The
Lost
World of Genesis One
by John H. Walton, IVP Academic
Publishers, 2009, 192 pages,
$16.00 (paperback) ISBN-13: 978-0-8308-3704-5
John
H. Walton is a professor of Old Testament at Wheaton College and has
written many books on the subject. We are interested in this book,
because it comes to the same conclusions that we have suggested in this
journal, but from a different perspective. What is meant by, “We take
the Bible literally”? Interpreting an English translation through the
teachings of a denominational tradition is not taking the Bible
literally. To take the Bible literally you have to look at who wrote
it, to whom it was written, and how the people of that day would have
understood it. Our approach has been to look at the Hebrew words used
in Genesis and ask how the people of that day would have understood the
words. We believe they would have understood the animals described in
Genesis as the ones that they saw in front of them — their barnyard
animals — and those close to them in the rivers and streams of their
land. Animals like dinosaurs, which could have been part of God’s tools
to prepare earth for humans, would not be what they would have
understood those words to mean.
Walton comes to a similar conclusion by studying the culture and
language of ancient Israel. The book is divided into 18 propositions
starting with ancient cosmology and ancient science. The Genesis
account is viewed as presenting functions, not accurate, modern
science. The ancients saw the cosmos as a temple, and Genesis one is
not an explanation of the material production of creation but of the
establishment of the temple. lt is a different and interesting
approach, and those struggling with Genesis and the advances of modern
science will find it useful and interesting — and challenging. It is
not a book for young or immature readers.
Back to Contents
Does God Exist?, NovDec10.
12/10/2010