Citing the
medieval Jewish exegete Abraham ibn Ezra (1089-1164) as a witness for understanding
בְּרֵאשִׁ֖ית in Gen 1:1 as being in the construct state, Michael
J. Alter wrote:
I believe that bereshit is in the construct, as in in the beginning of (bereshit) the reign of Jehoiakim (Jer. 26:1). Don’t ask how a word in the
construct can be connected to the verb in the perfect. This presents no
problem, for we find that very case in the verse When the Lord spoke at first with Hosea (Hos. 1:2), and in the verse the
city where David encamped (Isa.
29:1). (Iben Ezra’s Commentary on the
Pentateuch [trans. H. Norman Strickman; Brooklyn: Menorah, 1988], 22 as
cited by Michael J. Alter, Why the Torah
Begins with the Letter Beit [Northvale, N.J.: Jason Aronson Inc., 1998],
57)
Elsewhere,
quoting the work of Jack M. Sasson, we read:
[T]his exegesis is really beyond dispute:
first, because it is supported by grammar and syntax; second, because other
creation narratives similarly open with temporal or circumstantial clauses; and
third, because the first of God’s creative injunctions does not come until v.
3. (Jack M. Sasson, “Time . . . to Begin” in Sha’arei Talmon, eds. Michael Fishbane and Emanuel Tov [Winona
Lake, Ind.: Eisenbrauns, 1992], pp. 183-94, as cited by Alter, Ibid., 63)
In an editorial
note for the above (Ibid., p. 63 n. 36), Alter offers the following helpful
note:
All the examples of BRASYT are in temporal clauses, and the examples of RASYT (Reshit) in the absolute state (with or without prefixed
propositions) are found only when the term is used in ceremonial contexts; see
Skinner, Genesis, 12-13. A
bibliography on the traditional exegesis of Gen.
1:1 can be found in B.W. Anderson, “Introduction: Mythopoetic and Theological
Dimensions of the Biblical Creation Faith,” in Creation in the Old Testament (Philadelphia: 1984) 23-24. Or more
details on the controversy, see C. Westermann, Genesis 1-11: A Commentary (Minneapolis, 1984), pp. 93-98. The Book
of Hosea begins with a similar construction (v. 2), which is correctly rendered
in NJPSV: “When the Lord first spoke to Hosea, the Lord said to Hosea . . .”
James Patrick Holding refuted on Creation Ex Nihilo
Blake T. Ostler, Out of Nothing: A History of Creation ex Nihilo in Early Christian Thought