Odë:hgöd
Well-known member
- Joined
- Jul 27, 2020
- Messages
- 1,538
- Age
- 80
- Gender
- Male
- Religious Affiliation
- Christian
- Marital Status
- Married
- Acceptance of the Trinity & Nicene Creed
- Yes
.
• Gen 2:21a-22a . . So the Lord God cast a deep sleep upon the man; and, while he
slept, He took one of his ribs and closed up the flesh at that spot. And the Lord God
fashioned the rib that He had taken from the man into a woman;
The Hebrew word translated "rib" is tsela' (tsay-law') and Gen 2:21-22 contains the
only two places in the entire Old Testament where it's translated with an English
word representing a skeletal bone.
In the other twenty-nine places, it's translated "side" which is really how tsela'
should be translated because according to Gen 2:23, the material taken from
Adam's body included some of his flesh; and seeing as how the life of the flesh is in
the blood (Lev 17:11) then I think it's safe to assume that the flesh that God took
from Adam's body to construct the woman contained some of his blood too so that
the flesh was living flesh instead of dead.
In other words: we can accept "rib" if we allow it a description similar to a
barbecued rib; a serving that contains not bone alone rather, bone, blood, and
meat.
The most important thing to note in Gen 2:21a-22a is that Eve wasn't created
directly from the soil as Adam was, viz: Eve wasn't a discreet creation, i.e. her
gender isn't a unique specie.
Being as Eve was constructed with Adam's flesh, blood, and bones, then the flesh,
blood, and bones of her body were reproductions of his flesh, blood, and bones with
the result that Eve came into the world biologically related to Adam, i.e. he was her
father and she was his first child; so any discussion of incest has to go all the way
back to the very beginning and start with the first couple instead of Cain and/or
Seth.
_
• Gen 2:21a-22a . . So the Lord God cast a deep sleep upon the man; and, while he
slept, He took one of his ribs and closed up the flesh at that spot. And the Lord God
fashioned the rib that He had taken from the man into a woman;
The Hebrew word translated "rib" is tsela' (tsay-law') and Gen 2:21-22 contains the
only two places in the entire Old Testament where it's translated with an English
word representing a skeletal bone.
In the other twenty-nine places, it's translated "side" which is really how tsela'
should be translated because according to Gen 2:23, the material taken from
Adam's body included some of his flesh; and seeing as how the life of the flesh is in
the blood (Lev 17:11) then I think it's safe to assume that the flesh that God took
from Adam's body to construct the woman contained some of his blood too so that
the flesh was living flesh instead of dead.
In other words: we can accept "rib" if we allow it a description similar to a
barbecued rib; a serving that contains not bone alone rather, bone, blood, and
meat.
The most important thing to note in Gen 2:21a-22a is that Eve wasn't created
directly from the soil as Adam was, viz: Eve wasn't a discreet creation, i.e. her
gender isn't a unique specie.
Being as Eve was constructed with Adam's flesh, blood, and bones, then the flesh,
blood, and bones of her body were reproductions of his flesh, blood, and bones with
the result that Eve came into the world biologically related to Adam, i.e. he was her
father and she was his first child; so any discussion of incest has to go all the way
back to the very beginning and start with the first couple instead of Cain and/or
Seth.
_