[Home]Creation myth

HomePage | Recent Changes | Preferences

Difference (from prior major revision) (no other diffs)

Changed: 8c8,10
*Abrahamic faiths (Judaism, Christianity, Islam), - This comes in two versions, one from Genesis 1 and one from Genesis 2. In the first account, in the beginning the world is a great body of water. God then producs over a period of six days the sky, stars, the sun and moon, land, plants, animals. Finally on the sixth day he creates human beings. On the seventh day he rests. The second account concentrates on the creation of human beings; first a man, Adam, is created out of clay, then a woman, Eve, is created from Adam's rib.
* The first book of the Bible, common to Judaism and Christianity, contains two versions of creation: one from Genesis 1 and one from Genesis 2. In the first account, in the beginning the world is a great body of water. God then producs over a period of six days the sky, stars, the sun and moon, land, plants, animals. Finally on the sixth day he creates human beings. On the seventh day he rests. The second account concentrates on the creation of human beings; first a man, Adam, is created out of clay, then a woman, Eve, is created from Adam's rib.

* Islam - The account in the Quran has only one creation story. It is based on the Biblical version.

A creation myth is a specific type of myth which tells how the universe, the Earth, life, and/or humanity came into being. The term myth is used for a story with deep explanatory or symbolic resonance for a culture.

Many creation myths fall into similar categories: the fractionation of the things of the world from a primordial chaos, the separation of the mother and father god, from an ocean existing before the world, etc.

Traditional creation myths of various cultures:

In the USA, religiously conservative Christians argue that the Big Bang theory and evolution constitute the creation myth of modern Western civilization. Adherents of these scientific theories respond that unlike the creation myths of earlier cultures, they are subject to verification and refinement by the scientific method, rather than believed only on grounds of authority? and faith.

See also: Creation, Creationism

External links:


/Talk

HomePage | Recent Changes | Preferences
This page is read-only | View other revisions
Last edited December 14, 2001 11:30 am by RK (diff)
Search: