Copyright © 1988 by 
            THE THEOLOGY OF SEXUALITY
                        IN THE BEGINNING:
                                GENESIS 1-2
                                        RICHARD
M. DAVIDSON
                                               
            The first two chapters of the Bible
deal directly with the 
question of human sexuality. Not only is human
sexuality presented 
as a basic fact of creation, but an elucidation of
the nature of 
sexuality constitutes a central part of the
Creation accounts. These 
opening chapters of Scripture, coupled with the
portrayal of dis-
ruption and divine judgment
presented in Gen 3, have been 
described as of seminal character and
determinative for a biblical 
theology of sexuality. It has been correctly
noted that a clear under-
standing of these basic statements is crucial,
since here "the pattern 
is established and adjudged good. From then until
the close of the 
biblical corpus it is the assumed norm.”1
In this article we will 
focus upon the theology of sexuality in the creation
accounts 
(Gen
1-2), and in a subsequent article we will explore the theo-
logical insights on sexuality emerging from Gen
3.
                        1. Sexuality in Genesis 1:1-2:4a
            In Gen 1:26-28 "the highpoint
and goal has been reached 
toward which all of God's creativity from vs. 1 on was
directed.”2 
Here
in lofty grandeur is portrayed the creation of man (ha'adam 
=
"humankind"):
            26 Then God said, "Let us make
man in our image, after our 
            likeness;
and let them have dominion over the fish of the sea, and 
            over the
birds of the air, and over the cattle, and over all the earth, 
            and over
every creeping thing that creeps upon the earth." 27 So
    1 Dennis F. Kinlaw,
"A Biblical View of Homosexuality, in Gary R. Collins,
ed.,
The Secrets of Our Sexuality: Role Liberation
for the Christian (
1976),
p. 105.
   2 Gerhard von Rad,
Genesis: A Commentary, Old Testament
Library (Phila-
delphia, 1961), p. 57.
                                                            5
6                      RICHARD
M. DAVIDSON
            God created man in his own image, in
the image of God he 
            created
him; male and female he created them. 28 And God blessed 
            them, and
God said to them, "Be fruitful and multiply, and fill 
            the earth
and subdue it; and have dominion over the fish of the 
            sea and
over the birds of the air and over every living thing that
            moves upon
the earth."3
            It has been rightly observed that
discussion among theologians 
over this passage has largely focused on the meaning
of man's 
creation in the "image of God" and has
almost entirely ignored the 
further affirmation that humankind is created
male and female.4 In 
harmony with the concerns of this study we must
focus in particu-
lar upon the neglected
statement--"male and female he created 
them"--without ignoring the question of the imago Dei and the 
wider context of the chapter. The fundamental
insights into the 
theology of human sexuality which emerge from Gen
1:1-2:4a are 
here discussed under seven major subheadings.
Creation Order
            In the clause concerning man's
creation as male and female 
(Gen
1:27c) we note, first of all, that sexual differentiation is pre-
sented as a creation by God,
and not part of the divine order itself. 
This
emphasis upon the creation of sexual distinction appears to 
form a subtle but strong polemic against the "
'divinisation' of 
sex"5 so common in the
thought of 
            Throughout the mythology of the
ancient Near East, the sexual 
activities of the gods form a dominant motif.6
The fertility myth 
was of special importance, particularly in 
resulting from the union of male and female
deities: "Copulation 
and procreation were mythically regarded as a
divine event. Con-
sequently the religious
atmosphere was as good as saturated with 
mythical sexual conceptions.”7
    3 All English renditions of Scripture
herein are from the RSV.
    4 Paul K. Jewett, Man as Male and Female: A Study of Sexual
Relationships 
from a Theological Point of View (Grand Rapids, MI,
1975), p. 19.
    5 Gerhard von Rad, Old Testament
Theology (New York, 1962), 1:27.
    6 Raymond Collins, "The
Bible and Sexuality," BTB 7
(1977):149-151, conven-
iently summarizes the major
aspects of sexuality (fertility, love-passion, destructive
capacity, sacred marriage) in the ancient Near
Eastern myths. 
     7 Von Rad,
Old Testament Theology, 1:27.
                        THEOLOGY OF SEXUALITY                                 7
In contrast to this view of creation as divine
procreation, the 
account of Gen 1, with its emphasis upon the transcendant God 
(Elohim) and a
cosmic view of creation, posits a radical separation 
of sexuality and divinity. God stands
"absolutely beyond the polar-
ity of sex."8
The sexual distinctions are presented as a creation by 
God, not part of the divine order.
A Duality from the
Beginning
            Secondly, it may be noted that God
created the bipolarity of 
the sexes from the beginning. The popular idea of
an ideal andro-
gynous being later split into
two sexes cannot be sustained from 
the text. Gerhard von Rad
correctly points out that "the plural in 
vs.
27 ('he created them') is intentionally contrasted with the 
singular ('him') and prevents one from assuming
the creation of an 
originally androgynous man."9 The
sexual distinction between 
male and female is fundamental to what it means to
be human. To 
be human is to live as a sexual person. As Karl Barth expresses it, 
"We
cannot say man without having to say male or female and 
also male and female. Man exists in this
differentiation, in this 
duality."10 Whether or not we
agree with Barth that "this is the 
only structural differentiation in which he [the
human being] 
exists,"11  the sexual distinction is certainly presented
in Gen 1 as a 
basic component in the original creation of
humankind.
Equality of the Sexes
            A third insight into the theology of
human sexuality stems 
from the equal pairing of male and female in
parallel with ha-'adam
in Gen 1:27. There is no hint of ontological or
functional super-
iority or inferiority between
male and female. Both are "equally 
immediate to the Creator and His act."12
In the wider context of 
this passage, both are given the same dominion over
the earth and 
other living creatures (vss.
26 and 28). Both are to share alike in the 
blessing and responsibility of procreation (vs.
28). In short, both 
participate equally in the image of God.
   8 Ibid.
   9 Von Rad,
Genesis, p. 60.
   10 Karl 
   11 Ibid.
   12 Helmet Thielicke,
The Ethics of Sex (New York. 1964), p. 7.
8                      RICHARD
M. DAVIDSON
Wholeness
            A fourth theological insight will
serve to bridge our discussion 
from "male and female" to the imago Dei. In Gen 1:27 the generic 
term for humankind (ha'adam) includes both male and
female. 
"The
man and the woman together make man."13 The holistic 
picture of humankind is only complete when both
male and female 
are viewed together. Such a description points to
the individuality 
and complementarity of
the sexes, and will be more fully developed 
in Gen 2.
Relationship
The existence of the bipolarity of the sexes in
creation implies 
not only wholeness but relationship. The
juxtaposition of male 
and female in Gen 1:26 intimates what will become
explicit in 
Gen
2: the full meaning of human existence is not in male or 
female in isolation, but in their mutual communion.
The notion 
of male-female fellowship in Gen 1 has been
particularly empha-
sized by Barth, who
maintains that the "I-Thou" relationship of 
male and female is the essence of the imago Dei.
For Barth, 
Gen
1:27c is the exposition of vs. 27a. and b.
Man-in-fellowship as 
male and female is what it means to be in the image
of God.14
Barth's exclusive identification of the sexual
distinction with 
the image of God is too restrictive. Our purpose at
this point is not 
to enter into an extended discussion of the
meaning of the imago 
Dei.15 But it may be noted
that the Hebrew words selem
("Image") 
and demut ("likeness"), although possessing
overlapping semantic 
ranges, in the juxtaposition of vs. 26 appear to
emphasize both the 
concrete and abstract aspects of human beings,16
and together indi-
cate that the person as a
whole--both in material/bodily and
   13 Johannes Pedersen, 
   14 Barth's
discussion of this point extends through major portions of his Church 
Dogmatics,
vols. 3/1, 3/2, and 3/3. See the helpful summary of his argument in 
Jewett,
pp. 33-48.
   15 The literature on this subject
is voluminous. For a survey of views, see 
especially Claus Westermann,
Genesis 1-11: A Commentary (
pp.
147-155; G. C. Berkouwer, Man: The Image of God (Grand Rapids, MI, 1962), 
pp.
67-118; Anthony A. Hoekema, Created in God's Image (
1986),
pp. 33-65; and cf. Phyllis Trible, God and the Rhetoric of Sexuality 
(
    16 See Francis Brown, S. R.
Driver, and C. A. Briggs, Hebrew and
English 
Lexicon of the Old
Testament
(
THEOLOGY OF SEXUALITY                                 9
spiritual/mental components--is created
in God's image. In his 
commentary on Genesis, von Rad
has insightfully concluded with 
regard to Gen 1:26: "One will do well to split
the physical from the 
spiritual as little as possible: the whole man is
created in God's
image."17
Von Rad has elsewhere
further elucidated the meaning of the 
imago Dei in terms of mankind's dominion over the earth. Just as 
earthly kings set up images of themselves
throughout their king-
dom as a "sign of
sovereign authority," so in the context of Gen 
1:26-28
man is God's representative--his image--to uphold and 
enforce his claim as sovereign Lord.18
 If the image of God includes 
the whole person, and if it involves human dominion
over the 
earth as God's representative, this, does not,
however, exclude the 
aspect of fellowship between male and female
emphasized by Barth. 
The
sexual differentiation of male and female (vs. 27c) is not 
identical to the image of God (vs. 27a-b), as Barth maintains, but 
the two are brought into so close connection that
they should not 
be separated, as has been done for centuries. The
synthetic par-
allelism of vs. 27c, immediately
following the synonymous paral-
lelism of vs. 27a-b, indicates
that the mode of human existence in 
the divine image is that of male and female
together.19
The aspect of personal relationship between the
male and 
female is further highlighted by the analogy of God's
own differen-
tiation and relationship in
contemplating the creation of humanity. 
It
is hardly coincidental that only once in the creation account of 
Genesis--only
in Gen 1:26--does God speak of himself in the 
plural: "Let us make man in our image, after our likeness." There 
have been many attempts to account for this use of
the plural, but 
the explanation that appears most consonant with
both the imme-
diate context and the analogy
of Scripture identifies this usage as a 
plural of fullness. The "let us" as a plural
of fullness “supposes 
that there is within the divine Being the
distinction of personal-
ities" and expresses
"all intra-divine deliberation among 'persons' 
within the divine Being."20
BDB]:
cf. 
PP.
57-58.
    17 Von Rad,
Genesis, p. 58.
    18 Von Rad,
Old Testament Theology, 1:1-16.
    19 See the argumentation for
this point in Jewett, p. 45, and passim.
"See
Gerhard Hasel, "The Meaning of 'L .et Us' in Gen
1:26,'' AUSS 13 
(1975):58-66;-the
quotation is from p. 65. Cf. Derek Kidney, Genesis:
An Introduction
10                    RICHARD
M. DAVIDSON
The juxtaposition of the
plurality of the divine "let us" in vs. 
26
with the plurality of the "them" (male and female) in vss. 26-28 
is not without significance. Karl Barth appears to be right in his 
contention that a correspondence or analogy is
intended "between 
this mark of the divine being, namely, that it
includes an I and a 
Thou, and the being of man, male and female."21
The statement of 
this correspondence "preserves with exceeding
care the otherness of 
God,"22 precluding any notion
of the bisexuality of God, and yet at 
the same time underscores the profound importance
of the personal 
relationship and mutuality of
communion in human existence as 
male and female. Just as there takes place in the
divine being 
deliberating over humankind's
creation--"the differentiation and 
relationship, the loving coexistence
and co-operation, the I and 
Thou"23--,
so the same are to be found in the product of God's 
crowning creative work.
Procreation
It is clear from Gen 1:28 that one of the
primary purposes of 
sexuality is procreation, as indicated in the
words "Be fruitful and 
multiply." But what is particularly
noteworthy is that human 
procreativity "is not here
understood as an emanation or manifesta-
tion of his [the human
being's] creation in God's image." Rather, 
human procreative ability "is removed from God's
image and 
shifted to a special word of blessing."24
This separation of the 
imago Dei and procreation probably serves as a polemic against the 
mythological understanding and
orgiastic celebration of divine sex-
ual activity. But at the
same time a profound insight into the 
theology of human sexuality is provided.
Procreation is shown to be part of the divine
design for human 
sexuality--as a special added blessing. This
divine blessing/com-
mand is to be taken
seriously and acted upon freely and responsibly 
in the power that attends God's blessing.25
But sexuality cannot be
and Commentary, Tyndale Old
Testament Commentaries (
1967),
p. 52.
    21 Barth,
3/1:196. 
    22 Trible,
p. 21. 
    23 Barth,
3/1:196.
    24 Von Rad,
Genesis, pp. 60-61.
    25 The Hebrew word for
"bless" (berak)
in Gen 1 implies the power to accom-
plish the task which God has
set forth in the blessing. See Josef Scharbert,
"'117
THEOLOGY OF SEXUALITY                                 11
wholly subordinated to the intent to propagate
children. Sexual 
differentiation has meaning apart from
the procreative purpose. 
The
procreative blessing is also pronounced upon the birds and 
fish on the fifth day (vs. 22), but only man is made
in the image of 
God. Gen 1 emphasizes that the sexual distinction in
humankind is 
created by God particularly for fellowship, for
relationship, between 
male and female. This will become even more apparent
in Gen 2, 
where the motif of relationship dominates and
procreation is not 
mentioned at all.
Wholesomeness and Beauty
A final insight from Gen I into the theology of
human sexu-
ality emerges from God's
personal assessment of his creation. 
According
to vs. 31, when "God saw everything he had made"--
including the sexuality of his crowning work of
creation--"behold! 
it was very good." The Hebrew expression tob meod ("very good") 
connotes the quintessence of goodness,
wholesomeness, appropri-
ateness, beauty.26  The syllogism is straightforward. Sexuality 
(including the act of sexual intercourse) is part of God's
creation, 
part of his crowning act. And God's creation is very
good. There-
fore, declares the first chapter of Genesis, sex is
good, very good. It 
is not a mistake, a sinful aberration, a
"regrettable necessity,"27 a 
shameful experience, as it has so often been
regarded in the history 
of Christian as well as pagan thought. Rather,
human sexuality (as 
both an ontological state and a relational
experience) is divinely 
inaugurated: it is part of God's perfect design from
the beginning 
and willed as a fundamental aspect of human
existence.
It is not within the scope of this study to draw
out the full 
range of philosophical and sociological implications
that follow 
from the theology of human sexuality set forth in
Gen 1. Perhaps it 
may suffice to repeat again the central clause--"male
and female 
created he them"--and then exclaim with
Emil Brunner:
brk" TDOT, 2:306-307; Hermann W. Beyer,
"eu]loge<w, eu]loghto<j, eu]logi<a, 
e]neuloge<w, TDNT, 2:755-757.
    26 BDB, pp. 373-375; Andrew Bowlings, "bOF (tob)," in R. Laird Harris,
Gleason 
L.
Archer, Jr., and Bruce K. Waltke, eds., Theological Wordbook of the Old 
Testament (
    27
Harry Hollis, Jr., Thank God for Sex: A
Christian Model for Sexual Under-
standing and Behavior (Nashville, TN, 1975), p. 58. (This is Hollis'
phrase, but not 
his view.)
12                    RICHARD
M. DAVIDSON
That is the immense
double statement, of a lapidary simpli-
city, so simple indeed that
we hardly realize that with it a vast 
world of myth and Gnostic
speculation, of cynicism and asceti-
cism, of the deification of
sexuality and fear of sex completely
disappears.28
2. Sexuality in Genesis 2:4b-25
In the narrative of Gen 2:4b-25 many of the
insights from Gen 
I
into the theology of human sexuality are reinforced
and further 
illuminated, while new vistas of the profound nature
of sexual 
relationships also appear.29
Creation Order
The accounts of creation in Gen 1 and Gen 2
concur in 
assigning sexuality to the creation order and not
to the divine 
realm. But while Gen 1 does not indicate the precise
manner in 
which God created, Gen 2 removes any possible
lingering thoughts 
that creation occurred by divine procreation. In
this second chapter 
of Scripture is set forth in detail God's personal
labor of love, 
forming man from the dust of the ground and
"building"30 woman 
from one of the man's ribs.
Androgyny or Duality
from the Beginning
Some recent studies have revived an older theory
that the 
original ha'adam described in Gen 2:7-22 was "a sexually undiffer-
    28 Emil Brunner, Man in Revolt (
    29 Weighty evidence presented by
several recent seminal studies points to the 
conclusion that the first two chapters of Genesis
do not represent separate and 
disparate sources as argued by proponents of the
Documentary Hypothesis. See
especially Jacques Doukhan,
The Genesis Creation Story: Its Literary
Structure,
MI, 1978). Doukhan's
literary/structural analysis shows that instead of comprising 
multiple sources, Gen 1-2 provides a unified dual
perspective on Creation-and on
the God of Creation. In Gen 1:1-2:4a we find the
picture of an all-powerful, 
transcendent God (Elohim) and a
cosmic view of Creation. In Gen 2:4b-25, God is 
further presented as the personal, caring,
covenant God (Yahweh Elohim),
with
Creation
described in terms of man and his intimate, personal needs. From this 
unique dual perspective of infinite/personal God and
cosmic/man-centered creation 
emerges a balanced and enriched presentation of
the divine design for human 
sexuality.
    30 See below, pp. 16-17.
THEOLOGY OF SEXUALITY                                 13
entiated earth creature,"31
or "basically androgynous: one creature 
incorporating two sexes."32
But such an hypothesis is not supported 
by the text. According to Gen 2:7, 8, 15, 16 what
God creates before 
woman is called ha’adam "the man."
After the creation of woman, 
this creature is denoted by the same term (vss. 22-23). Nothing has 
changed in the makeup of "the man"
during his sleep except the 
loss of a rib. There is no hint in the text of any
division of an 
originally bisexual or sexually undifferentiated
being into two 
different sexes. It should be concluded that ha'adam,
"the man" 
formed before woman, was not originally androgynous,
but was 
"created in anticipation of the future."33 He
was created with those 
sexual drives toward union with his counterpart. This
becomes 
apparent in the man's encounter with the animals
which dramati-
cally points up his need of
"a helper fit for him" or "corresponding 
to him" (vss. 18,
20). Such a need is satisfied when he is introduced 
to woman and he fully realizes his sexuality vis-a-vis his sexual 
complement.
Equality or Hierarchy of
the Sexes
The one major question which has dominated the
scholarly 
discussion of sexuality in Gen 2 concerns the
relative status of the 
sexes. Does Gen 2 affirm the equality of the sexes,
or does it support 
a hierarchical view in which man is in some way
superior to the 
woman or given headship over woman at creation.  Over the cen-
turies, the preponderance of
commentators on Gen 2 have espoused 
the hierarchical interpretation, and this view has
been reaffirmed in 
a number of recent scholarly studies.34
The main elements of the 
narrative which purportedly prove a
divinely-ordained hierarchical
   31 Trible,
p. 80.
   32 United 
United 
   33 C. F. Kell,
The First Book of Moses (
   34 For examples, see Samuele Bacchiocchi. Women in the Church: A Biblical 
Study on the Role of
Women in the Church
(Berrien Springs, MI, 1987), pp. 31, 
71-79:
Barth, 3,1:300: 3 2:386-387;
Stephen B. Clark, Man and Woman in
Christ: An
examination of the Roles of Men and Women in the Light of Scripture and
the 
Social Sciences (Ann Arbor, Nil, 1980),
pp. 23-28; Jerry D. Colwell, "A Survey of 
Recent
Interpretations of Women in the Church" (Unpublished Master's Thesis,
God: A Response to
Biblical Feminism
(
14                                RICHARD
M. DAVIDSON
view of the sexes may be summarized as follows: (a)
man is created 
first and woman last (2:7, 22), and the first is
superior and the last is 
subordinate or inferior; (b) woman is formed for the
sake of man--
to be his "helpmate" or assistant to
cure man's loneliness (vss. 18-
20);
(c) woman comes out of man (vss. 21-22), which
implies a 
derivative and subordinate position; (d) woman is
created from 
man's rib (vss. 21-22),
which indicates her dependence upon him 
for life; and (e) the man names the woman (vs. 23),
which indicates 
his power and authority over her.
Do these points really substantiate a
hierarchical view of the 
sexes? Or is Phyllis Trible
correct in asserting that "although such 
specifics continue to be cited as support for
traditional interpreta-
tions of male superiority and
female inferiority, not one of them is 
altogether accurate and most of them are simply not
present in the 
story itself."35 Let us look at each
point in turn.
First, because man is created first and then
woman, it has been 
asserted that "by this the priority and
superiority of the man, and 
the dependence of the woman upon the man, are
established as an 
ordinance of divine creation."36
But a careful examination of the 
literary structure of Gen 2 reveals that such a
conclusion does not 
follow from the fact of man's prior creation. Hebrew
literature 
often makes use of an inclusio
device in which the points of central 
concern to a unit are placed at the beginning
and end of the unit.37 
This
is the case in Gen 2. The entire account is cast in the form of 
an inclusio or
"ring construction"38 in which the creation of man 
at the beginning of the narrative and the creation
of woman at the 
end of the narrative correspond to each other in
importance. The 
movement in Gen 2 is not from superior to
inferior, but from
Hooke, "Genesis," Peake's Commentary on the Bible (London, Eng., 1962), p. 179; 
James
B. Hurley, Man and Woman in Biblical
Perspective (
1981),
pp. 206-214; 
1958),
pp. 156-157.
    35 Trible,
p. 73. 
    36
Keil, p. 89.
    37 For discussion of this
construction, see especially the following: James 
Muilenburg, "Form Criticism and Beyond," JBL 88 (1969):9-10; Mitchel
Dahood, 
Psalms, AB (New York, 1966),
1:5; Phyllis Trible, "Depatriarchal-izing
in Biblical 
Interpretation,"
JAAR 41 (19'73):36.
    38 Muilenberg,
p. 9.
THEOLOGY OF SEXUALITY                                 15
incompleteness to completeness. Woman
is created as the climax, 
the culmination of the story. She is the crowning
work of creation.
If a hierarchy of the sexes is not implied in
the order of their 
creation, is such indicated by the purpose of woman's creation, as 
is suggested in a second major argument for the
hierarchical 
interpretation? Gen 2:18 records the
Lord's deliberation: "It is not 
good that the man should be alone; I will make him ‘ezer kenegdo 
[KJV,
"a help meet for him"; RSV, "a helper fit for him"; NASB,
a helper suitable to him"; NIV, "a
helper suitable for him"]." 
The
Hebrew words ‘ezer
kenegdo
have often been taken to imply 
the inferiority or subordinate status of woman. For
example, John 
Calvin
understood from this phrase that woman was a "faithful 
assistant'' for man.39 But this is not the
meaning conveyed by these 
terms!
The word ‘ezer is usually translated as
"help" or "helper" in
English. This, however, is a
misleading translation because the
English word "helper" tends to suggest
one who is an assistant, a
subordinate, an inferior, whereas
the Hebrew ‘ezer
carries no such
connotation. In fact, the Hebrew
Bible most frequently employs
’ezer to describe a superior
helper--God himself as the "helper" of
Israel.40 The
word can also be used with reference to man or
animals.41 It is a relational
term, describing a beneficial relation-
ship, but in itself does not specify position or
rank, either superior-
ity or inferiority.42
The specific position intended must be gleaned
from the immediate context. In the case of Gen 2:18
and 20, such
position is shown by the word which adjoins ‘ezer, namely kenegdo.
            The
word neged
conveys the idea of "in front of " or
"counter-
part," and a literal translation of kenegdo is thus
"like his
counterpart, corresponding to him."43 Used with ‘ezer, this term
    39 John Calvin, Commentary on Genesis (
    40 Exod
18:-1; Deut 33:7, 26; Ps 33:20: 70:5; 115:9, 10, 11.
    41 Isa
30:5; Hos 13:9; Gen 2:20.
    42 R. David
Freedman, ''Woman. A Power Equal to Man,” BARev ( 1983):56-58,
argues that the Hebrew word ‘ezer etymologically derives from
the merger of two 
Semitic
roots, ‘zr, "to save, rescue," and gzr, "to be
strong," and in this passage has 
reference to the latter: woman is (reated. like the man, ''a power (or strength) 
superior to the animals.
    43 Ludwig Koehler and
Walter Baumgartner, Lexicon in Veteris Testament 
Libros, 2d ed. (
16                                RICHARD
M. DAVIDSON
indicates no less than equality: Eve is Adam's
"benefactor/helper," 
one who in position is "corresponding to
him," "his counterpart, 
his complement."44 Eve is "a
power equal to man;"45 she is Adam's 
"partner."46
As a third alleged indication in Gen 2 of male
superiority and 
female subordination, it has been argued that since
woman came 
out of man, since she was formed from man,
therefore she has a 
derivative existence, a dependent and subordinate
status. That her 
existence was in some way "derived" from
Adam cannot be denied. 
But
derivation does not imply subordination! The text indicates 
this in several ways. We note, for example, that
Adam also was 
"derived"-from the ground (vs. 7)--but certainly we are
not to 
conclude that the ground was his superior! Again,
woman is not 
Adam's rib. It was the raw material, not woman, that was taken out 
of man, just as the raw material of man was
"taken" (Gen 3:19, 23) 
out of the ground .47 What is more,
Samuel Terrien rightly points 
out that woman "is not simply molded of clay,
as man was, but she 
is architecturally ‘built' (2:33)." The verb bnh "to
build," used in 
the creation account only with regard to the
formation of Eve, 
"suggests an aesthetic intent and connotes also the idea of
reliability 
and permanence."48 To clinch the
point, the text explicitly indi-
cates that the man was asleep
while God created woman. Man had 
no active part in the creation of woman that might
allow him to 
claim to be her superior.
A fourth argument used to support the
hierarchical view of the 
sexes concerns the woman's creation from Adam's rib.
But the very 
symbolism of the rib points to equality and not
hierarchy. The 
word sela’ can mean
either "side" or "rib."49 Since sela’ occurs in
   44 Von Rad,
Old Testament Theology, 1:149.
   45 Freedman,
pp. 56-58. Freedman notes that in later Mishnaic
Hebrew keneged
clearly means "equal," and in light of
various lines of biblical philological evidence
he forcefully argues that the phrase ‘ezer kenegdo
here should be translated "a 
power equal to him."
    46 Ibid, p.
56; Gen 2:18, NEB.
    47 Trible,
God and the Rhetoric of Sexuality, p.
101.
    48 Samuel Terrien, "Toward a Biblical Theology of
Womanhood," in Ruth T. 
Barnhouse and Urban T. Holmes, III, eds. Male and Female: Christian Approaches
to Sexuality (New York, 1976), p. 18.
    49 BDB, p. 854. Numerous
theories have been propounded to explain the meaning 
of the rib in this story: e.g., J. Boehmer, "Die geschlechtliche
Stellung des Weibes in
THEOLOGY OF SEXUALITY                                 17
the plural in vs. 21 and God is said to take
"one of " them, the 
reference in this verse is probably to a rib from
Adam's side. By 
"building" Eve from one of Adam's ribs, God appears to be
indi-
cating the mutual
relationship,50 the ''singleness of life,"51 the
''inseparable
unity”52 in which man and woman are joined. The
rib "means solidarity and equality."53
Created from Adam's "side 
[rib]," Eve was formed to stand by his side as an equal.
Peter 
from the feet of Adam to be his slave, nor from his
head to be his 
ruler, but from his side to be his beloved
partner."54
This interpretation appears to be further
confirmed by the 
man's poetic exclamation when he saw the woman for
the first time 
(vs.
23): "This at last is bone of my bones and flesh of my flesh"! The 
phrase "bone of my bones and flesh of my
flesh" indicates that the 
person described is "as close as one's own body."55
It denotes 
physical oneness and a "commonality of
concern, loyalty, and 
responsibility."56
Much can be deduced from this expression regard-
ing the nature of
sexuality, as we shall see below, but the expression 
certainly does not lead to the notion of woman's
subordination.
Gen
2 and 3," Monatschrift fur Geschichte und Wissenschaft
des Judentums 79 
(1939):292,
suggests that the ''rib'' is a euphemism for the birth canal which the 
male lacks; P. Humbert, Etudes sur le recit du Paradis
(Neuchatel, 19,10), pp. 57-58 
proposes that the mention of the ''rib"
explains the existence of the navel in Adam: 
and von Rad, Genesis, p.. 89, finds the detail of the
rib answering the question why 
ribs cover the upper but not the lower part of the body".
Such suggestions appear to 
miss the overall context of the passage with its
emphasis upon the relations/tip
between man and woman.
    50
Westermann, p. 230.
    51 Collins, p. 153. It may be
that the Sumerian language retains the memory of 
the close relationship between "rib" and
"life," for the Sumerian sign it signifies 
both "life'' and "rib.'' Sec S. N. Kramer,
History Begins at 
1959),
p. 136. This is not to say, however, that the detail of the rib in Gen 2 has
its 
origin in Sumrian mythology.
The story of creation in Gen 2 and the Sumerian 
myth in which the pun between the ''lady of the rib''
and "lady who makes live”
appears (ANET,
pp. 37-41), have virtually nothing in common.
   52 Keil,
p. 89.
   53 Trible, ''Depatriarchalizing.” p.
37.
   54 Quoted in Stuart B. Babbage.
Christianity) and Sex (
Similar
statement is attributed to other writers as well.
    55 Collins, p. 153.
    56 Walter Brueggemann,
"Of the Same Flesh and Bone (Gen 2:23a),'' CBQ 32 
(1970):5.10.
18                                RICHARD
M. DAVIDSON
The last major argument used to support a
hierarchical view 
of the sexes in Gen 2 is that in man's naming of
woman (vs. 23) is 
implied man's power, authority, and superiority
over her. It is true 
that assigning names in Scripture often does signify
authority over 
the one named.57 But such is not the
case in Gen 2:23. In the first 
place, the word "woman" (‘issah) is not a
personal name, but only 
a generic identification. This is verified in vs.
24, which indicates 
that a man is to cleave to his ‘issah ("wife"), and
further sub-
stantiated in Gen 3:20, which
explicitly records the man's naming 
of Eve only after the Fall.
Moreover, Jacques Doukhan
has shown that Gen 2:23 contains 
a pairing of "divine passives," indicating
that the designation of 
"woman" comes from God, not man. Just as in the past,
woman 
"was taken out of man" by God, an action with which the
man 
had nothing to do (he had been put into a
"deep sleep"), so in the 
future she "shall be called woman," a
designation originating in 
God and not man. Doukhan
also indicates how the literary struc-
ture of the Genesis Creation
story confirms this interpretation.58 
The
wordplay in 2:23 between 'is (man)
and 'issah
(wo-man) and 
the explanation of the woman's being taken out of
man are not 
given to buttress a hierarchical view of the sexes,
but rather to 
underscore man's joyous recognition of his second
self. In his 
ecstatic poetic utterance, the man is not
determining who the 
woman is, but delighting in what God has done. He is
saying 
"yes" to God in recognizing and welcoming woman as the
equal 
counterpart to his sexuality.59
In light of the foregoing discussion, I conclude
that there is 
nothing in Gen 2 to indicate a hierarchical view
of the sexes. The 
man and woman before the Fall are presented as
fully equal, with
    57 For examples of the oriental
view of naming as the demonstration of one's 
exercise of a sovereign right over a person, see
2 Kgs 23:34; 24:17; Dan 1:7. Cf. R. 
Abba,
"Name," IDB, 3:502.
    58 See Doukhan,
pp. 46-47, for substantiation and further discussion of these 
points. For other lines of evidence disaffirming man's
authoritative naming of 
woman in Gen 2:23 in contrast to his authoritative
naming of the animals in Gen
2:19-20,
see especially Trible, God and the Rhetoric of Sexuality, pp. 99-100, and 
Gerhard
Hasel, "Equality from the Start: Woman in the
Creation Story," Spectrum 
7
(1975):23-24.
    59 See Barth,
3/2:291; Trible, God
and the Rhetoric of Sexuality, p. 100.
THEOLOGY OF SEXUALITY                                 19
no hint of a headship of one over the other or a
hierarchical 
relationship between husband and
wife.
Sexuality as Wholeness
Both the first and second chapters of Genesis
affirm the attribute 
of wholeness in the human sexual experience. But
in Gen 2 we 
encounter a twofold amplification of the meaning
of sexual whole-
ness. First, Gen 2:7 articulates a holistic view of
man. According to 
the understanding of anthropology set forth in this
verse, man does 
not have
a soul, he is a soul. He is a living being, a psychophysical 
unity.60 There is no room in
such a view for a Platonic/Philonic 
dichotomy of body and soul. Excluded is the
dualistic notion of the 
ascetics that the body is evil and therefore all
expressions of the 
body pleasures--including sexual expressions--are
contaminated. 
The
holistic view of man presented in Gen 2:7 means that human 
sexuality cannot be compartmentalized into
"the things of the 
body" versus "the things of the
spirit/soul." The human being is a 
sexual creature, and his/her sexuality is manifested
in every aspect 
of human existence.
The meaning of wholeness is also amplified in
Gen 2 with 
regard to the differentiation between the sexes.
Whereas from Gen 1 
it was possible to conclude in a general way that
both male and 
female are equally needed to make up the image of God,
from Gen 
2
we can say more precisely that it is in "creative complemen-
tariness"61 that God designed male
and female to participate in 
this wholeness. Gen 2 opens with the creation of
man. But creation 
is not finished. The man is alone, he is
incomplete. And this is 
"not good" (vs. 18). Man needs an ‘ezer kenegdo--a helper/ bene-
factor who is his counterpart. Thus begins man's quest
to satisfy 
his God-instilled "hunger for wholeness."62
Such hunger is not 
satisfied by his animal companions but by the
sexual being God 
has "built" ("aesthetically
designed") to be alongside him as his 
complement. Adam in effect exclaims at his first
sight of Eve, "At 
last, I am whole! Here is the complement of
myself!" He recognizes,
   60 Stephen Sapp, Sexuality, the Bible, and Science (
   61 Terrien,
p. 18.
   62 Sakae Kubo, Theology and Ethics of Sex (Washington,
DC, 1980), p. 19.
20                    RICHARD
M. DAVIDSON
and the narrative instructs us, that "man is
whole only in his 
complementarity with another being who
is like unto himself."63
A Multi-dimensional
Relationship
Closely connected with "complementary
wholeness" is the idea 
of relationship. If Gen 1 whispers that human
sexuality is for 
fellowship, for relationship, Gen 2 orchestrates
this fact with a 
volume of double forte, and the melody and harmony of
the nar-
rative portray richness and
beauty in the relational symphony of 
the sexes.
According to Gen 2, the creation of Eve takes
place in the 
context of loneliness. The keynote is struck in
vs. 18: "It is not 
good that the man should be alone...." The
"underlying idea" of 
vss. 18-24 is that
"sexuality finds its meaning not in the appropria-
tion of divine creative
powers, but in human sociality."64 Man is a 
social being; sexuality is for sociality, for
relationship, companion-
ship, partnership. In principle, this passage may be
seen to affirm 
the various mutual social relationships that should
take place 
between the sexes (as is also true with the
"image-of-God" passage 
in Gen 1); but more specifically, the Genesis
account links the 
concept of sociality to the marriage
relationship. This is apparent 
from 2:24: "Therefore a man leaves his father
and his mother and 
cleaves to his wife, and they become one
flesh." The introductory 
"therefore" indicates that the relationship of Adam and
Eve is 
upheld as the ideal for all future human sexual
relationships. 
Certain
significant insights into the nature of sexuality call for
attention in this verse.
First, man leaves. The word ‘azab is a forceful term. It means
literally "to abandon, forsake," and is
employed frequently to 
describe 
of Gen 2:24 indicates the necessity of absolute
freedom from outside 
interferences in the sexual
relationship. Barth has pointed out that 
in a very real sense Gen 2 represents the
"Old Testament Magna 
Charta
of humanity" as Adam was allowed freely and exuberantly
    63 Collins, p. 153. Italics
supplied.
    64 Ibid.
    65 See BDB, pp. 736-737; Deut
28:20; Judg 10:13; 2 Chron
34:25; Isa 1:4; etc.
THEOLOGY OF SEXUALITY                                 21
to recognize and affirm the woman as his partner.66
Just as this 
freedom was essential in the Garden, so it is
crucial in all suc-
ceeding sexual relationships.
What is particularly striking in vs. 24 is that
it is the man who 
is to "leave." It was a matter of course
in the patriarchal society at 
the time Gen 2 was penned that the wife left her
mother and father. 
But
for the husband to "leave" was revolutionary!67
In effect, the 
force of this statement is that both are to leave--to
cut loose from 
those ties that would encroach upon the independence
and freedom 
of the relationship.
Second, man cleaves. The Hebrew verb dabaq,
"cleave," is 
another robust term, signifying "strong
personal attachment."68 It 
is often used as a technical covenant term for the
permanent bond 
of 
sexes in Gen 2:24, it seems clearly to indicate a
covenant context, 
i.e.,
a marriage covenant, paralleling the "oath of solidarity" and 
language of "covenant partnership"
expressed by Adam to Eve.70
But
as was true with Adam, more is involved here than a formal 
covenant. The word dabaq especially emphasizes the
inward atti-
tudinal dimensions of the
covenant bond. It "implies a devotion 
and an unshakable faith between humans; it connotes
a permanent 
attraction which transcends genital union to which,
nonetheless, it
gives meaning."71
Third, man and woman "become one
flesh." We may imme-
diately point out that this
"one-flesh" union follows the "cleaving" 
and thus comes within the context of the marriage
covenant. The 
unitive purpose of sexuality is
to find fulfillment inside the marital 
relationship. Furthermore, the
phrase "man and his wife"--with
    66 Barth,
3/2:291.
    67 Some leave seen behind this
passage a hint of a matriarchal social structure, 
but evidence lot such an hypothesis is not
convincing. For further discussion of this 
theory, see Jewett. p. 127.
    68 See BDB, pp. 179-180; G. Wahlis, “qbaDA dabaq,''
TDOT, 3:80-83; Earl S.
Kalland, "qbaDA (dabaq),"
TWOT, 1:177-178.
    69 See, e.g., Deut 10:20; 11:22:
13:1; Josh 22:5; 23:8.
    70 For discussion of the
covenant language used by Adam, see Brueggemann, 
pp.
532-542.
    71 Collins, p. 153.
22                                RICHARD
M. DAVIDSON
both nouns in the singular--clearly implies that the
sexual rela-
tionship envisioned is a
monogamous one, to be shared exclusively 
between two marriage partners. The LXX
translation makes this 
point explicit: "they two shall become one
flesh."
The "one-flesh" relationship certainly
involves the sexual 
union; sexual intercourse. The physical act of coitus
may even be 
in view in this passage as the primary means of
establishing the 
"innermost mystery'"72 of oneness. But this
is by no means all that 
is included. The term basar, "flesh," in the
OT refers not only to 
one's physical body but to a person's whole existence
in the world.73 
By
"one flesh" is thus connoted "mutual dependence and reciprocity 
in all areas of life,"74 a
"unity that embraces the natural lives of 
two persons in their entirety."75
It indicates a oneness and intimacy 
in the total relationship of the whole person of
the husband to the 
whole person of the wife.76
Sexuality for
Procreation
With regard to Gen 1 we noted that a primary
purpose of 
sexuality was for personal relationship, and that
procreation was 
presented as a special added blessing. The
significance of the unitive 
purpose of sexuality is highlighted in Gen 2 by
the complete 
absence of any reference to the propagation of
children. This omis-
sion is not to deny the
importance of procreation (as becomes 
apparent in later chapters of Scripture). But by
the "full-stop"77 
after "one-flesh" in vs. 24, sexuality is
given independent meaning 
and value. It does not need to be justified only as
a means to a 
superior end, i.e., procreation.
The Wholesomeness of
Sexuality
The narrative of Gen 2 highlights the divine
initiative and 
approbation in the relationship of the sexes. After
the formation of
    72 Otto Piper,
The Biblical View of Sex and Marriage
(New York, 1960),
pp.
52-67, explores the possible dimensions of this "inner mystery."
    73 See John N. Oswalt, "rWABA
(basar)," TWOT,
1:136; N.P. Bratsiotis, "rWABA
basar," TDOT, 2:325-329.
    74 Piper,
p. 28.
    75 Ibid.,
p. 25.
    76 Herbert J. and Fern Miles, Husband-Wife Equality (Old Tappan, NJ,
1978), 
p. 164.
    77 Walter Trobisch, I Married
You (New York, 1971), p. 20.
THEOLOGY OF SEXUALITY                                 23
woman, the Lord God "brought her to the
man" (vs. 22). The 
Creator
Himself, as it were, celebrated the first marriage.78 Thus, 
the "very good" which is pronounced upon humankind
and human 
sexuality in Gen 1 is in Gen 2 concretized in the
divine solemniza-
tion of the
"one-flesh'' union between husband and wife.
Sexuality is wholesome because it is inaugurated
by God him-
self. Since the inauguration occurs within the context
of a divine-
human relationship, sexuality must be seen to
encompass not 
only horizontal (human) but also vertical
(spiritual) dimensions. 
According
to the divine design, the sexual relationship between 
husband and wife is inextricably bound up with
the spiritual unity 
of both man and woman with their Creator.
A final word on God's Edenic
ideal for sexuality comes in vs. 
25:
"And the man and his wife were both naked, and were not 
ashamed." The Hebrew construction of the
last English phrase 
may be more accurately translated "they were
not ashamed before 
one another."79 Viewed in contrast
with the "utter [shameful] 
nakedness"80 mentioned in Gen 3, the
intent here is clear: namely, 
that "shameless sexuality was divinely ordered;
shameful sexuality 
is the result of sin."81 According to God's
original design, sexuality 
is wholesome, beautiful, and good. It is meant to
be experienced 
between spouses without fear, without
inhibitions, without shame 
and embarrassment.
Just as the "one-flesh" experience
applied to more than the 
physical union, so the concept of nakedness
probably connotes 
more than physical nudity.82 As Walter Trobisch states it, there is 
implied the ability ''to stand in front of each
other, stripped and 
undisguised, without pretensions, without hiding,
seeing the part-
ner as he or she really is,
and showing myself to him or her as I 
really am--and still not be ashamed."83
    78 See Brueggemann,
pp. 538-542, for evidence for linguistic and contextual 
indications of a covenant-making ceremony.
   79 BDB. p. 102.
   80 This wil1 be discussed in a
subsequent article, "The Theology of Sexuality in 
the Beginning: Genesis 3." forthcoming in AUSS.
   81 Collins, p. 154.
   82 See Kidner,
p. 66: Vs. 25 indicates "the perfect ease between them." The theory 
that Adam's and Eve's nakedness without shame refers
to their lack of consciousness 
of their Sexuality Will be orated in my
forthcoming article (See n. 80, above).
   83 Trobisch, p.
82.
24                                RICHARD
M. DAVIDSON
As we complete our discussion of the theology of
sexuality in 
Gen
2, we must reject the claim that this chapter displays a 
"melancholy attitude toward sex."84 Instead,
we must affirm with 
von Rad that Gen 2
"gives the relationship between man and 
woman the dignity of being the greatest miracle and
mystery of 
creation.''85
    84 Guthbert
A. Simpson, "The Book of Genesis: Introduction and Exegesis," IB 
(New York, 1952), 1:485-486.
    85 Von Rad,
Old Testament Theology, 1:150.
This material is cited with gracious permission
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  Berrien Springs
http://www.andrews.edu/SEM/
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