Responsible
Labor
The
divine institution of marriage, Genesis 2:18: “And the LORD God said, It is not good
that the man should be alone; I will make him a helper comparable to him.” The
first thing that we note is that it is Yaweh Elohim speaking here, and to
the Jew who is reading this, this is a reminder that this is the same
LORD God who has entered into
covenant and contract with Israel at Sinai. This God has the best interests of
man at heart and He says that it is not good that the male should be alone. The
first thing He notes here is that it is not good. This is why this word
tob, good, is not a moral good. Some want to argue that “very good”
necessarily excludes evil. Their argument is that Satan hasn’t fallen yet. But
one of the problems is that if good has a moral context to it then it is immoral
for man to be single, because God is saying it is not good for man to be alone.
So that shows the logical fallacy in treating tob as a word that has an
inherent moral connotation. It does not. What God is saying here is that it
doesn’t fit His plan or purpose, or how He designed man. This is half way
through the sixth day, so it is not good, it is not according to plan for man to
be alone. He needs to make a helper for him. Then we come to a word that the
feminists just grind their teeth over, the Hebrew word etzer, which means
to be a helper, an assistant, to be someone who would come alongside the man and
help him achieve the goal that God set for him. “Male and female He created
them,” both are created in the image of God. So together they represent the
image of in exercising dominion over the planet. The plan is that the man is the
one who has the vocation and it is the female who is to come alongside and be
the helper.
Being a helper is an
extremely high position. We live in a culture where if you are the number two
person then you just aren’t as important. The feminist philosophy has picked
this up to make women think that if they are a helper then somehow this is a low
position, and that they are somehow being devalued as a human being and as an
individual, and are nothing more than a slave and a servant. This accusation has
theological implications. For example, Psalm 33:20, “Our soul waiteth for the
LORD: he is our help and our
shield.” God is our etzer, so if somehow being an etzer is being
in a second class position then you are making a statement about God, that that
is a second class thing for God to do. Psalm 70:5, “But I am poor and needy:
make haste unto me, O God: thou art my help
[etzer] and my deliverer; O LORD, make no tarrying.” Psalm
115:9, “O Israel, trust thou in the LORD: he is their help
[etzer] and their shield.” Then in Exodus 18:4, “And the name of the
other was Eliezer; for the God of my father, said he, was mine help, and
delivered me from the sword of Pharaoh,” where the name Eliezer is from the
Hebrew word for God [El]; the “i” is the first person common
singular suffix, meaning mine—so “My God”; and then ezer is help: “My God
is my help.” Again and again God is referred to as a help, so this is a very
high view. In fact, when Jesus came at the first advent He said, “I cam not to
be served, but to serve, and to give my life as a ransom for many.” So the very
image of Christ as a redeemer is the image of an ezer, someone coming to
give help, to give assistance, so that man can be what God intended him to be.
So in the marriage you have a corporation where the man is the one who is the
leader. How a woman helps her husband be successful is that they seek to
exercise dominion in whatever sphere God has put them in, and this is a function
of her creativity where she is reflecting her being in the image of God and her
exercising creativity in that arena.
In
marriage what we see is a situation today where the man and the woman do not
have a real plan as to why they get married. The picture that we se in Scripture
is that the man needs to identify his calling before the woman marries him
because she needs to discover whether or not help him achieve the calling that
God has given him. Furthermore, the man needs to recognize that he has a
responsibility to take care of the home and the family. For example, Proverbs
24:27, “Prepare thy work without, and make it fit for thyself in the field; and
afterwards build thine house.” This is an injunction in Proverbs to men to first
establish their work and a financial basis for the family, and then build the
home in terms of getting married and having children. What happens today and
puts incredible pressure on marriages is that couples get married too soon, the
man doesn’t know what he wants to do, forces the wife to get out and work full
time; they never get themselves established and it ends up often coming back to
haunt both of them in the marriage.
We
see a pattern developing in Genesis 2:19ff. “And out of the ground the
LORD God formed every beast of
the field, and every fowl of the air; and brought them unto Adam to see what he
would call them.” God has a purpose for this. In v. 18 God recognized that it
wasn’t good for man to be alone, but this hadn’t dawned on Adam yet. So before
God creates the woman He is going to cause Adam to recognize that there is a
need there for the woman. So the first thing God does is take the beasts of the
field, the domesticatable beasts, not the wild beasts and every category of
animal that is found in Genesis chapter one. It would seem that the order of
creation on that day is first the beasts of the earth, then Adam, then the
beasts of the field, then the woman. God brings these animals to Adam “to see
what he would call them.” This is a function of Adam’s creativity as the image
of God. He has to do the observation; God is not going to tell him what to call
the animals. We don’t have divine guidance here. There are many areas in life
where we don’t have divine guidance. God is not going to tell you, “This is how
you cut the grass,” or “This is how you pay your bills.” God leaves many things
open to you to exercise your volition and to function in the realm of
creativity. The test isn’t so much what you decide to do as how you decide to do
it. They are both part of the package. The names Adam gave to each would say
something about the nature of that creature. Verses 20, “And Adam gave names to
all cattle, and to the fowl of the air, and to every beast of the field.” Notice
it is all the domesticatable kinds that were in the garden, not every single
kind of animal on the planet.
“
…but for Adam there was not found an help [etzer] corresponding to him.”
There is no comparable, corresponding pattern, so Adam recognizes that he is
alone. All the other animals have pairs. It is at this point that God has
prepared Adam for the next act, v. 21, “And the LORD God caused a deep sleep to
fall upon Adam, and he slept: and he took one of his ribs.” The word here for
ribs is the Hebrew word tzelah which doesn’t really mean rib, it means
side. The is the only time in about twenty-five places in the Old Testament that
it is translated rib. It has to do with bone and flesh that is taken, which it
must be because Adam will say that this is “bone of my bone and flesh of my
flash.” So it is not just talking out bone, it is taking out flesh, the muscle,
everything that went with it, and from that God fashions the woman.
Verse 22, “And the rib,
which the LORD God had taken from man,
made he a woman, and brought her unto the man.” Literally, the LORD God built from the rib
[side] a woman.” The word there is banah, the fourth Hebrew word now for
creation—He built the woman, He fashioned her from the rib. Many have noted the
symbolic value that He takes the woman from the side of the man. He doesn’t take
her from the head, indicating superiority, or from the feet, indicating that she
would be in a place of servitude, but from his side because she is going to be
serving side by side as together they exercise dominion over the plant. They are
to be a partnership, a team, and like on any team there is one who is the
primary leader and the other who is the follower or the helper. That is the
situation with Adam and Isha.
Verse 23, “And Adam said,
This is now bone of my bones, and flesh of my flesh [Hebrew idiom for the fact
that she is one with him]: she shall be called Woman [Ishah], because she
was taken out of Man [Ish].”
Verse 24, “Therefore shall a
man leave his father and his mother, and shall cleave unto his wife: and they
shall be one flesh.” Adam doesn’t say this, he doesn’t have a concept of father
and mother yet. This is typical in Genesis where Moses who is writing to Jews
makes application. It is an editorial comment by Moses under the inspiration of
the Holy Spirit, so he is teaching the Jews about the origin of man and the
origin of marriage. And notice it is the male who leaves, not the female. Here
the Hebrew word which has the idea not simply of sexual union, although that is
definitely part of the word, but has the idea of a full union with the woman as
they become one together, spiritually, psychologically and physically.
Verse 25 really sets the
stage for the next chapter. “And they were both naked, the man and his wife, and
were not ashamed.” They are naked, they are exposed, they are not ashamed
because with no sin or sin nature and therefore do not have a comprehension of
all the evil things that can come from perverted sex. So there is no
embarrassment over this, no shame. They are open, they are vulnerable, and there
is no sense of danger, no sense of being taken advantage of. This is going to be
in contrast to what happens in the next chapter, because in 3:1, “Now the
serpent was more cunning than any beast of the field which the LORD God had made.” The word for
“naked” and the word for “cunning” are words that are very similar and so there
is a definite word play in the Hebrew which is set up by this contrast: they are
naked, and in contrast to them being unashamed and open we now see the villain
work his way on to the scene in chapter three.