Garments of Light
Adam named his wife Eve, because she would become the mother of all life. The Lord God made garments of skin for Adam and his wife and clothed them. (3:20–21)
The context is one of the best known stories of the Bible. Together in the Garden of Eden, surrounded by the rich panoply of creation, the first human couple have everything they could possibly want – except one thing: there is a tree from which they are forbidden to eat. Needless to say, that is the one thing they want. “Stolen waters taste sweet,” says the book of Proverbs (9:17). They eat; their eyes are opened; they lose their innocence; for the first time they feel shame. When they hear “the voice of God” (Genesis 3:8) they try to hide, but discover that God is someone from whom one cannot hide. God asks them what they have done. Adam blames his wife. She blames the serpent. The result is paradise lost.
The episode is rich in its implications, but I want us to study one of its strangest features. The woman has been told that “with pain she will give birth to children” (3:16). Next, Adam is informed that he will face a life of painful toil. There then follows a sequence of three verses which seem to have no connection with one another. Indeed, they sound like a complete non sequitur. God says to Adam: “By the sweat of your brow you will eat your food until you return to the ground, since from it you were taken; for dust you are and to dust you will return.” This is followed by: “And Adam named his wife Eve, because she would become the mother of all life. The Lord God made garments of skin for Adam and his wife and clothed them” (3:19–21).
The problems are obvious. Adam has just blamed his wife for leading him into sin. He has also been condemned to mortality. Why, at just this juncture, does he turn to her and give her a new name? And why, immediately afterward, as they are about to be exiled from Eden, does God perform an act of kindness to the couple – giving dignity to the very symbol of their sin, the clothes with which they hide their shame?
The mood seems to have undergone a mysterious change. The bitter acrimony of the previous verses suddenly dissolves, and instead there is a new tenderness – between Adam and his wife, and between God and the couple. Rashi is so perplexed by this sudden transformation that he is moved to suggest that the middle verse is out of chronological sequence. He argues that it comes to conclude not the story of the sin of the forbidden fruit, but rather the earlier scene in which Adam gave names to the animals and found “no suitable companion” (2:20).
More mysterious still is the interpretation given by the first century sage Rabbi Meir to the phrase “garments of skin,” bigdei ‘or. Rabbi Meir reads the ‘ayin of the second word as an aleph, bigdei or – and thus interprets the phrase as “garments of light.”1.Bereshit Raba, 20:12.
This is an almost mystical suggestion and a deeply intriguing one. Why – not when they were in paradise, but as they were leaving it – were the couple bathed with divine radiance, clothed in garments of light?
Rabbi Elazar ben Azaryah said, “It is impossible for there to be a session in the house of study without some new interpretation.”2.Ḥagiga 3a.
In that spirit let us see whether we can find new meaning in this passage.
The words, “dust you are and to dust you will return,” awoke Adam, for the first time, to the consciousness of his mortality. There is no more profound self-knowledge than this – that the world will one day be without us, and we without the world. Much of civilization has turned on this single fact, that our lives are finite, a microsecond in the context of eternity; that however long we live, our time is limited and all too short.
The Torah is silent regarding Adam’s thoughts in the wake of this discovery, but we can reconstruct them. Until that point, death had not entered his consciousness, but now he was brought face to face with it. What, if he was mortal, would live on? Was there a part of him that would continue, even though he himself would no longer be there? It was then that Adam remembered God’s words to the woman. She would give birth to children – in pain, to be sure, but she would bring new life into the world.
Suddenly Adam knew that though we die, if we are privileged to have children, something of us will live on: our genes, our influence, our example, our ideals. That is our immortality. This was an idea that eventually shaped the character of the whole of Judaism in contradistinction to most other cultures in ancient and modern times. The Tower of Babel and the great buildings of Ramses ii – the two most significant glimpses the Torah gives us of the empires of the ancient world – testify to the idea that one defeats mortality by building monuments that outlast the winds and sands of time. Judaism has a quite different idea, that we defeat mortality by engraving our ideals on the hearts of our children, and they on theirs, unto the end of time. Where the Mesopotamians and Egyptians thought of buildings, Abraham and his descendants thought of builders (“Call them not ‘your children’ but ‘your builders’”3.Berakhot, 64a. ). Judaism became the most child-centred of faiths.
But there is one significant difference between personal immortality and the immortality we gain by those we bring to life and who live on after us. The latter cannot be achieved alone. Until he became aware of his mortality, Adam could think of his wife as a mere ezer kenegdo, usually translated as “a suitable helper” – as an assistant, not an equal. “She shall be called ‘woman’ [ishah] for she was taken from man [ish]” (2:23), he says. She was, in his eyes, an extension of himself.
Now he knew otherwise. Without her, he could not have children – and children were his share in eternity. With this awareness he ceased to think of her as an assistant. She was a person in her own right – more even than he was, for it was she, not he, who would actually give birth. In this respect she was more like God than he could be, for God is He-who-brings-new-life-into-being.
Once Adam experienced these thoughts, recrimination ended, for he saw that physical being, “nakedness,” was not simply a source of shame. There is a spiritual dimension to the physical relationship between husband and wife. At one level it is the most animal of desires, but at another it is as close as we come to the principle of divine creativity itself, namely, that love creates life. That is when he turned to his wife and for the first time saw her as a person and gave her a personal name, Eve, meaning, “she who gives life.”
The significance of this moment cannot be sufficiently emphasised. It was not that previously Adam had given his wife one name and now simply gave her another. It was that previously Adam had not given her a name at all. He called her ishah, “woman,” a generic noun, not a proper name. He himself had not had a proper name until this point either. It is only after he confers a proper name on the woman that the man acquires one himself: Adam. Until then he was simply called ha-adam, “the man.”
With the appearance of proper names, the concept of “person” is born. A noun designates a class, a group of things linked by common characteristics. Nouns speak of sameness and therefore substitutability. If we lose one watch we can buy another. If our car is stolen we can replace it. “Watch” and “car” are nouns, in both cases objects defined by their function.
A name is different. It refers not to a class or group of things but to an individual in his/her uniqueness. The primary bearer of a name is a human being. Only by extension do we give names to non-humans for which we have special affection – a pet, for example. The concepts of “name” and “person” are intimately linked. We cannot have one without the other. The single most important ethical truth about persons is that none is substitutable for any other. As persons, we are unique. “When a human being makes many coins in the same mint,” say the sages, “they all come out alike. [By contrast,] God makes every human being in the same image, His image, and they are all different.”4.Mishna, Sanhedrin, 4:5.
This is what gives human life its dignity and preciousness. Without it, we would not know love – for love in its primary sense is always directed to a person: to this man, that woman, this child, in their uniqueness. One who truly loves does not love abstractly. The lovers in the Song of Songs never tire of describing each other – his hair, her cheeks, his eyes, her mouth – the things that make the loved one unique, and not someone-in-general. Love lives in particularity.
This is also what gives human love its pathos and vulnerability. We know that like us, our beloved will eventually grow old and die, and that he or she can never be replaced. If we knew we would never die, we would need no intimations of eternity. But because we know we will one day die, one of the greatest things we can experience is the moment beyond time (the one we know we will never forget) when two souls touch and between them form a bridge over the abyss of mortality. That is the meaning of the verse, “Love is as strong as death, its passion as unyielding as the grave” (Song of Songs 8:6), an idea Dylan Thomas would reiterate in the words, “Though lovers be lost, love shall not; / And death shall have no dominion.”5.“And Death Shall Have No Dominion” in Dylan Thomas, Collected Poems 1934–1952 (London: Dent, 1952), 68.
On another level, this is what gives human life its sanctity. “A single life,” teach the sages, “is like a universe.”6.Mishna, Sanhedrin, 4:5.
However lifelike robots may one day become, there will always be this fundamental difference between a machine and a person. Machines can be replaced. Persons cannot.
The moment when Adam turned to his wife and gave her a proper name, Eve, was a turning point in the history of humanity. It was then that God robed the couple in garments of light. For it is only when we relate to one another as persons possessed of non-negotiable dignity that we respond to the “image of God” in the other. In a sense the whole of Judaism – or at least mitzvot bein adam le-havero, “the commands between us and our fellow human beings” – is an extended commentary to this idea. The rules of justice, mercy, charity, compassion, regard for the poor, love for the neighbour and the stranger, delicacy of speech and sensitivity to the easily-injured feelings of others, are all variants on the theme of respect for the human other as an image and likeness of the Divine Other.
The idea has even deeper implications. For there is an intimate connection between the way we relate to other people and the way we relate to God – and this too is expressed in the difference between a noun and a name.
Though God has many descriptions, two are primary: “Elokim,” and the four letter name we may not pronounce, known generally as Hashem – “the Name.” The sages distinguished them by saying that Elokim refers to divine justice, Hashem to divine compassion. The eleventh-century poet and philosopher Judah HaLevi made a different distinction.7.Judah HaLevi, Kuzari, book iv, para 1.
The word “el” was generally used by pagans to signify a god, by which they meant a force of nature (the sun, the storm, the earth, the sea, and the many other deities worshipped in ancient times). Monotheism was and is the insistence that none of these forces or powers represents ultimate reality. Each is only a segment of it. The One God is the totality of all powers. That is the idea represented by the word Elokim. It is a collective noun, meaning “the force of forces.” Elokim is God as we encounter Him in nature, in the vastness and intricacy of creation.
Hashem, by contrast, is not a noun but a name. It refers to God not as a power, or even the totality of all powers, but as a person, a “Thou.” Hashem is The One who speaks to us and to whom we speak, who loves us as a person loves, who hears our prayers, forgives our failures, gives us strength in times of crisis, and teaches us the path of life. In one of the most profound insights in the history of Jewish thought, HaLevi taught that the difference between Elokim and Hashem is the difference between the God of Aristotle and the God of Abraham. A philosopher can come to the realisation that the universe has an author, a creator, a first cause, a “prime mover.” But only a prophet (or a child of Abraham and the nation of prophets) can relate to God as a person. Hashem is God as we encounter Him not in creation, but revelation.
If we now turn back to the biblical text, we see a remarkable phenomenon. In Genesis 1, God is described as Elokim. In chapters 2 and 3, He is called Hashem-Elokim. In chapter 4, for the first time He is called Hashem alone. Something changes in the course of these chapters: not God, who does not change, but rather the human perception of God.
In the first chapter, which speaks about the birth of the universe and the slow emergence of order from chaos, man is part of nature. That is the (partial) truth in the discovery that we share much of our dna with other life forms. This is why God is described here as Elokim, the Author of nature. In chapters 2 and 3, man begins to use language. He becomes, in the words of the Targum, “a speaking being” (Genesis 2:7). God brings the various forms of life to him “to see what he would name them, and whatever the man called each living thing, that was its name” (2:19). But thus far he only uses nouns, first for the animals, and then for his wife, whom he calls ishah, “woman.” He has moved from nature to culture – of which language is the first step – but he has not yet understood the concept of a person. It is only after he gives his wife a proper name that the Torah uses the name Hashem on its own. It is only after he has become aware of his wife as a person that man is capable of understanding God as a “person.”
Judaism was much more than the discovery of monotheism, the discovery of a single unified God. That idea is contained in the word Elokim. It was also the discovery that God is a “person” – that the fact that we are persons, with loves, fears, hopes and dreams, is not an accidental by-product of evolution (as some neo-Darwinians claim), but rather an echo of the ultimate reality of the cosmos. We are not gene-producing machines but individuals, each of us unique, irreplaceable, here because God wants us to be here. That is the world-transforming concept of Hashem – and it was only when Adam responded to Eve as a person that he could see himself as a person, and so respond to God as such. That is why the mitzvot regulating the relationship between us and God are inseparable from the mitzvot defining the relationship between us and our fellow human beings.
Now we understand that extraordinary sequence of three verses. Discovering his mortality, Adam knew that he could only live on through his children, born through an act of love. That was when he realised that immortality cannot be achieved by one alone, but only by the union of two. For the first time he looked on his wife as a person in her own right, and expressed this by giving her a proper name. Having done this, he was able to experience God through His proper name, Hashem. At that moment humanity ceased to be a mere biological species and became Homo religiosus, man-in-search-of-God who meets Hashem, God-in-search-of-man. That is the profound message of the first three chapters of Genesis, a story about language, relationships and what it is to be a person. Judaism is the story of how the love we feel for another person leads to the love of God, and robes us in garments of light.