This study offers a focused exegetical re-reading of Genesis 2:21–22 that situates the creation of the woman within the literary, lexical, and theological framework of ancient Near Eastern temple anthropology. Rather than approaching the passage as a biological or purely etiological account, the article examines how the narrative employs tardēmâ (deep sleep), ṣēlāʿ (side), and the verb bnh (to build) to construct a theological vision of human identity shaped by divine initiative and sacred space. A canonical analysis of tardēmâ demonstrates its consistent association with moments of decisive divine action in which normal human agency is suspended, thereby framing the creation of the woman as an act belonging exclusively to God’s sovereign prerogative. The study further argues that the overwhelmingly architectural and cultic usage of ṣēlāʿ throughout the Hebrew Bible resists reduction to anatomical imagery and instead aligns Genesis 2 with temple-building motifs. When read within the Edenic narrative—already structured as sacred space—the formation of the woman emerges as an act of divine construction that completes the human vocation within the garden-temple. The man’s poetic response in Genesis 2:23 is examined as a climactic moment of recognition rather than classification, marking the emergence of relational ontology and shared human identity through elevated poetic speech. Taken together, these observations suggest that Genesis 2:21–22 presents humanity as intentionally constructed for communion, shared vocation, and the stewardship of sacred space. By foregrounding narrative coherence, lexical distribution, and grammatical nuance, this article contributes to ongoing discussions in biblical theology, theological anthropology, and ecclesiology, inviting renewed attention to how the Genesis creation account frames human community, identity, and purpose within the presence and design of God.
Gage Curtis (Sun,) studied this question.