Genesis — from the Greek word for “origin” or “beginning” — is the first book of the Bible and the foundation of all Scripture. It answers humanity’s most fundamental questions: Where did we come from? Why is there evil in the world? How does God relate to us?
Author and Date
Author: Moses (traditional view, affirmed by Jesus in John 5:46-47)
Date Written: ~1400–1200 BC
Genre: Narrative history, with elements of genealogy and poetry
Overview of Genesis
Genesis spans from the creation of the universe to the death of Joseph in Egypt — covering thousands of years of history in 50 chapters.
Part 1: Primeval History (Chapters 1–11)
- Creation (1–2): God creates the heavens, earth, and humanity
- The Fall (3): Adam and Eve sin; death and separation from God enter the world
- Cain and Abel (4): The first murder — sin spreads
- Noah and the Flood (6–9): God judges wickedness; Noah and his family are saved
- Tower of Babel (11): Humanity rebels; God scatters and diversifies the nations
Part 2: The Patriarchs (Chapters 12–50)
- Abraham (12–25): God calls Abram, makes a covenant, promises a nation and Messiah
- Isaac (21–28): The promised son; the near-sacrifice on Mount Moriah foreshadows Jesus
- Jacob (25–36): The deceiver who becomes Israel; his 12 sons become the 12 tribes
- Joseph (37–50): Sold into slavery, rises to power in Egypt, saves his family — a picture of Christ
Key Themes in Genesis
- God as Creator: Everything exists because God made it and called it good
- The Fall and Need for Redemption: Human sin entered the world, but God immediately promised a Redeemer (Genesis 3:15 — the first messianic prophecy)
- God’s Covenant: God initiates relationship with humanity through binding promises
- Providence: God works through human history — even evil — to accomplish His purposes (Genesis 50:20)
Key Verses in Genesis
- Genesis 1:1 — “In the beginning God created the heavens and the earth.”
- Genesis 3:15 — The protoevangelium (first gospel): a Redeemer who will crush the serpent
- Genesis 12:2-3 — God’s covenant with Abraham: “I will make you into a great nation…all peoples on earth will be blessed through you.”
- Genesis 50:20 — “You intended to harm me, but God intended it for good.”
How Genesis Connects to the Rest of the Bible
Every major theme in the Bible is introduced in Genesis: creation, the image of God, sin and its consequences, sacrifice, covenant, faith, and redemption. Genesis is the seed; the rest of the Bible is the unfolding flower. The Book of Revelation brings full circle what Genesis began — paradise restored.
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