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Jewish custom divides the book into twelve parashiot (weekly readings); one of which is read each week during the yearly cycle of Torah readings.
Genesis tells the story of God's creation of the world, the creation of Adam in the Garden of Eden, and God's discovery that man alone could never be happy, for "man had no helpmate;" God thus creates a mate for man, Chava (in English: Eve). Genesis goes on to recount the story of their first two children, Cain and Abel, the development of the peoples of the world, and the eventual flood that God brought upon the world to blot out sin and give the world a fresh start (the story of Noah and the Ark). The story then moves on to cover the Jewish patriarchs and matriarchs: Abraham and Sarah, Isaac and Rebecca and Jacob, Rachel[?] and Leah[?].
Based on the genealogical data given for early mankind, some have dated God's Creation of the world to the latter part of the 5th millennium BC. This date is based on a literal reading of the creation account and the assumptions that the six days in which God created the heavens and the earth were 24-hour days[?], that Adam, Eve, and the Garden of Eden existed, and that a complete trace of events from Creation to a historically verifiable date is listed in the biblical account. It may be, as even some traditionalists maintain, that such a prosaic reading of Genesis is a misreading of the literature. At any rate, this date of Creation is in conflict with modern scientific theory (see Big Bang).
Genesis makes no claims about its authorship; Jewish tradition from early on assumed that the entire book was dictated, in its entirety, by God to Moses on Mount Sinai. For a number of reasons, this view is no longer accepted by most biblical scholars, non-Orthodox Jews, Catholics, and liberal Protestants. Instead, they accept that the text of Genesis as we see it today was redacted together very early on from two earlier sources, denoted as the "J" source and "E" source. See the JEDP theory entry for more information.
Nonetheless, all agree that the text has a distinct unity of its own, and is very unlike the other four books of the Torah.
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