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Creation and Blessing is an exceptionally helpful guide for pastors and teachers. Its literary, exegetical, and theological analyses will enrich any exposition of Genesis. The author's purpose is to "help the reader appreciate the major literary and theological motifs that form the theological ideas in the narratives, and to demonstrate how these theological ideas can be developed into clear and accurate expository ideas." To accomplish this goal, he divides Genesis into more than sixty units, discussing each unit's theological ideas, describing its structure, and synthesizing its message, as well as providing an exegetical outline, an expository outline, and a bibliography.… (altro)
Themes: God brings good out of evil God completes what He begins regardless of man's failures. Man tends to disobedience, deception, hubris, self-pleasing. God creates perfectly and harmoniously. He loves, He loves beauty. The Lord covenants wants to walk with man. The nature of God, the nature of man, and their relationship, including His expectations and His moral code.
23 The starting point for this study is the presupposition that Scripture is revelation, a message from God to his people. Genesis thus has a dimension very different from the comparable literature of the ancient Near East. As God's revelation, Genesis is authoritative. Consequently, in studying it, one must go beyond academic inquiry to discover its theologically applicable truths.
38 This determination will involve concentration on literary genre, narrative structure, rhetorical devices, the unified theological point of the narrative, and the correlation with the theology of the book and with the Bible as a whole.
42 The simplest way to capture the unity, and the most helpful for the next to steps in the process, is to make a full exegetical outline of the material and then write a summary of the passage in one sentence. 43 In short, it requires us to decide upon the central point of theunit and to determine how the other parts are related to it. ( )
Creation and Blessing is an exceptionally helpful guide for pastors and teachers. Its literary, exegetical, and theological analyses will enrich any exposition of Genesis. The author's purpose is to "help the reader appreciate the major literary and theological motifs that form the theological ideas in the narratives, and to demonstrate how these theological ideas can be developed into clear and accurate expository ideas." To accomplish this goal, he divides Genesis into more than sixty units, discussing each unit's theological ideas, describing its structure, and synthesizing its message, as well as providing an exegetical outline, an expository outline, and a bibliography.
God completes what He begins regardless of man's failures.
Man tends to disobedience, deception, hubris, self-pleasing.
God creates perfectly and harmoniously. He loves, He loves beauty.
The Lord covenants wants to walk with man.
The nature of God, the nature of man, and their relationship, including His expectations and His moral code.
23 The starting point for this study is the presupposition that Scripture is revelation, a message from God to his people. Genesis thus has a dimension very different from the comparable literature of the ancient Near East. As God's revelation, Genesis is authoritative. Consequently, in studying it, one must go beyond academic inquiry to discover its theologically applicable truths.
38 This determination will involve concentration on literary genre, narrative structure, rhetorical devices, the unified theological point of the narrative, and the correlation with the theology of the book and with the Bible as a whole.
42 The simplest way to capture the unity, and the most helpful for the next to steps in the process, is to make a full exegetical outline of the material and then write a summary of the passage in one sentence.
43 In short, it requires us to decide upon the central point of theunit and to determine how the other parts are related to it. ( )