Rose Guide to Genesis
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About this ebook
- Overview & timeline of the book of Genesis
- Geography, customs, and daily life in the ancient world
- A to Z guide of who’s who in Genesis & family trees
- Key themes of covenant, creation, and blessing
- And much more!
- A full timeline of Genesis’ 50 books in over 100 key events
- A clear outline of Genesis unpacked and organized into an origin structure
- Dozens of easy-to-read summaries of the most important people and events
- And more
- Learn about the people and lands of ancient world from Mesopotamia to Egypt with fascinating facts
- Discover insights into family structure, customs, and religious practices of ancient peoples to give context to your Bible study
- Uncover the many ways Christ is foreshadowed in the Book of Genesis
- And so much more!
- Quick-Reference: Find what you need fast using clear headers, charts, and simple summaries to answer the questions you have at the flip of a page!
- Illustrated: Packed with dozens of graphics, photos, and illustrations, don't just imagine what life was like in the time of Noah, Abraham, Sarah, and Jacob—SEE illustrations, maps, locations, and more!
- Simple Overview: Covers everything you need to know about the Book of Genesis: hundredsof key events and peoplehistorical backgrounds
- Solid and Reliable: Enjoy having well-researched knowledge in one compact handbook! You'll have all the solidscriptural overviews and information you need at your fingertips.
- Individual study
- Small groups
- Young adult and youth groups
- Church libraries
- Homeschool
- And more!
Rose Guides are easy-to-read reference handbooks that explore the people, places, and stories of the Bible. With the colorful maps, charts, and timelines that Rose Publishing is known for, Rose Guides provide readers with key historical and practical insights for understanding the books of the Bible and biblical topics that are important for our lives today.
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Rose Guide to Genesis - Rose Publishing
Chapter 1
The Story
of Genesis
All stories have a beginning. The story of the Bible starts not with the once upon a time
of fairy tales, but with four other unforgettable words: In the beginning God ...
(Gen. 1:1). This story begins with God. Before the existence of the world as we know it today, before thousands of years of human history, before even the formation of galaxies and planets, there was God. Genesis, the first book of the Bible, is the account of how all good things in this world began, and how so much of it went terribly wrong.
The Story of Genesis at a Glance
Creation (Gen. 1–2)
Now the earth was formless and empty, darkness was over the surface of the deep, and the Spirit of God was hovering over the waters. And God said, Let there be light, and there was light.
Genesis 1:2–3
The first chapter of Genesis tells how God brought form to the formless and filled the emptiness with life. With the power of his word, God created light where there was none, put galaxies in space, made birds to fill the air and fish to fill the seas, and like a potter at his wheel, he formed the first human being from the dust of the ground.
The creation story reveals who God is. He is the Creator who gives life to humanity and all living things. This world is his beautiful and very good
creation (Gen. 1:31). In the first two chapters of Genesis, we see God as designer, artist, architect, and life-giver—a good and loving God who takes delight in his creation. He needs nothing, yet freely gives life to all.
The creation story also tells us something about ourselves. We are not here by accident. Our Creator purposefully designed us to reflect himself.
God created mankind in his own image, in the image of God he created them; male and female he created them.
Genesis 1:27
He made the first man Adam from the dust of the ground, and the first woman Eve from Adam’s side. As image-bearers of God, their directive was an important one: to fill the earth and reign over God’s creation.
A Fallen World (Gen. 3–5)
The first two chapters of Genesis portray a picture of the world that is very good
(Gen. 1:31). God put the first man and woman in the garden of Eden, a place where they cared for God’s creation and God cared for them. Both Adam and Eve were naked and felt no shame (Gen. 2:25).
Consider the world as it is today. It is easy to see that many things are not the way they should be. If everything was once so good, how did it go so wrong? The next chapter in Genesis answers this question.
Adam and Eve had a choice: trust in the goodness of their Creator or go their own way, rebelling against the kind of life God had given them. God issued them one restriction: You must not eat from the tree of the knowledge of good and evil, for when you eat from it you will certainly die
(Gen. 2:17).
Deceived by a manipulative serpent, Eve chose the fruit of the one tree that was off limits. (Revelation 12:9 and 20:2 point to the involvement of Satan—that ancient serpent
—in this deception in the garden.) Adam also ate the fruit, and things were never the same. Shame, followed by hiding from God, was their immediate response (Gen. 3:7–8). The man and woman had known only the goodness of God. In rebellion against their Maker, they came to know evil as well.
They tried to hide from God, but it was no use. Sinful choices have consequences. The first couple—and all humanity thereafter—was banished from the garden of Eden. Sinfulness, corruption, pain, and death entered the world. Life became very difficult: physical pain, hard work, broken relationships with each other and with God, and ultimately death. The world was no longer the way it should be. The following stories in the book of Genesis give a clear—and at times disturbing—portrait of the effects of sin.
Noah’s Ark (Gen. 6–11)
By chapter six in Genesis, many years had passed since Adam and Eve, and the human race increased rapidly, but so did evil, corruption, and violence (Gen. 6:5, 12). The Creator who had given life in the first chapters of Genesis concludes that the wickedness of humanity is so great that he will take away all the life he had made on the face of the earth. The means of destruction will be a massive flood like the world had never seen before!
The flood story can be viewed as a kind of reverse creation story. It is the undoing of the created world that had become so corrupted.
Yet there was one man who had found favor with God. Noah, whose name may mean comfort
or relief,
was a righteous and blameless person who walked with God (Gen. 6:8–9). God chose to save Noah and his family from God’s wrath against evil in the world. In a way, the life-destroying flood would bring about a new start for humanity, another beginning.
By faith, Noah did exactly as God instructed and built a large ark. Then the flood waters came and covered the entire earth. For one year, Noah, his family, and many pairs of animals survived inside the ark. All other life on the land was destroyed. The breath of life we read about earlier in Genesis is snuffed out, save for a few on the ark. Finally, the waters receded and Noah and his family and all the animals exited the ark.
God made an everlasting covenant with Noah and all living creatures. He declared that never again would he destroy the earth in a flood. The rainbow in the sky would be the sign of the covenant,
a reminder that God will keep his promise (Gen. 9:12–17). Though it was a new beginning, the fallen state of humanity and of the world continued. It was not long before Noah and his family were acting sinfully and reaping the consequences.
Abraham and Sarah (Gen. 12–24)
Even with a new beginning after the flood waters were gone, sin and corruption remained in the world. Much of humanity continued living against the will of God. Yet God was undeterred from bringing about his plan to redeem humanity and all creation. Starting in Genesis 12, we see God forging a path of redemption through one special—though far from perfect—family. The story of this family begins with a childless couple named Abraham and Sarah.
AbrahamAbraham and his wife Sarah (also called Abram and Sarai) were originally from the ancient city of Ur in Mesopotamia. Ur, as we know from archaeology, was a thriving center of commerce. But it was also a city teeming with the worship of false gods. Abraham’s family was semi-nomadic, moving to wherever they could find food and pasturelands for their flocks. They traveled from Ur to Harran in upper Mesopotamia, another major city of commerce.
God called Abraham to migrate from Harran to the land of Canaan. God assured Abraham with a covenant that God would bless him and his family.
The
Lord
had said to Abram, Go from your country, your people and your father’s household to the land I will show you. I will make you into a great nation, and I will bless you; I will make your name great, and you will be a blessing.
Genesis 12:1–2
Throughout Abraham’s story in Genesis, God reaffirms this covenant on seven different occasions. The covenant included these promises: Abraham and Sarah would have a son (Gen. 18:1–15); all nations would