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Genesis 1-11 Q+R

Responses to listeners' questions from Genesis 1-11.

Episode 1
46m
Apr 1, 2017
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Episodes

This summer we're releasing audio of questions and responses that we did on our YouTube channel talking through different books in the Old Testament. In this episode, Tim and Jon discuss Genesis 1-11 and the Overview video. You can view the video here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hAGkL2MDyfk

Thank you to all of our supporters and listeners. You can find more resources, all free here at our website. www.thebibleproject.com

Questions: Why did we leave out the snake in the video? (1:00) What is imagery of serpent in ancient culture? (3:14) Does it matter if we read Genesis literally or not? (7:15) What is the deal with genealogies in the Genesis? (14:07) Did God create the earth twice in Genesis 1 and 2? (18:28) What would have happened if Adam and Eve had not chosen the fruit in the story? (27:19) Who are "the sons of god" in Genesis 6 and the book of Enoch? (33:16)

Resources:

John Walton, The Lost World of Genesis One

  • The Lost World of Adam and Eve

  • Genesis​, The NIV Application Commentary

Michael Heiser, The Unseen Realm​[for the "sons of God" in Genesis 6]

John Sailhamer, Genesis [in volume 1 of ​The Expositor's Bible Commentary​]

Music: Defender Instrumental by Rosasharn Music

Scripture References
Genesis 5
Genesis 6:1-5

Podcast Date: April 1, 2017

(46.00)

Speakers in the audio file:

Jon Collins

Tim Mackie


Jon: Hey, this is Jon at The Bible Project. Today on the podcast, we're going to continue

releasing a series of questions and responses that we did on YouTube. Question and

response was a time where we took your questions, and we gave our best response.

We did this on YouTube Live, so you'll notice the audio quality is a little different, not

as good as our usual podcast. So we apologize for that.

In this episode, we're releasing our Q&R on Genesis 1 through 11. There's a lot of

great stories fundamental to the story of the Bible in Genesis 1 through 11. You can

watch the video that we based this discussion of off. You can find the link in our

show notes.

The first question in this Q&R is about why we didn't talk about Satan or the snake,

the serpent in this video — why we left them out. Here we go.

Jon: Actually, one of the questions came from Demetrius Walton. Demetrius asked, "What

caused you to leave out the serpent who's the enemy of the Messiah and our souls?

Why did you leave out Genesis 3:15 because we get God's rescue plan in seed form

and the idea of a Messiah in that verse? Once we get to chapter 12, we see how God

flushes out the plan through His promise covenant with Abraham." So why did we

leave out the snake?

Tim: Demetrius, good question man. That's exactly the question I asked myself as we're

making the video. There's one practical question, and this is about learning the

visual communication medium of these videos. What we found in our writing and

brainstorming process is in the five to six-minute video, like what we're doing, you

can't talk about everything. If you talk about everything, it'll be 30 minutes, and it

won't be effective as a piece of communication.

So what we wanted to do was highlight what we saw as the dominant narrative

theme and thread that holds together all of the stories in Genesis 1 through 11.

That's with the spiral really. We set it up as everything's great and then the spiral.

And so we just focused like a laser on that.

And I knew that we would do a series at some point where we would get to the

snake crusher and the serpent.

Jon: Which we do in the Messiah.

Tim: Which we do in the Messiah video. Then in the Read Scripture series, which is you

see the poster in front of you here, we have a two-part video on Genesis that we do

all about the serpent. So I also knew that in future videos we'd talk about the

serpent. That's why we did what we did.

Because to introduce the serpent would require at least 30 to 60 seconds more and

we just felt like we want to highlight the human rebellion as the thread. There are

pros and cons to that decision but that's why we did it.

Jon: We will keep talking about the sermon though. This other question came in from

Andrew Mattson [SP]. In regards to the serpent, I understand that in the ancient

Near Eastern contexts the serpent could have been recognized as the chaos

monster, and the image of the serpent actually develops into a biblical theology of

Satan. But if the recently freed Israelite slaves are the first audience for the story,

then I think it would be fair to say that Egypt is their immediate context.

Within Egyptian artwork that has a lot of protective serpent imagery, the Cobra

protruding from Pharaoh's crown, and the pharaoh himself looking like a cobra with

the...How do you pronounce that?

Tim: [unintelligible 00:03:57]

Jon: Do you think that the Genesis serpent could have evoked the memory of Pharaoh in

the Egyptian enslavement? So is there any connection between the biblical writers

using the serpent and what was going on in the ancient Near Eastern context there

with Pharaoh and all that stuff?

Tim: Andrew, great question. You've done some reading on the background of the image

of the serpent in the ancient Near East. My hunch is that you've been reading John

Walton, which is awesome. I'm a huge fan of his commentary on Genesis.

So, yeah, the image of the serpent, first off, in the narrative itself, all it says about this

serpent is that it's a creature that is like any other creature in God's good world. It

doesn't come out of the gates and say, it's Satan or its spiritual evil embodied in a...is

just it's a creature.

But the author of Genesis selects an image and tells the story this way, and the

serpent for sure, like all of this Egyptian symbolic context, is in the background. But

the image of a serpent also in Israel's own neighborhood of the Canaanites is a really

common image in the literature and mythology of the Canaanites.

And so, the serpent just like something like the Statue of Liberty, or think in terms of

like American politics right now, the elephant as an image of Republican Party,

animals have a wide ripple effect of the images and ideas that they bring to mind.

And the serpent's definitely that.

So you get other sea dragon or reptile-like creatures occurring elsewhere in the Old

Testament as this icon of chaos and disorder, or death in God's good world. So all of

that is wrapped up here. This is a creature, and clearly what it does in the story is try

and lead humans to rebel against the Creator and lead them towards death.

The point is, it's a very rich image that would have had lots of connection to

Egyptian and Canaanite as the bad guy representing spiritual evil and chaos. So yes,

all of that's there, Andrew, and I do think the author of Genesis expected the readers

to make those connections.

Jon: Quick live question. Which of the books is your favorite?

Tim: Of the Bible?

Jon: Yeah, of the Bible.

Tim: Whatever one I'm working on.

Jon: It's true. Every single time we get to new video, Tim's like, "I'm so excited. We're

finally in. We are in the book." It's true.

Tim: There you go. They are all awesome.

Jon: A lot of people kind of want to talk about literalism and...did we have a question?

Tim: We do. We have a few questions about Genesis 1 through 11.

Jon: What would kind of help frame that conversation?

Tim: Kip Weiland had a great way of framing that question. Do we have that? I'll read it.

Kip said, "I'm a multi-decade Christ follower. I'm witnessing what seems to be a

growing division in the church over the significance of literalism in the Genesis

stories. These accounts cover a great deal of time, certainly predating human writing

and historical record keeping. The debate seems to rage over the way we read the

Bible.

Maybe the concern is over trying to control what we choose to read as poetic,

metaphorical, historical, analogous, etc. My question is, does that matter where we

draw the lines of literalism versus metaphor in the Genesis account, so creation,

Adam and Eve, Noah, Babylon or is this just a matter of opinion?"

And then Kip says, "I personally don't find the story of God with us threatened by

these questions. God's authorship and creative command need not be questioned

despite the mystery inherent in the story. But why are some people threatened over

this?" He's talking about this topic in a five-minute answer. It's like doing surgery

with a hammer. It's so complex.

Jon: And also there's a lot at stake for people.

Tim: That's right. There are multiple questions here. Here would be my way of framing it.

Any time you or I communicate to another person, we choose a medium of

communication. If it's your words, you can do it in conversation, but you can also

choose to break out in song and sing to your friends what you think about dinner or

something. We choose types of communication for different purposes.

Then, when a human wants to use the literary text to do that, there are just all kinds

of different choices available. Do I write a letter? Do I write a novel? Do I write a

poem? And so, communication requires a mode of communicating done in the

language, which means it's in a culture.

And so, the debate actually isn't I think about should I read the story literally or

metaphorically? I think the question needs to be we need to honor these biblical

authors, and pay attention to the mode of writing and the style of writing they chose

to communicate in. Then I need to adjust my expectations to the medium that they

chose.

I think a lot of what this debate is especially with the early chapters of Genesis is that

modern readers we don't know what expectations we're supposed to have. And a lot

of the debate is about people debating over what expectations are we imposing on

these stories? What one should we really have?

So for me, it's not about should I read these stories literally or metaphorically. If I use

a metaphor, if you interpret my metaphor literally, you're violating my intention. I

don't care how we're supposed to read these stories from our point of view, I want

to know how these authors intended these stories to be read.

And so, then you just have to get into, well, what type of writing is it? It's narrative,

but it's a type of narrative that has a lot of connections and overlaps with the way

that Israelites ancient context, the Babylonians, the Egyptians, wrote very similar

types of narratives about what was to them ancient history. We forget that for the

Israelites, Genesis 1 to 11 is about ancient history.

Jon: Well, you mentioned that the other day when we were talking about this, and I

thought that was a really interesting way to think about it. Because for me, yeah, the

ancient—

Tim: It's all ancient.

Jon: Yeah. Or Jesus' time, that's ancient time. Then, if you think about the Babylonian

captivity time, that's ancient. And on and on, and on. King David, ancients. But to

King David, he had his ancients; people who were just as far away as...I don't know

what the math is. And that all bled into how they thought about the world.

Tim: So, a question is, how did an ancient Israelite author depict ancient history for that

author? What we have in Genesis 1 to 11 is a type of narrative that has lots...Every

story has connections to similar topics and narratives in Babylonian literature, and

Egyptian literature, and Canaanite literature. And so, we shouldn't treat it in isolation

from that background, we should read it in connection with it.

What you see is there's overlap and similarities, but also key differences that the

biblical authors believe in the God of Israel is the one true God, the Creator of all.

And so, they tell the stories from that theological angle.

I'm not going to get into specifics here, but the problem is we get into specifics too

quickly in this debate, and then we just get lost in the debates about did the flood

really happen or didn't happen? That's the wrong question. The question is, who is

this author dialoguing with? Well, there's ancient Babylonians flood stories too. Lots

of them. And this story in Genesis is definitely in dialogue with those stories. So let's

have the conversation on that level.

Before we get into our debates about did it really happen or didn't happen, we have

to discipline ourselves, and I think be patient with that question until we read the

stories in their ancient style.

Jon: Because there's so much beauty and so much to learn from these stories when you

begin to ask the right question, and you don't get hung up with, did this literally

happen or not.

Tim: Yeah, yeah, which is important. Don't get me wrong. The question about the

truthfulness of the Bible is extremely important. It's really, really important. But I

want to be careful that I don't impose my 21st-century Western expectations on to

these stories and make them talk about ancient history the way I want them to talk

about it. That's not loving my neighbor as myself.

If I'm really going to honor these authors, I'm going to submit myself to the way that

they chose to communicate in their cultural context. And it's very different than how

we do it today. Anyway, that's a big 30,000-foot answer to that complex question.

Jon: A lot of people are asking — and it kind of ties into that — to talk about the people

living 120 years and—

Tim: That's a good example of what we are talking about.

Jon: This is actually Philippe has asked it a couple of times.

Tim: Philippe. Genesis 5 is a great example. The genealogy going from Adam, the first

human character in the story, going through all these generations down leading up

to Noah. And these people live fantastically long periods of time. Hundreds and

hundreds years of time. Then the flood happens. Then after that, people start to live

fewer years.

Jon: It's actually capped, right? There's a cap.

Tim: Well, there's a cap with the sons of god in Genesis chapter 6. I can already tell we're

not even going to scratch the surface of people's questions about Genesis 1 to 11.

But here's the thing. We read Modern Westerners, and we say, "Oh, it's a genealogy.

This is like what my grandpa or grandma put together at genealogy.com last week

and gave me the big fat book."

You have to stop and you have to say, "Well, no, this is from thousands of years ago,

different culture, it's likely that genealogies functioned differently in their culture

than they do in ours." Biblical genealogies do function differently.

There is an immense amount of meaning and significance and theology built into

these. It's not just a matter of record keeping. And so, the ordering of the names,

even like the symbolic placement of them, that Enoch come seventh, and then he

lives precisely the number of years as the solar calendar year, and then he's taken

up...Every single one of them has these intriguing features to them, which clues us

into that the author is doing more than just giving us an ancient archival list. But he's

doing theology with this genealogy. That's one thing.

In terms of cultural connection, there is a number of ancient genealogies from

ancient Babylon that have a very similar setup to Genesis 1 to 11. The Babylonians

also had preserved a memory of a catastrophic flood in the Middle East, and they

have the sense of in the ancient history, they had kings and people who live not just

hundreds of years, thousands of years, tens of thousands of years. And then the

flood happens because the gods got angry and then human start living for shorter

amounts of time.

The Genesis author is interacting with this tradition that they would have known,

before the flood, people lived fantastically long amounts of time. In comparison, I

know it seems weird to you, but in comparison to these Babylonian stories, the

people in Genesis 5 don't live very long. Like Methuselah got 900 years under his

belt.

Jon: Which is a long time.

Tim: It's a long time for us. But in comparison to the stories that the author is alluding to,

it's not.

Jon: What are those stories saying?

Tim: Oh, they are living like 5000 years?

Jon: Oh, really?

Tim: Yeah, these Babylonian kings. Then what's unique about Genesis 5 is the drum

beating in the genealogy is everybody dies. People live long amounts of time and

then they die. And it's the garden, the act of divine judgment from the garden of

death entering into God's world.

And so, Genesis 5, the point you should get, actually, from an ancient perspective

wouldn't be how long these people are living. It's the fact that everybody's dying,

and how short these people are living. So, to me, that story—

[crosstalk 00:17:50]

Jon: It's about the consequences is death.

Tim: The consequences is sin and death — bringing about death in God's good world. It's

a good example. Where from our perspective, we think these people live forever. But

from their perspective, the point of it is they're living so short, and then everybody's

dying.

Jon: So they are leading to know like something's happening.

Tim: Something's wrong in God's world in light of what happened in the garden. There is

more to be said there, but that's a good example of reading the narratives and

dialogue with the ancient stories that they are connected to.

Jon: Do we have a question on the difference between Genesis 1 and 2?

Tim: We do. Krishna asked it. It's very simple. Did God create the earth twice in Genesis 1

and 2?

Jon: We're getting in the live stream. People asking about that as well. There's also some

naughty language going on in the live stream. Guys, come on. I know this is the

internet but behave.

Tim: Sorry. I need to not look at the live stream questions. That's really funny.

Jon: So, Genesis 1 and 2. In Genesis 1, we have a creation story. You go through the

seven days. And then Genesis 2, we have another creation story that has a different

flavor to it. Did God create the world twice? That's actually a blunt way of putting it.

Tim: Yeah, that's a blunt way of putting it. Once again, this is about ancient culture, and

Hebrew's a different language. First of all, what do we even mean by "create"?

For modern Western folk, that means to bring something into physical existence. But

the moment you wade into Genesis 1, with that assumption, it immediately doesn't

make very much sense, because the story begins "in the beginning, God created,"

and then the first thing that's there is a chaotic, dark, watery chaos.

So Genesis 1 doesn't tell a story of something coming into being out of nothing. It's

that things begin in a chaotic, dark uninhabitable state and that God brings order,

and beauty in an environment where life can flourish ending in a garden. That's

Genesis chapter 1. And it uses the seven-day scheme that's brilliant and amazing.

There's no time to talk about how it fits together.

But Genesis 2 comes along and uses a one-day scheme. The order is different than

Genesis 1. Like in Genesis 1, the land and then the creatures, and then the humans

are the pinnacle in Genesis 1. In Genesis 2, you have the land and then you have

humans. We have the man, then you have animals and creatures, then you have

female.

So even the different narrative order, I think, clues us into the fact that the author is

doing something other than just shooting a video camera of what happened in the

first weeks of the universe. Unless the author wasn't smart enough to realize he's

telling about the same events with time schemes that don't fit together, that's I think

the author's clue to say neither one of those stories is giving us a video camera shot.

An easy way to think about Genesis 1 and 2, I think of Genesis 1 as a Hubble Space

Telescope photo is just grand and cosmic, and it's you're looking out at the galaxies.

Whereas Genesis 2...Oh, wait. Can I show them my screen? Oh, perfect, great.

Here's I think Genesis 2. It's Van Gogh's most famous painting, Starry Night. You

guys have seen this painting before? Genesis 2 has a rich, rich use of imagery. God

has hands. He's getting his hands in the dirt and God's breathing and so on. It's all

this very earthy imagery that I think the author...is the author claiming that God has

hands that floated down out of the sky? Obviously, the authors giving clues that

there's more than meets the eye with his language.

There are two different portraits, I think of the same claim that God is the author of

all that is. How exactly that took place, I don't think the author intends the stories to

give us that information. That's information that I think modern folks we're obsessed

with. And we want the Bible to speak to it, but I think we violate what the author was

trying to do when we make the Bible's speak that way.

I know and I say that, in my humble opinion, because I know there are lots of really

smart people that disagree with me, but that's my conviction.

Jon: Is it Walton? Is he a good resource for...?

Tim: He's a Hebrew Bible scholar. He teaches at Wheaton in Illinois, John Walton. He has

two great books. One is called "The Lost World of Genesis One." Then he has one

called "The Lost World of Adam and Eve."

You will learn more about these narratives that you thought you knew, but realize

you never knew, and then also about the ancient culture that Israel lived in, and that

the author of Genesis' connection to...read the great books and the really accessible

anybody could read them. They don't assume you know Hebrew or anything. That's

a great place to start if you want to take a next step in learning about this.

We had a question about why we use different art styles — it's the last one. Eric's

question — that we thought was good.

Jon: Eric Schiller.

Tim: Schiller. If I pronounced that right Eric. No disrespect if I mispronounced it. Eric

asked this. He said, "I'm curious about why the theme videos use a different style

than the book videos. I love the book style which seemed easier to follow.

I'm also curious about the technique used to create the book style videos, maybe a

good topic for last video in the series, bonus clip. Thanks for unlocking the Bible. The

video overviews are just enough a central context to proceed with reading the text

with the full expectation of understanding rather than forcing myself to read."

I'm glad the videos are helpful for you, Eric. They're really fun to make. Why do we

choose different styles? And kind of the evolution of the different styles is

interesting. So we watch Genesis 1 to 11.

Jon: Yeah. That's where we started with styles. Two things. One is, this is an amazing

design team we have. You can't really see everyone. We're doing this as a passion

project. And so, we want to continue to explore and press ourselves as designers. So

that's one reason selfishly why.

Tim: Just innovate new style.

Jon: Yeah, just to have fun, make this fun. Also, I think it's going to be boring to watch

the same style over and over and over. But we're also discovering which styles are

best for different books, so there's some exploration there.

Tim: At the beginning of last year, we wanted to experiment with more of what would be

like a powered lecture type of video. And that's what the poster Read Scriptures

series has come about. We chose one style, let's do every book of the Bible, literary

design, let's get into the details. We love that and gain traction with it so we're doing

it. It's going to be done by the end of this year.

But for the more animated color style videos, we want to allow the artists to just

sky's the limit, you know, to keep exploring new techniques and styles. That's kind of

why we do it. Underneath that, I think is a passion particularly of Jon's, though mine

too that we just think art produced by followers of Jesus shouldn't be crappy. It

shouldn't be bad, and it often is. There's just no reason for that at all.

Jon: We want it to be beautiful.

Tim: Yeah, we want the videos to be pushing the envelope and pressing a leading edge

of design art design. So that's another reason why.

Jon: [unintelligible 00:26:46] said, "I love the variety of styles. It shows how much we're

like our Creator." So that's what you're saying.

Tim: Yeah, agreed.

Jon: We were Christians, we're created by God, and He's creative. Let's use our creativity.

Tim: That's right. We will never come up with anything matching how awesome The

Hubble Space looks.

Jon: That's true.

Tim: But we can make a cool video about Genesis 1 to 11. We have a handful of

questions. I've seen a couple about the tree of the knowledge of good and evil and

the first sin and stuff like that, why we framed it the way we did?

We have one question on that that came in earlier from Grace. She put it this way.

She said, "I've always wondered about Genesis, the story of how man first sinned. Is

there any indication that Adam and Eve would have sinned and eaten the forbidden

fruit had they not been tempted? Further, if God gave man a will, does that

necessarily indicate that man was created with the ability or the propensity to sin on

his own? Does sin require a tempter?"

One of my wisest theology teachers, Gerry Breshears, who you'll see his face on the

website, he's a mentor to me, and he vets and reads all of the scripts before we

move them on. He has a really helpful way of talking about different kinds of Bible

theology questions that we have. Some are questions that the biblical texts actually

answer, like, give us information to answer.

Then other ones, the Bible is silent and he calls these pipe and beer questions, where

you kick up your feet at the end of the day with a group of people and a beer, and

you get some good English smoking tobacco, and you have a ball. I mean, you just

speculate till you're all sleepy and tired. In moderation. But at the end of the day,

you recognize like, "Yeah, we're not sure."

And so, there's an enormous amount of pipe and beer types of questions happening

in the garden story in particular. What would have happened if the humans in that

story hadn't made the choice of it? We don't know. The narrative isn't exploring

speculative possibilities. These narratives in Genesis 1 to 11 are trying to help give us

an angle on why the world is the way it is as we experience it.

What we wanted to do here was to show that the choice between knowing good

and evil — and in Hebrew, knowing is about experiential knowledge, not just

philosophical knowledge. And so it's about are humans going to trust God as the

provider of what is good? Or as they go about building this world, are they going to

know good and evil for themselves and on their own terms. That's why the image of

grabbing is so important. I think in the story, are they going to receive good from

God, or are they can take good and then define it on their own terms?

That's the human experience as far back as we can tell. And that's true to almost all

of our experience. I mean, think of anytime you feel your temporizing with

somebody you don't like and then you want to yell at them or say the mean cutting

comment, and you know it's wrong, but then you did it anyway. And then you look

back 10 seconds later, or it might take you an hour, and you're like, "Dang, I

shouldn't have done that. That was really dumb." It's that, right? It's our experience

of doing the wrong thing.

Like you chose to say that and to give in, but at the same time, you look back on it

as if you went insane for a second because that's not who you are, and who you

want to be. And so, we experience evil or temptation at something foreign to us. But

it also is something that we choose.

I can't think of a better way to explore that idea than the narrative of Genesis 3. It's

just brilliant how it explores it. And so, the story just doesn't speculate for us, it gives

us an account of our real experiences of evil I think.

Jon: We used in the script the phrase that...I think it was something like, "Humans are

horrible at defining good and evil on our own." It just leads to a ton of problems. So,

there's something lacking in our ability to pray God essentially, and define what's

good and what's evil. When we do that ourselves, that's what leads to all these

problems.

Even if we were trying to do the right thing, even if your best intentions are in mind,

I mean, sometimes you're just being morally dubious, but sometimes you're just

trying to do the right thing and you screw it up because we don't know how to—

Tim: The story of Cain is about that. You have Cain who's made this horrible choice in his

past, but God gives him a second chance. Cain goes and builds a city, and the city

becomes the center of all this technological, cultural progress, and music, and

metalworking. And then it all leads to Lamech, and he's this arrogant, violent person

who ends up making hell on earth in Cain's city.

The narrative itself is exploring Cain didn't set out to make nightmare town. He set

out to make a city that's awesome with this music and art and technology, but

something about the human condition just distorts the human story towards

violence and selfishness, even despite our best intention.

Jon: So the tree of the knowledge of good and evil is showing us that we need to rely on

God's definition of good and evil. When we take it for ourselves, we screw things up.

Tim: We inevitably redefine good and evil in selfish me and my tribe type of terms and

exhibit a human history. It's like, this is controversial? I think this is the world as we

know it. And it's the Bible's account of why things are that way.

Jon: A lot of people want to talk about sons of God and Enoch. Book of Enoch keeps

coming up in the theme.

Tim: I know. Totally.

Jon: We have a great question on that.

Tim: Yeah, we had a question from I think this was Seth Roach's question. I think we'll

summarize this. I've recently been introduced to an idea through Dr. Michael Heiser,

who's acquaintance and colleague. I went to school with Dr. Mike Heiser for a couple

years. And this is his take. That the cause for evil and sin in the world isn't simply

Genesis 3, but also includes the other rebellions mentioned in Genesis 6 and Genesis

11.

This seems to hold more than Adam accountable and reflects on the cosmic warfare

we are in and in fact, Christ entered into an overcame through the cross and

resurrection. I know there's so much more behind all of that, but can you comment

or bring into the narrative the effect of the rebellion of the watchers or the sons of

god that's reflected in those chapters as well as mentioned by Peter and Jude?

Yeah. Here we go. You guys welcome to the 3,000-year-old conversation. Who on

earth are the sons of god in Genesis chapter 6? The first thing you do is Humble

yourself and recognize you joined millions of people before you who have been

trying to figure out what on earth that story is trying to say.

We're talking about Genesis chapter 6:1-4. Actually, you can look at my screen. I'll

just acquaint you with it if you're not already. I'll read from the New American

Standard, which is the worst English, but the most faithful to the Hebrew.

"Now it came about, when men began to multiply on the face of the land, and

daughters were born to them, that the sons of god saw that the daughters of men

were beautiful; and they took wives for themselves, whomever they chose. Then the

LORD said, "My Spirit shall not strive or abide—there's some debate on the meaning

of that word—with man forever because he also is flesh; nevertheless, his days will

be one hundred and twenty years." The Nephilim were on the earth in those days,

and also afterward, when the sons of God came in to the daughters of men, and

they bore children to them. Those were the mighty men who were of old, men of

renown."

That's all very clear. Yeah, that's a very strange story. The first debate is on who are

the sons of God. There's been about three basic views on that through 3,000 years of

debate.

One is that it means what the same phrase means in the beginning of the book of

Job, that "sons" refers to members of a category of gods namely divine or spiritual

beings, later understood as angels. So this would be that there were spiritual beings

that were a part of God's crew or in the Old Testament, His divine council, His

cabinet, and that they decided to go down to earth and... It doesn't even highlight

sex as such, but just that they wanted to marry these women because they were

really beautiful.

Then somehow that's bad because God brings a judgment because of that, and then

this odd note that these you're still around guys called the Nephilim are on the earth

[crosstalk 00:36:59]

Tim: Well, it doesn't say that.

Jon: Okay.

Tim: All it says is, in the same time period was the period when the Nephilim were on the

earth, and also afterward when this happened. And who are the Nephilim? They're

just mighty warriors who are awesome.

So here's where we go. One view is that it's the sons of god. There was about 800-

ish years after this story came into existence — 800 to 500. There was a book

produced in the Second Temple period by an anonymous author called the Book of

Enoch. This author was writing as if they were the character Enoch from the book of

Genesis. It was a very common form of Jewish biblical interpretation. And much

other stories spun out of trying to interpret this.

And so, it fills out the story that the sons of God are these angelic beings who

rebelled against God. They thought that these women are really beautiful, they went

and had sex with them, and then produced giants that the Nephilim are their

offspring. Giants. Now, the story doesn't say the Nephilim are their offspring.

Jon: This is all from the book of Enoch.

Tim: It's from the book of Enoch.

Jon: Which by the way, just to say, is not in our scriptures.

Tim: That's right. It's not in the Jewish, Christian, Catholic, Protestant Bible.

Jon: But it was literature during that time, widely read. We know that even Jesus followers

in the early church would have had access to it.

Tim: Yeah, Jude quotes from it.

Jon: So it's a widely read influential book. What does that mean for us then now? Just to

kind of pause on then the Nephilim thing. Just the book of Enoch, a lot of people

want to know is this Scripture? What should be our perspective on the Book of

Enoch?

Tim: Oh, well, it was not included in the Jewish Bible. It just doesn't fit or have a place

there in what the Hebrew Bible is doing. But it was widely read.

And then, as the Hebrew Bible and the Jewish Bible went into Christian tradition, the

Book of Enoch was in the environment, and lots of people read it and quoted from

it, people like Jude in the New Testament. But that doesn't mean that they

considered it part of the Old Testament.

Just like when I quote from Paul's letter to the Romans, and then I quote from CS

Lewis, it doesn't mean I think CS Lewis is part of the Bible. But I really think that

people should read this. It's like that. Just because you quote from something as

valuable doesn't mean that you think it should be part of the Bible. There's a little

more to it than that but basically, that is my response about the Book of Enoch.

So it's a very important witness to how Jews in the Second Century BC were reading

and interpreting the story about the sons of god. But it's really important to know

that there have been other views throughout history namely that the sons of god

were...In Israel, the king was called the son of God, like David or the kings from the

line of David.

Another very ancient view is that these are ways of talking about ancient kings; kings

of the ancient world who took as many wives as they chose, which in the Genesis

narratives is violating the plan for a covenant of one man one woman set out in

Genesis 1 and 1.

And so you have kings who like Lamech are just accumulating wives like property —

as many as they can. And this was the days of the great Nephilim and warriors

evolved, and they created as the story goes on, such violence in God's good world

that God cleansed it with the flood.

Jon: That's two separate views.

Tim: Two separate views. A third one is called the Sethite View. Just google "the Sethite

view Genesis 6" and you'll find that one explained.

Jon: Why are so many people interested right now in sons of god, Book of Enoch? What's

going on?

Tim: "The Noah" movie. The Noah movie is essentially the Book of Enoch version of the

flood story. It's fantastic.

People conspiracy theorists then get UFOs in here. The Book of Enoch is crazy

because in the Book of Enoch, he names all of these angelic beings — there's big list

of their names — and none of this is actually comes from Genesis. It's all in

interpretation from this Second Temple Jewish period.

Jon: Which is interesting.

Tim: It's interesting.

Jon: But it's extra-biblical.

Tim: That's right. Because for a Jewish author in this 200 BC, this story is ancient to them.

And so, already, they're living in a different cultural context from that in which the

author wrote the story.

Jon: Now, if you want to get really interesting, crazy stuff that isn't the Bible, the book of

Daniel.

Tim: Yes, in terms of this literature.

Jon: Yeah, this type of literature.

Tim: Yeah, totally. Well, kind of. It's a part of the biblical worldview that earthly events

have some analogy or correlation to heavenly events — they are connected —

especially the story of nations, and how nations rise and fall. And so, you have

angelic beings, who are these representatives or rulers representing different people,

groups and nation. So when nations fight, these angelic beings are fighting. And

that's a concept in the book of Daniel. But that's way beyond Genesis 1 to 11. When

we talk about the book of Daniel—

[crosstalk 00:43:22]

Jon: Luke is asking about John Sailhamer.

Tim: Oh. Tim, have you read? I've read everything by John Sailhamer multiple times. And I

had the privilege of being a student for a number of years when I was in seminary. If

I would cite two main influences that all of these videos come out of, it would be

John Sailhamer, and then my first Bible Teacher, Ray Lubeck, who was himself a

student of John Sailhamer, both of whom I studied with here in Portland.

Yes, John Sailhamer, go look him up on Amazon and buy and read everything he

ever wrote if you're interested in how to read the Bible wisely and intelligently.

Jon: We got to wrap this up. A couple questions we didn't get to, Ham and Noah. A lot of

people—

Tim: What happened in the tent.

Jon: What happened in the tent. 10-second answer.

Tim: Second answer. Oh, 10-second answer. Ham looked upon his father's nakedness,

which is nearly identical to a phrase used multiple times in the book of Leviticus to

some kind of sexual abuse or having sex.

Jon: So sorry that bums you out. Let's see. Let's wrap it up there.

Tim: Sex in the tent.

Jon: We really appreciate you being part of this. A special thank you to the people who

have been supporting this project, the reason why we now have free time to do this,

making more videos. Sorry, we can't get everything. This will be posted on YouTube

later, and we'll do this again. So thanks, guys.

Tim: Yeah, see you guys. Thanks.

Jon: Thanks again for listening to The Bible Project podcast. We're a nonprofit studio.

We're in Portland, Oregon, and we make videos and podcasts and other resources

free of charge because of a growing number of monthly supporters who make this

project going. So, thanks for being a part of this with us.

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