From Noah to Israel: Realization of the Primaeval Blessing After the Flood
Carol M. Kaminski
Continuum International Publishing Group, 2004 -
 157 pages
 
 

The
 primaeval blessing, 'Be fruitful and multiply, and fill the earth, ' 
first announced to humankind in Genesis 1.28 is renewed to Noah and his 
sons after the flood in Genesis 9.1. There is widespread scholarly 
consensus that the ensuing dispersion in Genesis 10.1-32 and 11.1-9 is 
the means by which the creation blessing is fulfilled. Kaminski argues 
that the primeval blessing is not fulfilled in the Table of Nations and 
that Yahweh's scattering Noah's descendants in the Babel story does not 
contribute positively to the creation theme. Rather, the creation 
blessing is being taken up in the primary line of Shem (Genesis 
11.10-26), which leads directly to Abraham. She further suggests that 
divine grace is not absent after the Babel judgment, as is commonly 
assumed, but is at work in the Shemite genealogy.She argues that the 
primeval blessing, which is unfulfilled in the primaeval history, is 
taken up by Abraham and his descendants by means of a divine promise. 
While the blessing is in the process of being realised in the 
patriarchal narratives, it is not fulfilled. The multiplication theme is
 resumed, however, in Exodus 1.7, which describes Israel's proliferation
 in Egypt. This is the first indication that the creation blessing is 
fulfilled. Realisation of the primaeval blessing progresses after the 
flood, therefore, from Noah to Israel. Yet God's blessing on Israel is 
not for their sake alone - it is the means through which the divine 
intention for creation will be restored to the world .JSOTS 413
 
 
 
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