Read for context:
The opening chapters of the Bible and the story of the creation of Adam and Eve offers us many entry points for thinking about what it means to live as individuals within communities.
We will explore some texts below and reflect on them together in an art analysis and activity:
Genesis Chapter 2 describes how God formed Adam from the dust of the ground and breathed into him the breath of life. After Adam was created, God placed him in the lush and fertile Garden of Eden, to cultivate and care for it.
At this point in the narrative, Adam was still the only human in existence and God’s work was not yet complete.
God acknowledges the incompleteness of his work and says that it was not good for the Human to be alone. (Genesis 2:18) and decides to make a “fitting counterpart” [ezer k’negdo] for him.
So God put Adam to sleep and performed a surgery of sorts, removed one of his ribs, then healed the wound, and from that rib he created Eve.
When God brought Eve to Adam, he responded that she is:
“Bone of my bones And flesh of my flesh.”
(Genesis 2:23)
Facilitator prompts the group:
- If God was going to create Eve anyway, why do you think God first created Adam alone? How do you understand the phrase “fitting counterpart” that God uses in his plan to create Eve?
- What is meant by Adam’s description of Eve as “bone of my bones and flesh of my flesh”?
- Do you agree that it is “not good” for people “to be alone”? Are there times that perhaps it is?
Observe and Analyze:
Hillel Smith is an artist, graphic designer and creator of the Parsha Poster project – a series of posters “advertising” the
Parshat Hashavua (weekly Torah portion). The posters use innovative Hebrew lettering, and each one integrates the Hebrew name of the parsha somehow into the illustration. Smith uses a bold, graphic aesthetic to tell Biblical stories in a new way.