“These are [eleh] the outgrowths of the heavens [when they were created, on the day that the Lord God made the earth and the heavens]…” – Rabbi Abahu said: Everywhere eleh is stated, it rejects what preceded it; ve’eleh adds to what preceded it. Here, where it says eleh, it excludes what preceded it. What, then, does it exclude? Emptiness, disorder, and darkness.7The state that preceded the creation of the earth and the heavens (Genesis 1:2).
Rabbi Yehuda and Rabbi Neḥemya, Rabbi Yehuda says: “The heavens and the earth…were completed” (Genesis 2:1) – at their designated time. “And their entire host” (Genesis 2:1) – at their designated time.8The heavens and the earth on the one hand, and their hosts on the other hand, were created on separate days. Rabbi Neḥemya said to him: But is it not written: “These are the outgrowths of the heavens and of the earth when they were created [on the day that the Lord God made the earth and the heavens]” – which teaches that on the same day they were created they produced their outgrowths? He said to him: But is it not written: “It was evening, it was morning, one day…a second day…a third day…a fourth day…a fifth day…a sixth day”?9With different items created on each day. Rabbi Neḥemya said: They are like people picking figs; each one of them appears at its time.10All the buds of the figs are present at the beginning of the season, but they ripen gradually, each one in its time. So, too, the outgrowths of the heavens and the earth were present in an incipient form from the beginning, and grew into their final form during the subsequent days. Rabbi Berekhya said in support of Rabbi Neḥemya’s teaching: “The earth brought forth [vegetation]” (Genesis 1:12) – [“bringing forth” indicating] something that was already stored inside it.