Genesis Chapter 2 verse 18 Holy Bible

ASV Genesis 2:18

And Jehovah God said, It is not good that the man should be alone; I will make him a help meet for him.
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BBE Genesis 2:18

And the Lord God said, It is not good for the man to be by himself: I will make one like himself as a help to him
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DARBY Genesis 2:18

And Jehovah Elohim said, It is not good that Man should be alone; I will make him a helpmate, his like.
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KJV Genesis 2:18

And the LORD God said, It is not good that the man should be alone; I will make him an help meet for him.
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WBT Genesis 2:18

And the LORD God said, It is not good that the man should be alone: I will make him a help meet for him.
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WEB Genesis 2:18

Yahweh God said, "It is not good that the man should be alone; I will make him a helper suitable for him."
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YLT Genesis 2:18

And Jehovah God saith, `Not good for the man to be alone, I do make to him an helper -- as his counterpart.'
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Pulpit Commentary

Pulpit CommentaryVerse 18. - In anticipation of the ensuing narrative of the temptation and the fall, the historian, having depicted man's settlement in Eden, advances to complete his dramatis personae by the introduction upon the scene of the animals and woman. In the preliminary creation record (7-27) it is simply stated that God created man, male and female; there is a complete absence of details as to the Divine modus operandi in the execution of these, his last and greatest works. It is one object, among others, of the second portion of the history to supply those details. With regard to man (Adam), an account of his formation, at once minute and exhaustive, has been given in the preceding verses (7-17); now, with like attention to antecedent and concomitant circumstances and events, the sacred penman adds a description of the time, reason, manner, and result of the formation of woman. And the Lord God said, It is not good for man to be alone. While the animals were produced either in swarms (as the fishes) or in pairs (as the birds and beasts), man was created as an individual; his partner, by a subsequent operation of creative power, being produced from himself. With the wild phantasies and gross speculations of some theosophists, as to whether, prior to the creation of Eve, Adam was androgynic (Bohme), or simply vir in potentia, out of which state he passed the moment the woman stood by his side (Ziegler), a devout exegesis is not required to intermeddle. Neither is it needful to wonder how God should pronounce that to be not good which he had previously (Genesis 1:31) affirmed was good. The Divine judgment of which the preceding chapter speaks was expressed at the completion of man's creation; this, while that creation was in progress. For the new-made man to have been left without a partner would, in the estimation of Jehovah Elohim, have been for him a condition of being which, if not necessarily bad in itself, yet, considering his intellectual and social nature, "would eventually have passed over from the negative not good, or a manifest want, into the positive not good, or a hurtful impropriety"' (Lange). "It was not good for man to be alone; not, as certain foolish Rabbis conceited, lest he should imagine himself to be the lord of the world, or as though no man could live without a woman, which is contrary to Scripture; but in respect of (1) mutual society and comfort, (2) the propagation of the race, (3) the increase and generation of the Church of God, and . . .

Ellicott's Commentary

Ellicott's Commentary for English Readers(18) It is not good . . . --In these words we have the Divine appointment of marriage, and also the declaration that the female is subsequent in order of production to the male, and formed from him. In Genesis 1:27; Genesis 5:2, the creation of male and female is represented as having been simultaneous. She is described as "a help meet for him:" Heb., a help as his front, his reflected image, or, as the Syriac translates it, a helper similar to him. The happiness of marriage is based, not upon the woman being just the same thing as the man, but upon her being one in whom he sees his image and counterpart.