According to Kirk, Theogony is a Greek poem that explains the birth of Greek gods written by Hesiod. She uses Homeric Greek to write it in epic dialect. Genesis, on the other hand, explains how God created the world in 6 days and rested on the seventh day. This is a Bible story explaining how God created Adam and Eve. It includes the creation of other creatures
Both "Genesis" and "Theology" are creative myths, showing different views on the origin of the world and all the ideas in it. They also have some similarities. Kirk explained that creation began with a lot of confusion in Theogony, Levin pointed out in the Genesis that Earth is just invisible and empty. Both started on the invisible Earth, but in Theogony confusion was first born. For example, Gaia has appeared after Hesiod and has created another God that intersects the new God. On the other hand, the creation of Genesis differs in that it does not arise from many eternal actions with a mysterious beginning. On the contrary, how each existence depends largely on the principle that can not be explained, the eternal absence of which exists. So, Theogony tries to explain how the universe evolved without mentioning its existence, but Genesis solved the existence of the universe.
Most of Theogony's things are formed by wrong actions and tricks, according to Genesis God has created everything. This shows how powerful God is in Genesis, but it is not in Theogony. Prior to doing any activity, Greek gods must negotiate with each other, and God does not need to ask for permission or assistance before carrying out tasks. God was always there when Theogonie explained the birth of Greek gods. But both the Bible and Theogonie point out that men are the first people of their creation and later they are women. God and gods have supernatural powers
Both sentences have different views on the future of mankind. Theogogue is pessimistic because humans are always confused and chaotic until Zeus destroys the deadly race. By contrast, the Bible is optimistic by explaining how God forgives sinners. It also shows how he reached immortal agreements with them.
By this initial thing, I saw Genesis 1 and Theogonie contradicting each other. In Genesis, God and Heaven came first to Earth, then Theogonie, Earth first came to heaven. In Genesis, God is the creator, in Theogonie it is a kind of confusion. Not only that, in Theogony we have never seen human creation. Indeed, Theogony argues that human negative sanctions are actually sacred, and in Genesis it is claimed that men's negative sanctions are coming from sin. In Theogony it is "God" that reveals good and evil, and in Genesis God says that you should not eat from good and evil trees. In fact, God told us to choose a life.
Genesis and "Theology" in Hesiod's Bible are both cultures different from the explanation of the origins of the universe. Genesis comes from the ancient Hebrew Bible, and Theogony is a poem from ancient Greeks. These two descriptions have changed dramatically, and they have very different views on evil, the earth, and the origin of God. In Genesis 1, God created the heaven and the earth, and in the sixth day the remaining creations were created and rested on the seventh day. As seen in the next Bible, he rested on the seventh day and gave a pattern to humans: I work 6 days and then 7 days off. God is eternal, so he has not begun, he never ends. On the first day, God created light for no reason. On the second day, he created heaven (probably the atmosphere). On the third day, God created dry lands and plant lives. On the fourth day, God created the sun, the moon and the stars.