Some traditions suggest that Adam, the first human, wasn't just made on Earth, but actually brought something vital to Earth – fire and light themselves!
Imagine this: Before Adam existed as a mortal being, some say he lived in heaven. And according to Orhot Hayim, he brought not only fire but also light down with him. When he descended, the whole sky blazed, like the world was about to be consumed! In that moment, God, it is said, relinquished some control of fire, sealing it with a decree. As Jeremiah 23:29 tells us, "My word is like fire."
So, it's like God shared a part of Himself, His very word, through Adam.
But what about the light? How did Adam bring that down? The Se'udat Gan Eden in Beit ha-Midrash offers a few possibilities. Some say the light radiated from Adam's fingernails, shining brighter than the sun! Can you picture that? Fingernails reflecting enough light to illuminate the world... it's a powerful image. It almost feels like a reference to the Havdalah ceremony, when we look at our fingernails in the candlelight as we transition from Shabbat to the rest of the week.
Others suggest Adam used the four winds to carry the light. Still others say he used enchanted stones. And here's where it gets really interesting. These weren't just any stones. According to Midrash Konen in Beit ha-Midrash, one was the stone of darkness, and the other, the stone of dimness, as it is said in Job 28:3, "The stones of thick darkness and the shadow of death."
Think about that for a moment. Adam brought light into the world using darkness and death. It's a mystery, how exactly, but it speaks to the idea that creation often comes from chaos, from the void.
Now, this story has some parallels to the Greek myth of Prometheus, who stole fire from the gods and gave it to humanity. As Robert Graves explains in The Greek Myths, Prometheus lit a torch at the sun and gave mankind a glowing coal. Similarly, this version of Adam's story, as Rabbi Schwartz points out in Tree of Souls, positions him almost as a divine figure, a bringer of essential elements to the world. Bringing light is certainly a God-like act, echoing the very first words of Creation: "Let there be light!" (Genesis 1:3).
Was Adam's act of bringing fire and light an act of rebellion, like Prometheus's? Perhaps. Some interpret it as another version of the Fall. Instead of eating the forbidden fruit, the cosmic Adam took fire and light from heaven. This interpretation is supported by Genesis 3:22: "Behold, the man has become like one of us, knowing good and bad." In this context, Adam's sin and the forces that it released into the world are parallel to stealing the fire and light of heaven.
There's even another, lesser-known Jewish myth that echoes this theme, found in interpretations of Genesis 6, concerning the "sons of God" and the "daughters of men." This story is read as an account of angels who descended to earth, promising God to be righteous, but instead, they were seduced by the beauty of human women. They, too, were attempting to bring something down from the heavens, but with far different results.
So, what does it all mean? Perhaps this story of Adam isn't just about the literal origins of fire and light. Maybe it's about the human potential to bring divine qualities into the world, even if it comes with a cost. It reminds us that even in darkness, there's the possibility of light, and that creation and innovation can sometimes stem from unexpected, even seemingly negative, sources.