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Informed by the understanding that all texts are intertexts, this
work develops and employs a method that utilizes the concept of
intertextuality for the purpose of exploring the history of
interpretation of a biblical text. With Day One, Genesis 1.1-5, as
the primary text, the intertextuality of this biblical text is
investigated in its Hebrew (Masoretic Text) and Greek (Septuagint)
contexts. The study then broadens to take up the intertextuality of
Day One in other Hebrew and Greek texts up to c. 200 CE, moving
from Hebrew texts such as Ben Sira and the Dead Sea Scrolls to
Greek texts such as Josephus, Philo, the New Testament, and early
Christian texts. What emerges from this is a new glimpse of the
intertextuality of Day One that provides insight into the
complexity of the intertextuality of a biblical text and the role
that language plays in intertextuality and interpretation. In
addition to the methodological insights that this approach provides
to the history of interpretation, the study also sheds light on
textual and theological questions that relate to Day One, including
the genesis of creatio ex nihilo.
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