From ChatGPT on 1/27/2026.
Below is the expanded comparison table, with an added column indicating the day on which each event occurs. Where the second creation account has no day structure, this is stated explicitly.
| Category | Genesis 1:1–2:4a (First Creation Account) | Day (Gen 1) | Genesis 2:4b–3:24 (Second Creation Account) | Day (Gen 2–3) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Common scholarly label | Priestly account (P) | — | Yahwist account (J) | — |
| Divine name used | “God” (ʾĕlōhîm), Genesis 1:1 | — | “YHWH God,” Genesis 2:4b | — |
| Scope of creation | Cosmic: heavens and earth, Genesis 1:1 | Day 1 (initiation) | Localized: garden and humans, Genesis 2:8 | No days used |
| Light | Light separated from darkness, Genesis 1:3–5 | Day 1 | Not mentioned | — |
| Sky / firmament | Sky created, Genesis 1:6–8 | Day 2 | Not mentioned | — |
| Dry land and seas | Land and seas separated, Genesis 1:9–10 | Day 3 | Implied land already exists, Genesis 2:5 | — |
| Plants and vegetation | Plants created, Genesis 1:11–12 | Day 3 | Plants appear after the man, Genesis 2:5–9 | No days used |
| Sun, moon, stars | Celestial bodies created, Genesis 1:14–18 | Day 4 | Not mentioned | — |
| Birds and sea creatures | Created, Genesis 1:20–23 | Day 5 | Not mentioned | — |
| Land animals | Created, Genesis 1:24–25 | Day 6 | Created after the man, Genesis 2:18–19 | No days used |
| Creation of humans | Male and female together, Genesis 1:26–27 | Day 6 | Man first, Genesis 2:7; woman later, Genesis 2:21–23 | No days used |
| Image of God language | Explicit, Genesis 1:26–27 | Day 6 | Absent | — |
| Human role | Dominion over creation, Genesis 1:28 | Day 6 | Tilling and keeping garden, Genesis 2:15 | No days used |
| Garden of Eden | Absent | — | Planted by God, Genesis 2:8 | No days used |
| Named rivers | None | — | Four rivers named, Genesis 2:10–14 | No days used |
| Special trees | None | — | Tree of life; tree of knowledge, Genesis 2:9 | No days used |
| Serpent | Absent | — | Appears and speaks, Genesis 3:1 | No days used |
| Human disobedience | Absent | — | Eating the fruit, Genesis 3:6 | No days used |
| Consequences | Creation declared “very good,” Genesis 1:31 | Day 6 | Curse, mortality, exile, Genesis 3:14–24 | No days used |
| Divine rest | God rests, Genesis 2:1–3 | Day 7 | Not mentioned | — |
The two accounts differ in order, style, theology, and narrative focus. Genesis 1 presents a cosmic, structured creation, while Genesis 2–3 presents a localized, relational, and moral origin story. Critical scholars widely regard them as distinct traditions placed side by side, rather than a single continuous narrative (e.g., Claus Westermann, Genesis 1–11; John J. Collins, Introduction to the Hebrew Bible).
Key textual observation:
Only Genesis 1 operates within a seven-day chronological framework (Genesis 1:3–2:3). Genesis 2–3 contains no days at all; events are narrated without temporal markers. As Claus Westermann states, the Eden narrative “has no interest in chronology but in relationships and consequences” (Genesis 1–11, on Genesis 2–3).