> the man is made from the dust.
The text (Gn. 2.7) is talking about all humanity (ha adam), not an individual. It is a category, not a personal name. "Formed from the dust of the ground" means that humans are mortal (Gn. 3.19; Ps. 103.14; 1 Cor. 15.47-48), born by natural processes, and we will die by natural processes.
> time and events transpire with no woman, only God and a man
When the text says "adam," it is talking about an individual. When it says "the adam" (
ha adam), it is talking about all humanity.
- Gn. 1.27: Humankind; all humanity. Verses 28-30 refer and apply to all humans.
- Gn. 2.5: Not a single individual human. Gn. 1 is about God bringing order and functionality to what was disordered and nonfunctional—not about material manufacture. Gn. 2.5 is about how one might achieve order—the value they seek to achieve. Order is not automatic; the default situation is non-order. Order has to be gained. The text is addressing the different aspects of order. It does it by starting with a deficiency, which is non-order (Gn. 2.5-6).
- Gn. 2.7: Humankind; all humanity. Humankind was created with mortal bodies. Dust is equated with mortality in the text (Gn. 3.19), in the canon (Ps. 103.14), and by logic (a tree of life would otherwise be unnecessary). In Adam we are all created mortal.
> God notes "it is not good for man to be alone"
Note the definite article in 2.15. This is Adam, the archetypal human (an individual representing all humankind). It is showing us that humans have responsibility to "fill the earth and subdue it"; to "rule over it." We (all) are like priests, caring for sacred space, fulfilling our function, and given a place to be in relationship with God and for Him to reveal Himself to us.
2.18: Again it is
ha adam, with the definite article. It is a category, not a name. Here, again, the term is used of the individual human serving as a human representative. It is about order, and how one might achieve or envision order. "It is not good for man to be alone" is order terminology. It's neither talking about an individual male, nor is it talking about all the males of the species. It’s talking about humanity. Humans need community, which is a function of order.
Why does the text split up male and female if we’re talking about humanity? Because humanity experiences community at the male/female level. It leads to family, which is the other issue in community. It's not speaking in metaphors—it's a reality of how community order is founded in male and female.
> God causes man to sleep
2.21: The word is
ha adam: All humanity. Again the individual represents all; it's an archetype.
The term for "deep sleep" (
tardema) is often used with the implication of a supernaturally-imposed trance (Job 33.15; Isa. 29.10). The Human is not sedated for surgery (the ancients would have no understanding of such a thing); he is given a vision of something going on in the spiritual realm (Gn. 15:12; Job 4:13; Dan. 8:18; 10:9).
God gives the archetypal man a vision of something important about the nature and identity of the woman to whom He is about to introduce him. When the vision stops, Adam declares she is "bone of my bone and flesh of my flesh," indicating that the text is not referring simply to a rib. John Walton writes: The vision has shown the archetypal man that woman is essentially related to him. She is "of the same stuff" as he is. These verses need not be understood as recounting the material origins of the first woman. Communication through a vision underlines this, and the idea that up to half of Adam is involved fairly requires it. God is showing the man how he should think about the helper that He is about to provide and then brings this woman to him (just as the man had been taken and brought to the garden).
When Adam sees the woman, his first outburst shows that he sees her as his equal, that he is in kinship relationship to her, and that they each, as well as the two together, share the image of God. It's about order, not manufacture.
> closed up the place with flesh
This is not talking about material manufacture or surgery, but about order. There is order in relationship, in family, and in community. Their bond with each other is more than physical. She is a help-meet—a counter-partner—his equal, his kinship, his community. They were equal in being and worth.