Genesis 1 through the Ages
Stanley L. Jaki
   Around 1900 or so, two leading Catholic exegetes, Lagrange and
Hummelauer, admitted that none of the countless interpretations of Genesis 1 that had been offered during the previous eighteen hundred years could carry conviction. The source of that debacle was concordism, or the belief that Genesis 1 was cosmogenesis in a scientific sense, however indirectly.
     This dispiriting state of affairs is re-examined in this book on a scale
hitherto unparalleled. Rabbis, Church Fathers, Scholastics, Reformers and
Counter-Reformers are passed in review. Scientists are taken to task for wading into exegetical waters. The author submits to unsparing criticism various 20th-century exegetical efforts, Catholic and Protestant, aimed at finding a clue toGenesis 1 by taking it for a legend.
     The concluding chapter also contains an interpretation of Genesis 1
which is literal without being literalist and eliminates thereby the specter of concordism.