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THE IDEAL MAN
Like all creatures formed on the six days of creation, Adam came
from the hands of the Creator fully and completely developed. He
was not like a child, but like a man of twenty years of age.[21]
The dimensions of his body were gigantic, reaching from heaven to
earth, or, what amounts to the same, from east to west.[22] Among
later generations of men, there were but few who in a measure
resembled Adam in his extraordinary size and physical
perfections. Samson possessed his strength, Saul his neck,
Absalom his hair, Asahel his fleetness of foot, Uzziah his
forehead, Josiah his nostrils, Zedekiah his eyes, and Zerubbabel
his voice. History shows that these physical excellencies were no
blessings to many of their possessors; they invited the ruin of
almost all. Samson's extraordinary strength caused his death;
Saul killed himself by cutting his neck with his own sword; while
speeding swiftly, Asahel was pierced by Abner's spear; Absalom
was caught up by his hair in an oak, and thus suspended met his
death; Uzziah was smitten with leprosy upon his forehead; the
darts that killed Josiah entered through his nostrils, and
Zedekiah's eyes were blinded.[23]
The generality of men inherited as little of the beauty as of the
portentous size of their first father. The fairest women compared
with Sarah are as apes compared with a human being. Sarah's
relation to Eve is the same, and, again, Eve was but as an ape
compared with Adam. His person was so handsome that the very sole
of his foot obscured the splendor of the sun.[24]
His spiritual qualities kept pace with his personal charm, for
God had fashioned his soul with particular care. She is the image
of God, and as God fills the world, so the soul fills the human
body; as God sees all things, and is seen by none, so the soul
sees, but cannot be seen; as God guides the world, so the soul
guides the body; as God in His holiness is pure, so is the soul;
and as God dwells in secret, so doth the soul.[25]
When God was about to put a soul into Adam's clod-like body, He
said: "At which point shall I breathe the soul into him? Into the
mouth? Nay, for he will use it to speak ill of his fellow-man.
Into the eyes? With them he will wink lustfully. Into the ears?
They will hearken to slander and blasphemy. I will breathe her
into his nostrils; as they discern the unclean and reject it, and
take in the fragrant, so the pious will shun sin, and will cleave
to the words of the Torah"[26]
The perfections of Adam's soul showed themselves as soon as he
received her, indeed, while he was still without life. In the
hour that intervened between breathing a soul into the first man
and his becoming alive, God revealed the whole history of mankind
to him. He showed him each generation and its leaders; each
generation and its prophets; each generation and its teachers;
each generation and its scholars; each generation and its
statesmen; each generation and its judges; each generation and
its pious members; each generation and its average, commonplace
members; and each generation and its impious members. The tale of
their years, the number of their days, the reckoning of their
hours, and the measure of their steps, all were made known unto
him.[27]
Of his own free will Adam relinquished seventy of his allotted
years. His appointed span was to be a thousand years, one of the
Lord's days. But he saw that only a single minute of life was
apportioned to the great soul of David, and he made a gift of
seventy years to her, reducing his own years to nine hundred and
thirty.'
The wisdom of Adam displayed itself to greatest advantage when he
gave names to the animals. Then it appeared that God, in
combating the arguments of the angels that opposed the creation
of man, had spoken well, when He insisted that man would possess
more wisdom than they themselves. When Adam was barely an hour
old, God assembled the whole world of animals before him and the
angels. The latter were called upon to name the different kinds,
but they were not equal to the task. Adam, however, spoke without
hesitation: "O Lord of the world! The proper name for this animal
is ox, for this one horse, for this one lion, for this one
camel." And so he called all in turn by name, suiting the name to
the peculiarity of the animal. Then God asked him what his name
was to be, and he said Adam, because he had been created out of
Adamah, dust of the earth. Again, God asked him His own name, and
he said: "Adonai, Lord, because Thou art Lord over all
creatures"--the very name God had given unto Himself, the name by
which the angels call Him, the name that will remain immutable
evermore.[29] But without the gift of the holy spirit, Adam could
not have found names for all; he was in very truth a prophet, and
his wisdom a prophetic quality.[30]
The names of the animals were not the only inheritance handed
down by Adam to the generations after him, for mankind owes all
crafts to him, especially the art of writing, and he was the
inventor of all the seventy languages.[31] And still another task
he accomplished for his descendants. God showed Adam the whole
earth, and Adam designated what places were to be settled later
by men, and what places were to remain waste.[32]
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