Genesis opens both the Catholic Bible and all of Scripture. It establishes the foundations of creation, humanity, sin, and divine promise. The book presents the ordered world called into being by God and the gradual unfolding of His covenant with humanity—from Adam to Noah, from Abraham to Jacob. In Catholic theology, Genesis is not myth in the modern sense but sacred history expressed through inspired narrative, setting the framework for every later revelation: creation, fall, covenant, and redemption.
| Testament | Old Testament | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Section | 1. Pentateuch (The Law / Torah) | ||
| Category | Field | Explanation | Genesis |
| Canonical Identity | Name | Official title of the book | Genesis |
| Testament | Old or New Testament | Old Testament | |
| Canonical Group | Section of Scripture | Pentateuch (Law) | |
| Order in Canon | Position in Catholic sequence | 1 | |
| Authorship and Origin | Attributed Author | Traditional writer | Moses |
| Approximate Date | Estimated time of composition | 1500–1200 BC | |
| Original Language | Primary written form | Hebrew | |
| Provenance | Cultural or geographic origin | Ancient Near East, influenced by Mesopotamian and Canaanite tradition | |
| Historical Context | Period Represented | Dates of events described | c. 4000–1700 BC |
| Dominant Powers | Civilizations or empires active | Sumerian city-states, Egypt | |
| Social / Religious Setting | Cultural background | Early tribal, patriarchal society forming covenant identity | |
| External Influences | Neighboring cultural echoes | Sumerian and Akkadian parallels (Enuma Elish, Gilgamesh) | |
| Structure and Content | Chapters | Total number of canonical chapters | 50 |
| Genre | Literary type | Theological and historical narrative | |
| Major Sections | Core divisions or movements | 1. Creation (1–2) 2. Fall (3) 3. Flood (6–9) 4. Patriarchs (12–50) | |
| Key Figures | Central characters | Adam, Eve, Noah, Abraham, Sarah, Isaac, Jacob, Joseph | |
| Setting | Main geographic focus | Eden, Mesopotamia, Canaan, Egypt |
Genesis concludes with the story of Joseph and the migration of Israel’s family to Egypt, linking human beginnings to the origins of God’s chosen people. Its closing line—Joseph’s death and the anticipation of Exodus—points forward to deliverance and fulfillment. Within the Catholic canon, Genesis stands as the first act of salvation history: the book of origins that defines the relationship between God, creation, and humanity, and prepares the way for the entire biblical narrative that follows.
The Book of Genesis opens the entire biblical canon, laying the foundation for the story of salvation. In the NABRE (New American Bible, Revised Edition) tradition, Genesis is understood not as a single historical chronicle but as a divinely inspired theological composition revealing humanity’s origin, vocation, and covenantal relationship with God. The book unfolds in five broad movements—from creation to the family of Israel—each illustrating the interplay of divine initiative and human response. Through poetry, genealogy, and narrative, Genesis establishes every major theme of faith: creation, sin, promise, election, and providence. The five-section framework below follows NABRE’s interpretive organization, emphasizing both literary unity and theological depth. It traces how God’s universal care narrows into a specific covenantal people, setting the stage for the entire biblical narrative that follows.
| Section Name | Chapters | Summary | Key Figures | Notes (NABRE Style) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Creation and the Fall | 1–3 | God creates the world and humanity; sin and exile follow disobedience. | God, Adam, Eve, Serpent. | NABRE notes emphasize poetic, theological creation narratives revealing divine order and human dignity. Sin represents misuse of freedom and the loss of harmony with God. |
| Early Humanity and the Flood | 4–11 | Human violence spreads; God sends a flood but renews creation through Noah. | Cain, Abel, Noah, Shem, Ham, Japheth. | NABRE highlights growing corruption, divine judgment, and mercy. The flood prefigures baptism; the Tower of Babel explains humanity’s division. |
| Abraham Cycle | 12–25 | God calls Abraham, promises descendants and land, and tests his faith. | Abraham, Sarah, Hagar, Isaac. | NABRE portrays Abraham as the model of faith. Covenant rituals reveal God’s enduring promises and the foundation of Israel’s history. |
| Isaac and Jacob Cycle | 26–36 | The covenant passes through Isaac and Jacob; Jacob’s life transforms Israel’s story. | Isaac, Rebekah, Jacob, Esau, Leah, Rachel. | NABRE focuses on divine election, reconciliation, and Jacob’s renaming as Israel. Human weakness contrasts with God’s fidelity. |
| Joseph Cycle | 37–50 | Joseph’s betrayal leads to preservation of Israel through divine providence. | Joseph, Jacob, brothers, Pharaoh. | NABRE underlines forgiveness and providence. Joseph’s story anticipates redemption through suffering and prepares for Exodus. |
The structure of Genesis reflects a movement from cosmic origins to covenant identity—from the creation of all humanity to the chosen line through which God’s plan will unfold. NABRE commentary views this as the first great act of divine revelation: God enters human history through family, faith, and promise. Each section contributes to a single arc of restoration—creation disturbed, order renewed, and blessing extended. By the end of Genesis, the family of Abraham has become the people of Israel, living in Egypt under God’s providential care. The book closes not with resolution but with expectation, forming a bridge to Exodus and to the continuing story of redemption that defines the rest of Scripture.
The following table presents the Book of Genesis in chapter-by-chapter form following the New American Bible, Revised Edition (NABRE) framework. It traces the flow of divine revelation from creation to covenant, capturing how God’s purposes unfold through both universal history and personal encounter. Genesis begins with cosmic order—the creation of the world and humanity—and narrows into family history, revealing God’s covenant with Abraham and his descendants. Each chapter contributes to this progression from universal origins to the formation of a chosen people, setting the foundation for the rest of Scripture. NABRE commentary treats Genesis as sacred history, not scientific record. Its structure balances theology, poetry, and human narrative to reveal how God’s creative will, justice, and mercy shape human destiny. The table below organizes the book into five major narrative movements—Creation and the Fall, Early Humanity and the Flood, The Abraham Cycle, The Isaac and Jacob Cycle, and The Joseph Cycle—with each chapter summarized to reflect Catholic interpretive tradition and theological emphasis.
| Section | Chapter | Title / Focus | Summary | Key Figures | Notes (NABRE Style) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Creation and the Fall | Genesis 1 | The Creation of the World | God creates heaven, earth, and all life in six days, declaring it good, and rests on the seventh. | God | NABRE emphasizes the poetic structure (seven-day symmetry) revealing divine order, not scientific chronology. Humanity is the pinnacle of creation. |
| Creation and the Fall | Genesis 2 | The Creation of Man and Woman | A second account of creation focuses on human intimacy with God and each other. | God, Adam, Eve | NABRE notes this as a complementary account, emphasizing personal relationship and stewardship over creation. |
| Creation and the Fall | Genesis 3 | The Fall of Man | The serpent tempts Eve; sin enters the world; Adam and Eve are expelled from Eden. | God, Adam, Eve, Serpent | NABRE reads this as theological myth conveying moral truth: sin disrupts harmony, but God promises eventual redemption (protoevangelium). |
| Early Humanity and the Flood | Genesis 4 | Cain and Abel | Cain kills his brother Abel; sin and jealousy spread. | Cain, Abel, Adam, Eve | NABRE underscores moral freedom and personal responsibility; God remains just yet merciful toward Cain. |
| Early Humanity and the Flood | Genesis 5 | Descendants of Adam | Genealogy from Adam to Noah; lifespans symbolize blessing and continuity. | Adam, Seth, Enoch, Noah | NABRE explains genealogies as theological links, not literal chronologies—marking order and divine plan through generations. |
| Early Humanity and the Flood | Genesis 6 | Corruption Before the Flood | Human wickedness grows; God decides to cleanse the earth. | God, Noah | NABRE highlights moral decline and divine grief; Noah is chosen for his righteousness. |
| Early Humanity and the Flood | Genesis 7 | The Great Flood Begins | God commands Noah to enter the ark with his family and animals; the floodwaters cover the earth. | God, Noah | NABRE frames this as recreation—judgment and renewal echoing Genesis 1. |
| Early Humanity and the Flood | Genesis 8 | The Waters Recede and Covenant Renewed | The flood ends; Noah offers sacrifice; God promises never to destroy life again. | God, Noah | NABRE identifies this as the first formal covenant—symbolized by the rainbow. |
| Early Humanity and the Flood | Genesis 9 | God’s Covenant with Noah | Covenant terms and moral law are established; sign of the rainbow reaffirmed. | God, Noah, Shem, Ham, Japheth | NABRE stresses divine mercy and the sanctity of human life; prohibition of blood prefigures later covenant law. |
| Early Humanity and the Flood | Genesis 10 | The Table of Nations | Genealogies of Noah’s descendants outline the spread of peoples after the flood. | Shem, Ham, Japheth | NABRE interprets this as a theological map of human unity and diversity; prepares for Babel narrative. |
| Early Humanity and the Flood | Genesis 11 | The Tower of Babel | Humanity, united by one language, builds a tower to reach heaven; God confuses their speech and scatters them. | Nimrod, Shem’s line | NABRE views this as a parable on pride and the limits of human ambition. It closes the primeval history and transitions to God’s particular covenant. |
| The Abraham Cycle | Genesis 12 | The Call of Abram | God calls Abram to leave his homeland and promises land, descendants, and blessing. Abram builds altars in faith. | Abram (Abraham), Sarai (Sarah), Lot | NABRE presents Abram as the model of obedience; the covenant marks God’s direct intervention in history. |
| The Abraham Cycle | Genesis 13 | Abram and Lot Separate | Abram allows Lot to choose land; Lot settles near Sodom, Abram remains in Canaan. | Abram, Lot | NABRE highlights Abram’s trust in God’s provision over self-interest, contrasting human ambition with faith. |
| The Abraham Cycle | Genesis 14 | Abram Rescues Lot | Abram rescues Lot from local kings and is blessed by Melchizedek, king of Salem. | Abram, Lot, Melchizedek | NABRE treats Melchizedek as a priest-king prefiguring Christ; blessing affirms divine favor on Abram. |
| The Abraham Cycle | Genesis 15 | God’s Covenant with Abram | God formally binds Himself to Abram through covenant sacrifice, promising descendants as numerous as the stars. | Abram, God | NABRE underscores faith as righteousness (Gen 15:6); covenant imagery anticipates Mosaic and New Covenants. |
| The Abraham Cycle | Genesis 16 | The Birth of Ishmael | Sarai gives Hagar to Abram; Hagar bears Ishmael, ancestor of many nations. | Sarai, Abram, Hagar, Ishmael | NABRE shows human impatience with divine promise but also God’s mercy toward the marginalized Hagar. |
| The Abraham Cycle | Genesis 17 | Covenant of Circumcision | God renames Abram “Abraham” and Sarai “Sarah,” establishing circumcision as covenant sign. | Abraham, Sarah, Ishmael | NABRE links circumcision to identity and obedience; divine promise narrows to covenant lineage through Isaac. |
| The Abraham Cycle | Genesis 18 | The Three Visitors | God appears to Abraham at Mamre, promising a son; Abraham intercedes for Sodom. | Abraham, Sarah, three visitors | NABRE reads this theophany as revelation of divine intimacy and justice; hospitality and prayer as models of faith. |
| The Abraham Cycle | Genesis 19 | The Destruction of Sodom and Gomorrah | God destroys the wicked cities; Lot and his daughters escape. | Lot, Lot’s wife, angels | NABRE notes moral depravity and divine justice balanced by mercy. Lot’s wife symbolizes disobedient attachment to sin. |
| The Abraham Cycle | Genesis 20 | Abraham and Abimelech | Abraham repeats deception about Sarah; God protects Sarah and reaffirms His promise. | Abraham, Sarah, Abimelech | NABRE interprets repetition as human weakness and divine constancy; God’s fidelity prevails despite human fear. |
| The Abraham Cycle | Genesis 21 | Birth of Isaac | Sarah bears Isaac; Hagar and Ishmael are sent away but saved by God. | Abraham, Sarah, Isaac, Hagar, Ishmael | NABRE highlights the fulfillment of divine promise and God’s care for both covenant and non-covenant descendants. |
| The Abraham Cycle | Genesis 22 | The Testing of Abraham | God commands Abraham to sacrifice Isaac, then stops him, confirming his faith. | Abraham, Isaac | NABRE identifies this as a supreme act of trust; foreshadows Christ’s sacrifice. |
| The Abraham Cycle | Genesis 23 | Purchase of the Burial Field | Sarah dies; Abraham buys the cave of Machpelah for burial. | Abraham, Sarah | NABRE notes the first legal claim to the promised land; faith becomes tangible inheritance. |
| The Abraham Cycle | Genesis 24 | Marriage of Isaac and Rebekah | Abraham’s servant finds Rebekah as wife for Isaac through divine guidance. | Abraham’s servant, Rebekah, Isaac, Laban, Bethuel | NABRE emphasizes providence and covenant continuity through faithful obedience. |
| The Abraham Cycle | Genesis 25 | Death of Abraham and Descendants | Abraham dies; Esau and Jacob are born to Isaac and Rebekah. | Abraham, Isaac, Rebekah, Esau, Jacob, Ishmael | NABRE links closure of patriarch’s life with the rise of new covenant figures; genealogies preserve continuity. |
| Isaac and Jacob Cycle | Genesis 26 | Isaac and Abimelech | Isaac repeats Abraham’s pattern of fear but prospers in Gerar. | Isaac, Rebekah, Abimelech | NABRE reads repetition as typological continuity—God’s promise transcends human frailty. |
| Isaac and Jacob Cycle | Genesis 27 | Jacob Takes Esau’s Blessing | Jacob deceives Isaac to receive the blessing meant for Esau. | Jacob, Esau, Isaac, Rebekah | NABRE interprets this as fulfillment of prophecy and divine election despite human deceit. |
| Isaac and Jacob Cycle | Genesis 28 | Jacob’s Dream at Bethel | Jacob dreams of a ladder reaching heaven; God renews covenant promises. | Jacob | NABRE identifies Bethel as sacred encounter; symbolizes God’s presence beyond the land. |
| Isaac and Jacob Cycle | Genesis 29 | Jacob Marries Leah and Rachel | Jacob serves Laban, is deceived into marrying Leah, then also marries Rachel. | Jacob, Leah, Rachel, Laban | NABRE highlights poetic justice; deceit repeats in family line yet serves God’s plan. |
| Isaac and Jacob Cycle | Genesis 30 | Jacob’s Children and Prosperity | Births of Jacob’s sons; Jacob’s flocks multiply despite Laban’s manipulation. | Jacob, Leah, Rachel, Bilhah, Zilpah | NABRE notes divine favor amid rivalry; tribal ancestors of Israel emerge through imperfect means. |
| Isaac and Jacob Cycle | Genesis 31 | Jacob Flees from Laban | Jacob secretly departs Laban’s household; reconciliation follows after confrontation. | Jacob, Laban, Rachel, Leah | NABRE emphasizes God’s protection over Jacob and covenant faithfulness through family reconciliation. |
| Isaac and Jacob Cycle | Genesis 32 | Jacob Prepares to Meet Esau | Jacob wrestles with a mysterious figure and is renamed Israel. | Jacob (Israel), Esau | NABRE views the wrestling as symbolic of Israel’s lifelong struggle with God—transformation through encounter. |
| Isaac and Jacob Cycle | Genesis 33 | Jacob and Esau Reconcile | Jacob meets Esau peacefully; the brothers part in mutual respect. | Jacob, Esau | NABRE highlights forgiveness and divine providence, contrasting fear with reconciliation. |
| Isaac and Jacob Cycle | Genesis 34 | The Defilement of Dinah | Shechem violates Dinah; her brothers retaliate, deceiving and killing the men of Shechem. | Dinah, Simeon, Levi, Jacob | NABRE treats this as moral warning: vengeance corrupts justice; Israel’s tribal reputation is marred. |
| Isaac and Jacob Cycle | Genesis 35 | Return to Bethel and Deaths | Jacob returns to Bethel, fulfills vows, and experiences family deaths. | Jacob, Rachel, Isaac | NABRE connects Bethel as closure of Jacob’s journey; death scenes mark generational transition. |
| Isaac and Jacob Cycle | Genesis 36 | Descendants of Esau | Genealogy of Esau (Edom) and his descendants. | Esau (Edom) | NABRE uses this genealogy to trace political and familial boundaries; underscores God’s faithfulness to all Abrahamic lines. |
| Joseph Cycle | Genesis 37 | Joseph’s Dreams and Betrayal | Joseph’s brothers sell him into slavery after jealousy over his dreams. | Joseph, Jacob, Reuben, Judah | NABRE sees divine providence already at work; suffering initiates salvation for Israel. |
| Joseph Cycle | Genesis 38 | Judah and Tamar | Judah’s family line continues through Tamar’s courage and deception. | Judah, Tamar | NABRE interprets this episode as preservation of Davidic lineage; divine justice through unexpected means. |
| Joseph Cycle | Genesis 39 | Joseph in Potiphar’s House | Joseph prospers under Potiphar but is falsely accused and imprisoned. | Joseph, Potiphar, Potiphar’s wife | NABRE highlights integrity and fidelity under trial; God’s presence endures in adversity. |
| Joseph Cycle | Genesis 40 | Joseph Interprets Prison Dreams | Joseph interprets dreams for Pharaoh’s servants while imprisoned. | Joseph, cupbearer, baker | NABRE notes God’s gift of interpretation foreshadowing Joseph’s rise; faith active in confinement. |
| Joseph Cycle | Genesis 41 | Pharaoh’s Dreams and Joseph’s Rise | Joseph interprets Pharaoh’s dreams of famine and abundance; rises to power in Egypt. | Joseph, Pharaoh | NABRE presents Joseph as the wise servant whose discernment saves nations; prefiguration of divine providence through wisdom. |
| Joseph Cycle | Genesis 42 | Joseph’s Brothers Go to Egypt | Joseph’s brothers come to Egypt for grain; he recognizes them but conceals his identity. | Joseph, Jacob, brothers | NABRE emphasizes testing and moral growth; divine plan unfolds through family reunion in disguise. |
| Joseph Cycle | Genesis 43 | The Second Journey to Egypt | The brothers return with Benjamin; Joseph receives them warmly but continues testing. | Joseph, Benjamin, Judah, brothers | NABRE views this as development of repentance and reconciliation; Judah’s leadership foreshadows royal lineage. |
| Joseph Cycle | Genesis 44 | The Silver Cup Test | Joseph tests his brothers’ loyalty by framing Benjamin; Judah offers himself instead. | Joseph, Judah, Benjamin | NABRE highlights conversion and sacrificial love; Judah’s self-offering prefigures Christ’s redemptive pattern. |
| Joseph Cycle | Genesis 45 | Joseph Reveals His Identity | Joseph discloses himself and forgives his brothers; invites family to Egypt. | Joseph, Jacob, brothers | NABRE stresses providence turning evil into good (Gen 50:20 theme introduced here). Forgiveness renews covenant unity. |
| Joseph Cycle | Genesis 46 | Jacob’s Journey to Egypt | Jacob moves to Egypt with family after divine assurance. | Jacob, Joseph | NABRE interprets migration as divine guidance ensuring preservation of Israel. |
| Joseph Cycle | Genesis 47 | Joseph and the Famine | Joseph administers Egypt’s resources wisely; Israel settles in Goshen. | Joseph, Pharaoh, Jacob | NABRE notes tension between survival and servitude; blessing of Pharaoh by Jacob signifies divine hierarchy. |
| Joseph Cycle | Genesis 48 | Jacob Blesses Ephraim and Manasseh | Jacob blesses Joseph’s sons, giving the greater blessing to the younger. | Jacob (Israel), Joseph, Ephraim, Manasseh | NABRE identifies reversal motif—God’s election defies convention; continues pattern from earlier patriarchs. |
| Joseph Cycle | Genesis 49 | Jacob’s Blessings on His Sons | Jacob delivers prophetic blessings to each of his sons before death. | Jacob, twelve sons | NABRE reads this as tribal charter; Judah’s blessing foretells kingship and messianic line. |
| Joseph Cycle | Genesis 50 | Deaths of Jacob and Joseph | Jacob dies and is buried in Canaan; Joseph forgives his brothers and dies in Egypt. | Jacob, Joseph, brothers | NABRE concludes Genesis with fulfilled providence and hope of return; Joseph’s final words affirm God’s enduring plan. |
The Book of Genesis closes where it began—with God’s sovereignty guiding creation toward its intended purpose. What began in Eden with alienation ends in Egypt with reconciliation, preservation, and promise. Humanity’s story, marked by sin and failure, is continually redirected by divine faithfulness. NABRE interpretation emphasizes this ongoing movement from chaos to covenant, revealing that God’s purpose persists through flawed individuals and complex histories. Each chapter demonstrates that divine providence transforms disorder into blessing, preparing the way for redemption. Genesis ends not with final resolution but with expectation. Joseph’s dying assurance—“God will surely take care of you and lead you up from this land” (Gen 50:24)—becomes the hinge to Exodus. The story of creation thus opens directly into the story of salvation, affirming that every beginning in Scripture is also a promise of fulfillment.