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In this text-centered interpretation of Genesis 1-3, Seth Postell contends that the opening chapters of the Bible, when interpreted as a strategic literary introduction to the Torah and the Tanakh, intentionally foreshadow Israel's failure to keep the Sinai Covenant and their exile from the Promised Land, in order to point the reader to a future work of God, whereby a king will come in "the last days" to fulfill Adam's original mandate to conquer the land (Gen 1:28). Thus Genesis 1-3, the Torah, and the Hebrew Bible as a whole have an eschatological trajectory. Postell highlights numerous intentional links between the y of Adam and the story of Israel and, in the process, explains numerous otherwise perplexing features of the Eden story.
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Edition | Availability |
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1
Adam As Israel: Genesis 1u3 As the Introduction to the Torah and Tanakh
2012, Clarke Company, Limited, James
in English
0227900235 9780227900239
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2
Adam as Israel: Genesis 1-3 as the introduction to the Torah and Tanakh
2011, Pickwick Publications
in English
1610971760 9781610971768
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3
Adam as Israel: Genesis 1-3 as the Introduction to the Torah and Tanakh
Dec 31, 2011, James Clarke & Co, James Clarke Company
paperback
0227680197 9780227680193
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4
Adam As Israel: Genesis 1-3 As the Introduction to the Torah and Tanakh
2011, Wipf & Stock Publishers, Wipf and Stock, Pickwick Publications
in English
1498259081 9781498259088
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