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Karen Armstrong

Decent Essays

The book, In the Beginning, by Karen Armstrong follows the first book of the Bible, Genesis. It unfolds some very well-known stories in Genesis. Armstrong goes through each of the stories of Genesis and interprets what each story is about and how we can relate it to our own lives. The book of Genesis can be difficult to understand and it holds many mysteries within it, but with the help of Karen Armstrong, we are able to understand the stories of Genesis and what they mean.
This is the story of the Bible’s first book, raw and unchurched. Karen introduces us one by one to the characters and their stories, making no effort to turn them into saints, for they are nothing like the impossibly and depressingly flawless characters we met in Sunday School. Throughout, the authors of Genesis remind us that we can expect no clear-cut answers. We wrestle with the text, measuring its inconsistent doctrines and contradictory lessons, as we struggle to grasp the character of God. How can God be omnipotent, but powerless to control his creation? How can God be benevolent but a killer; wise but arbitrary; just but partial and unfair; omniscient but ignorant of human yearning?
One of the stories that Armstrong interpreted that I enjoyed was the one of Jacob and Esau. Jacob and Esau were twin …show more content…

Her unquestioned acceptance of the JEPD theory of Genesis, that there are two main authors of Genesis, J and E, whose words were then clumsily merged by a later editor, bothered me a little bit. I have never found that theory of biblical criticism to be plausible, even though it has gained wide acceptance in liberal circles. I also don't accept the conservative notion that Moses wrote the first five books of the Bible. There is no question in my mind from a simple reading that the stories of Genesis were collected and put together by a later editor, who wanted to show God's transcendent work in the flawed descendants of

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