Commentary on Genesis 2,18-24.Olson

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 Commentary on Genesis 2:18-24 Dennis Olson The book of Genesis begins with two different but complementary stories of God's creation of the world. Two Creation Stories and Two Portrayals of God  In Genesis 1, God is portrayed as speaking from afar, bringing order out of chaos in a well planned and carefully structured progression of six days of creation. God repeatedly pronounces the results of the six days of creation as "good" and the whole creation in the end as "very good" (Genesis 1:31). God creates humans as a simultaneous community, male and female, both fully in the image of God. Genesis 1 teaches us that God's intentions for creation will come to fruition in accord with God's will and desire. When we turn to the second creation story in Gen 2:4b-25, the portrait of God is somewhat different. God gets "down and dirty" with creation, forming the human (adam) from the land or clay (adamah). God performs CPR on the newly formed lump of clay, breathing into the dirt-creature's nostrils "the breath of life." Like the crazed doctor who brings to life the lifeless Frankenstein in the film Young Frankenstein, we can imagine God exclaiming, "He's alive! He's alive!" The image of the garden of Eden as a laboratory with God as the chief scientist engaging in trial- and-error experiments captures something of the spirit of God's portrayal in Genesis 2. Although God will finally and assuredly have God's way with the world (Genesis 1), God will also encounter unexpected challenges and try new solutions in a give-and-take in interaction with creation and its creatures (so Genesis 2). Being Lonely: Not Good! In Genesis 1, God had repeatedly said that everything was "good." In Genesis 2, God surveys his emerging horticultural experiment in Eden and senses something is "not good." God observes, "It's not good that the man should be alone" (2:18). God's discovery highlights what is fundamental to human nature and human flourishing: humans are social creatures who thrive in close and intimate relationships with others. Thus, God resolves to make for the single human "a helper [Hebrew: ezer ] as his partner." A "helper" in the Old Testament is not a subordinate but one who may be an equal or sometimes even a superior to the one who is being helped. In fact, God is often called a "helper" to humans in need (Psalm 10:14; 54:4). God's first experimental attempt to resolve this deficit of community is to create an array of wild animals, birds, and domestic animals as possible soul mates for the human. God marches the

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Biblical Commentary

Transcript of Commentary on Genesis 2,18-24.Olson

  • Commentary on Genesis 2:18-24

    Dennis Olson

    The book of Genesis begins with two different but complementary stories of God's creation

    of the world.

    Two Creation Stories and Two Portrayals of God

    In Genesis 1, God is portrayed as speaking from afar, bringing order out of chaos in a well planned

    and carefully structured progression of six days of creation. God repeatedly pronounces the results

    of the six days of creation as "good" and the whole creation in the end as "very good" (Genesis

    1:31). God creates humans as a simultaneous community, male and female, both fully in the image

    of God. Genesis 1 teaches us that God's intentions for creation will come to fruition in accord with

    God's will and desire.

    When we turn to the second creation story in Gen 2:4b-25, the portrait of God is somewhat

    different. God gets "down and dirty" with creation, forming the human (adam) from the land or clay

    (adamah). God performs CPR on the newly formed lump of clay, breathing into the dirt-creature's

    nostrils "the breath of life." Like the crazed doctor who brings to life the lifeless Frankenstein in the

    film Young Frankenstein, we can imagine God exclaiming, "He's alive! He's alive!"

    The image of the garden of Eden as a laboratory with God as the chief scientist engaging in trial-

    and-error experiments captures something of the spirit of God's portrayal in Genesis 2. Although

    God will finally and assuredly have God's way with the world (Genesis 1), God will also encounter

    unexpected challenges and try new solutions in a give-and-take in interaction with creation and its

    creatures (so Genesis 2).

    Being Lonely: Not Good!

    In Genesis 1, God had repeatedly said that everything was "good." In Genesis 2, God surveys his

    emerging horticultural experiment in Eden and senses something is "not good." God observes, "It's

    not good that the man should be alone" (2:18). God's discovery highlights what is fundamental to

    human nature and human flourishing: humans are social creatures who thrive in close and intimate

    relationships with others. Thus, God resolves to make for the single human "a helper [Hebrew: ezer]

    as his partner." A "helper" in the Old Testament is not a subordinate but one who may be an equal

    or sometimes even a superior to the one who is being helped. In fact, God is often called a "helper"

    to humans in need (Psalm 10:14; 54:4).

    God's first experimental attempt to resolve this deficit of community is to create an array of wild

    animals, birds, and domestic animals as possible soul mates for the human. God marches the

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  • colorful parade of diverse wild life before the human and invites him to give names to the various

    creatures (2:18-20). Elephant, condor, dog, cat, kangaroo, what have you. The act of naming in the

    ancient world was a means of defining and shaping the character and essence of the one named.

    By naming the animals, the human participates with God as a co-creation, but sadly this first

    experiment does not work. The animals are interesting, but none of the animals fully resolves the

    ache and void of human loneliness.

    The Second Experiment: Success at Last!

    So God embarks on another experiment. God assumes the role of chief surgeon and anesthetizes

    the man into a deep sleep. This new attempt at finding a "helper as his partner" will not involve

    human co-creation this time. It will all be God's doing, a gift from God alone. God surgically

    removes a rib from the man's side and lovingly shapes the rib into a second human being who is

    "like" the man but also "opposite" him, like two puzzle pieces that fit together. The animal-as-full-

    partner experiment had been a bust, but this time God gets it oh so right! The man awakes and

    instantly recognizes the fulfillment of his deep longing in the eyes of the new "other," the woman.

    For the first time in Scripture, the human speaks in the elevated language of poetic verse as a sign

    of the ecstasy and joy that accompanies this discovery:

    This at last is bone of my bones

    and flesh of my flesh.

    This one shall be called Woman [Hebrew ishshah]

    for out of Man [Hebrew ish] this one was taken.

    "At last," the search is over. The imagery of being "bone of my bones" and "flesh of my flesh"

    speaks of a bond between the man and woman so strong that to sever it would be as if to rip out a

    physical part of one's own body. The man's lyric response is the Bible's first example of love poetry

    but not its last. The Bible's other great celebration of human love and passion is the Old Testament

    book, the Song of Songs, a commentary and sequel to Genesis 2.

    Love as a Fragile Gift

    This marital bond is so intimate that the two "become one flesh"--naked, open to one another,

    vulnerable, trusting, passionate, loving, and "not ashamed" (2:24-25). This union of two lonely

    human beings yearning for community and finding it in one another is the great climax of the

    second creation story.

    Unfortunately, the happy union is quickly strained and marred as the narrative suddenly and

    unexpectedly descends into the story of Adam and Eve's disobedience and expulsion from the

    garden of Eden in Genesis 3. Mutual trust, partnership, support, freedom from shame, and equality

    of relationship are all threatened by human disobedience in Genesis 3. The Gospel lesson for this

    Sunday in Mark 10:2-16 takes up the issue of divorce, the severing of this relationship of a man and

  • a woman in the real world of human pain and pleasure, the knowledge of good and evil, faithfulness

    and sin.

    The reality and the mystery of human love is that sometimes it endures and sometimes it does not.

    Genesis 2 reminds us of God's original intention and desire for humans--to find in at least one other

    person a bond of love that runs so deeply and so intimately that we never feel alone.