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GENERAL AUDIENCE
Wednesday 10
October
1979
The Meaning of Man's Original Solitude
In the last reflection of the present cycle we reached an
introductory conclusion, taken from the words of Genesis on the creation of
man as male and female. We reached these words, that is, the
"beginning," to which the Lord Jesus referred in his talk on the
indissolubility of marriage (cf. Mt 19:3-9; Mk 10:1-12). But the
conclusion at which we arrived does not yet end the series of our analyses. We
must reread the narrations of the first and second chapters of Genesis in a
wider context, which will allow us to establish a series of meanings of the
ancient text to which Christ referred. Therefore, today we will reflect on the
meaning of man's original solitude.
The starting point of this reflection is provided for us
directly by the following words of Genesis: "It is not good that man
[male] should be alone; I will make him a helper fit for him" (Gn
2:18). God-Yahweh speaks these words. They belong to the second account of the
creation of man, and so they come from the Yahwist tradition. As we have
already recalled, it is significant that, as regards the Yahwist text, the
account of the creation of the man is a separate passage (Gn 2:7). It
precedes the account of the creation of the first woman (Gn 2:21-22).
It is also significant that the first man ('adam), created from
"dust from the ground," is defined as a "male" ('is)
only after the creation of the first woman. So when GodYahweh speaks the words
about solitude, it is in reference to the solitude of "man" as such,
and not just to that of the male.
However, it is difficult to go very far in drawing
conclusions merely on the basis of this fact. Nevertheless, the complete
context of that solitude of which Genesis 2:18 speaks can convince us that it
is a question here of the solitude of "man" (male and female) and
not just of the solitude of man the male, caused by the lack of woman.
Therefore, on the basis of the whole context, it seems that this solitude has
two meanings: one derived from man's very nature, that is, from his humanity,
and the other derived from the male-female relationship. The first meaning is
evident in the account of Genesis 2, and the second is evident, in a certain
way, on the basis of the first meaning. A detailed analysis of the description
seems to confirm this.
The problem of solitude is manifested only in the context
of the second account of the creation of man. The first account ignores this
problem. There man is created in one act as male and female. "God created
man in his own image...male and female he created them" (Gn 1:27).
As we have already mentioned, the second account speaks first of the creation
of the man and only afterward of the creation of the woman from the
"rib" of the male. This account concentrates our attention on the fact
that "man is alone." This appears as a fundamental anthropological
problem, prior, in a certain sense, to the one raised by the fact that this
man is male and female. This problem is prior not so much in the chronological
sense, as in the existential sense. It is prior "by its very
nature." The problem of man's solitude from the point of view of the
theology of the body will also be revealed as such, if we succeed in making a
thorough analysis of the second account of creation in Genesis 2.
The affirmadon of God-Yahweh, "It is not good that man
should be alone," appears not only in the immediate context of the
decision to create woman, "I will make him a helper fit for him,"
but also in the wider context of reasons and circumstances. These explain more
deeply the meaning of man's original solitude. The Yahwist text connects the
creation of man first and foremost with the need to "till the
ground" (Gn 2:5). That would correspond, in the first account,
with the vocation to subdue and have dominion over the earth (cf. Gn
1:28). Then, the second account of creation speaks of man being put in the
"garden in Eden," and in this way introduces us to the state of his
original happiness. Up to this moment man is the object of the creative action
of God-Yahweh, who at the same time, as legislator, establishes the conditions
of the first covenant with man.
Man's subjectivity is already emphasized through this. It
finds a further expression when the Lord God "formed out of the ground
every beast of the field and every bird of the air, and brought them to man to
see what he would call them" (Gn 2:19). In this way, therefore,
the first meaning of man's original solitude is defined on the basis of a
specific test or examination which man undergoes before God (and in a certain
way also before himself). By means of this test, man becomes aware of his own
superiority, that is, that he cannot be considered on the same foodng as any
other species of living beings on the earth.
As the text says, "Whatever the man called every
living creature, that was its name" (Gn 2:19). "The man gave
names to all cattle, and to the birds of the air, and to every beast of the
field; but for the man [male] there was not found a helper fit for him" (Gn
2:20).
All this part of the text is unquestionably a preparation
for the account of the creation of woman. However, it possesses a deep meaning
even apart from this creation. Right from the first moment of his existence,
created man finds himself before God as if in search of his own entity. It
could be said he is in search of the definition of himself. A contemporary
person would say he is in search of his own "identity." The fact
that man "is alone" in the midst of the visible world and, in
particular, among living beings, has a negative significance in this search,
since it expresses what he "is not."
Nevertheless, the fact of not
being able to identify himself essentially with the visible world of other
living beings (animalia) has, at the same time, a positive aspect for
this primary search. Even if this fact is not yet a complete definition, it
constitutes one of its elements. If we accept the Aristotelian tradition in
logic and in anthropology, it would be necessary to define this element as the
"proximate genus" (genus proximum).
However, the Yahwist text enables us to discover also
further elements in that admirable passage. Man finds himself alone before God
mainly to express, through a first self-definition, his own self-knowledge, as
the original and fundamental manifestation of mankind. Self-knowledge develops
at the same rate as knowledge of the world, of all the visible creatures, of
all the living beings to which man has given a name to affirm his own
dissimilarity with regard to them. In this way, consciousness reveals man as
the one who possesses a cognitive faculty as regards the visible world. With
this knowledge which, in a certain way, brings him out of his own being, man
at the same time reveals himself to himself in all the peculiarity of his
being. He is not only essentially and subjectively alone. Solitude also
signifies man's subjectivity, which is constituted through selfknowledge. Man
is alone because he is "different" from the visible world, from the
world of living beings. Analyzing the text of Genesis we are, in a way,
witnesses of how man "distinguishes himself " before God-Yahweh from
the whole world of living beings (animalia) with his first act of self-consciousness, and of how he reveals himself to himself. At the same time
he asserts himself as a "person" in the visible world. Sketched so
incisively in Genesis 2:19-20, that process is a search for a definition of
himself. Linking up with the Aristotelian tradition, it leads to indicating
the proximate genus. Chapter 2 of Genesis expresses this with the
words: "The man gave names...." There corresponds to this the
specific differentia which is, according to Aristotle's definition, nôus,
zoón noetikón. This process also leads to the first delineation of the
human being as a human person with the specific subjectivity that
characterizes him.
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