isn't one of Aesop's fables.
But I read something recently that suggests to me that the enumeration of 7 days itself... that is probably a poetic device. What I read was a translation of another ancient story, named Aqhat. This story was engraved on stone around the time that Moses lived, and unearthed in Ugarit in modern days by archaeologists.
The story contains a section that looks very similar to Genesis 1's week of creation. I've included the sectoin at the bottom of this post so you can read it for yourself. As you do, take note of the progression over a period of 7 days, and of the repetitive language that painstakingly documents the shift from one day to the next. The main character dresses, goes to offer sacrifices to the gods, praying that he might conceive a son, and then undresses, goes to bed, gets up the next day and repeats it all again.
It seems that this repetition over a period of 7 days is a literary form. It expresses the passage of time - of a long time. The repetition causes the reader/hearer of the story to experience the passage of time. If you read below, you will suffer alongside the main character as he waits and persists in petitioning the gods for a son. You might be happy to know that he is granted his request.
Then Danel, the man of Rapau,
the Hero, the man of the Harnamite,
girded, he gave the gods food,girded, he gave the holy ones drink.
He cast off his cloak and lay down,put off his garment and spent the night
One day passed, and on the secondgirded, Daniel gave to the gods,
girded, he gave the gods food,girded, he gave the holy ones drink.
A third day passed, and on the fourthgirded, Daniel gave to the gods,
girded, he gave the gods food,girded, he gave the holy ones drink.
A fifth day passed, and on the sixthgirded, Daniel gave to the gods,
girded, he gave the gods food,girded, he gave the holy ones drink.
Danel cast off his cloak and lay down,cast off his cloak and lay down,
put off his garment and spent the night.
Then, on the seventh day, Baal approached...from Stories from Ancient Canaan, by Coogan & Smith