Genesis As Allegory
Recognizing the deeper meaning of the text.
By Rabbi Jeffrey H. Tigay
Reprinted with permission
from Conservative
Judaism Journal.
In
showing that the Universe had a beginning, science has come closer to the
teachings of the Bible than ever before. Nevertheless, there is still a
considerable distance between current scientific thought and the details of the
biblical account of creation.
According
to the latter, the physical world and the many species of living things were
created essentially as we know them less than six thousand years ago over a
period of seven days. Astronomy, geology, biology, and related sciences
indicate that the process was a gradual one that took billions of years.
Earlier
geological strata of the earth's surface show the different stages through
which the earth passed and approximately how long they lasted, while fossils
and remains of extinct species such as dinosaurs show that the different
species of living creatures evolved slowly from a common ancestor.
These
conclusions are denied by adherents of a doctrine known as "scientific
creationism," who are campaigning to require that any public school which
teaches evolution must also teach what they call "creation science"
as a scientifically respectable alternative to evolution.
The
feverish concern of the "scientific creationists" to protect a
literal reading of the story in Genesis 1 reflects a conviction that devotion
to the Bible requires one to interpret its words--particularly Genesis--literally
and to accept it in its literal sense.
But,
as Steven Katz notes..., "In Jewish religious thought Genesis is not
regarded as meant for a literal reading, and Jewish tradition has not usually
read it so." In fact, as we shall argue below, even the compilers of the
Bible do not seem to have been concerned with a literal reading of the text.
They were prepared to have at least parts of it read non-literally.
Sensible Interpretation
In
the Middle Ages, Saadia Gaon argued that a biblical passage should not be
interpreted literally if that made a passage mean something contrary to the
senses or reason (or, as we would say, science; Emunot ve-Deot, chapter 7). Maimonides applied this principle to
theories about creation. He held that if the eternity of the universe (what we
would call the Steady State theory) could be proven by logic (science) then the
biblical passages speaking about creation at a point in time could and should
be interpreted figuratively in a way that is compatible with the eternity of
the universe.
It
is only because the eternity of the universe has not been proven that he
interpreted the verses about creation at a point in time literally (Guide, II, 25), but he still insisted
that the creation story as a whole was written metaphorically (Book I, Introduction).
To
Saadia and Maimonides, belief in the truth of the Bible does not require a
denial of science ("reason," "logic") when the two seem to
conflict. These philosophers imply that questions of science should be left to
scientists and scientific method. In fact, Maimonides quotes a passage in the
Talmud in which Jewish scholars abandoned an astronomical theory of their own
in favor of a theory of gentile scholars (Pesahim 94b).
Maimonides
approved of their action, saying that "speculative matters everyone treats
according to the results of his own study, and everyone accepts that which
appears to him established by proof" (Guide,
II, 8). To him, clearly, Science is a matter of speculation and is not the
field in which the Bible seeks to be decisive.
Delving More Deeply
In
more recent times Rabbi Abraham Isaac Kook held that scientific ideas which
seem to conflict with the Torah need not necessarily be opposed, but can serve
as stimuli to delve more deeply into the Torah and discover more profound
meaning in it.
The
approach of these thinkers is one that Fritz Rothschild has described as a
guiding principle of Jewish biblical exegesis:
"The
view that the Bible contains God's message to man has led to ever new
interpretations, since it constantly forced believing readers of the Bible to
reconcile the words of the sacred text with whatever they held to be true on
the basis of their own experience, the canons of logic, contemporary science,
and their moral insights.... The traditionalist will always feel called upon to
interpret the text so that it reflects not ancient error but the highest
standards of trustworthy knowledge and insight of his own time."
(Rothschild, "Truth and Metaphor in the Bible")
This
approach urges us to probe more deeply into the biblical accounts of creation
and to search for the intention of the Bible's compilers in presenting these
accounts. By compilers I mean those who gathered all the sources and books
together and produced the Bible in the form in which it was canonized in
classical Judaism. In critical terms these are the redactors of the Bible; in
Franz Rosenzweig's terms, rabboteinu
(our rabbis).
Conflicting Accounts of Creation
Whatever
the intention of the individual accounts of creation may have been, it is clear
from the Bible as a whole that its compilers were not overly concerned with the
details of the creation story in the first chapter of Genesis. They
incorporated several accounts of creation in the Bible even though no two
accounts agree in detail with Genesis 1 or with each other. Genesis 1 describes
the creation of the world in six days. The second account of creation is the
story of Adam and Eve in the Garden of Eden (Genesis 2).
Several
other accounts are found in poetic form in Psalms, Proverbs, and Job. Genesis 1
says that man was the last living creature created; Genesis 2 says that he was
the first. Genesis 1 speaks of the prehistoric waters in purely naturalistic
terms and says that God merely commanded them to gather in a single spot so
that dry land could appear.
But
in poetic passages the ancient waters are personified as rebellious sea
monsters which threatened to swamp the dry land, until God subdued them and
created the seashore as a boundary which they were prohibited from crossing.
The
most notable difference between Genesis and all the other accounts is that none
of the others mentions the idea that the world was created in six days. This
idea--which is the centerpiece of the whole creationist movement--was
apparently not considered important enough in the Bible to be repeated in other
accounts of creation.
The
fact that so many differing accounts were all accepted in the Bible shows that
its compilers were not concerned about these details. They undoubtedly assumed
that the differences could be reconciled, but they left this task to the
ingenuity of exegetes. This virtually assured that different reconciliations
would be proposed and some of the passages would have to be interpreted
non-literally.
What
the Bible as a whole insists on is not these details, but only what the stories
have in common. In other words, these stories are regarded as poetic statements
of certain basic truths, not as literally scientific accounts of how the
universe developed.
The Divine Plan
What
matters in Judaism are the concepts shared by all these stories: that the world
was created by God, that He planned it carefully and designed it to be
hospitable to man. These are the very conclusions to which astronomy now
points. The other details of the biblical accounts should not be taken
literally, but metaphorically or poetically.
To
give just one example: the six days of creation culminating in the Sabbath on
the seventh day symbolize how God guided the development of the world stage by
stage according to a well-thought-out plan. The process is described as taking
place over a period of seven days because seven was regarded in the ancient
world as the number of perfection and seven days were regarded as the ideal
length of a process. The unit of "seven days" is more a statement
about the perfection of the process than a chronological statistic.
Thus
a literal reading of the Bible, on which "creation science"
implicitly insists, misses the point of the Bible itself, which seems
uninterested in literal interpretation. Like poetry and certain kinds of prose,
which sometimes speak in metaphors and symbols, the Bible as a whole does not
intend these stories to be taken literally.
Literalism
is not only misleading but is also a disservice to the cause of the Bible
itself. It forces the Bible to compete as science, and in such a competition it
cannot win. In a scientific age such as ours the Bible will never be accepted
as science by educated people.
What
is more, attempting to secure acceptance for it as science is hardly
worthwhile, for this would divert attention away from the Bible's religious
message to details which from a religious point of view are trivial.
The
religious message is precisely the realm in which science cannot compete, and
those devoted to the cause of the Bible would do far better service to their
cause by stressing its unique religious message. To the religious person it
makes little difference whether the world was created in six days or several
billion years.
What
counts is the deeper message of the biblical account of creation: The world was
made by a wise Creator who seeks man's welfare, who created the world carefully
with man's benefit in mind, who created man with Godlike qualities and
commanded him to administer the world wisely.
Though
we observe the Sabbath every seven days, it is this deeper message which we
celebrate each week. The current views of modern science deepen our
understanding of this message and renew our confidence in it.
Rabbi Dr. Jeffrey H. Tigay is
a Professor of Hebrew and Semitic Languages and Literatures at the University
of Pennsylvania.