Women in Genesis
In the Book of Genesis, women are portrayed mostly in a negative light, and are judged by their obedience to God and the patriarchs and how well they fulfill their duties as wives and mothers. God has a plan for the world, but repeatedly the sins of humanity interfere with it, and from Eve onward, women are often portrayed as particularly weak, dishonest or untrustworthy. Adam's duty was to protect the Garden of Eden while both he and Eve were required to "be fruitful and multiply, fill the earth and subdue it"(Gen 1:28). Because of the disobedience initiated by Eve, humanity is expelled from paradise. Even after God destroys the world in the Great Flood, he commands Noah and his sons to repopulate the earth, although their wives are not even given names (Gen 9:1). Nor do Lot's wife and daughters have names, although he clearly has total power over them, even to the point of offering his daughters to the men of Sodom to save the angelic visitors from rape. Later, Sarah and Rachel threaten to block the divine plan to build a great nation because they cannot have children, although God repairs this deficiency. Sarah gives Abraham her Egyptian slave Hagar, then drives her and her son Ishmael out because if jealousy, creating a state a warfare between the two lines of the patriarch (Gen 21:9). Leah also tricks her older sister Rachel be taking her place with Jacob on their wedding night, but as Tamar later tricked her father-in-law Judah by disguising herself as a prostitute. Sometimes women are victims as well, such as Dinah and Hagar, and in general foreign women like Esau's wives, Tamar, Hagar and Joseph's wife Asenath have even lower status than Hebrew wives.
Genesis has two separate creation stories in chapters one and two that were later combined into the same book, and only the second one has the story of Eve being created from the rib or Adam or their fall from grace and expulsion from the Garden of Eden. From the start, the Bible makes it clear that the main function of women is to be "helpmates…wives and mothers" (Bellis 59). In the first Genesis creation story, God creates the heavens and the earth, the land and oceans along with all the plants and animals, then creates Adam and Eve together in His own image on the sixth day. God repeatedly states that his creation is "good" and finally "very good." In Genesis 1:2 "the earth did not have any shape. And it was empty," then God creates light, followed by dry ground, then the sun, moon, stars and planets, followed by all the creatures on the air sea and land (Gen 1: 4-10). On the sixth day, "God created man in his own image. He created him in the likeness of God. He created them as male and female" (Gen 1:27). Then He gives them control and dominion over the entire earth and all creatures on it, and "God saw everything he had made. And it was very good" (Gen 1: 31).
In Genesis 1 God creates the universe out of nothingness (ex nihilo) and in this story He is an invisible, all-knowing, all-powerful Creator of the universe, who creates Adam out of clay then breathes life into him. In Genesis 2, the serpent is not explicitly identified as Satan, but only later does the Bible reveal that Satan is a fallen angel cast down from heaven because of his pride and arrogance. His main purpose is always to deceive, tempt and test human beings and to lead them astray, and in Genesis 2, Eve is tempted by the serpent and eats the forbidden fruit first. In Genesis 2 in which Adam names all the creatures on the earth (Gen 2: 20), but when he was unable to find a helper among them, God puts him to sleep and then creates a woman out of his rib. Then...
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