1. Introduction: Not the Origin of Things, but the Origin of Meaning
What if the opening chapters of Genesis were not telling us how the material world came to be, but how meaning came to be? What if "creation" referred not to atoms and planets, but to the unfolding of semiotic reality? Through the lens of systemic functional linguistics, we can read Genesis as a symbolic account of how language, meaning, and subjectivity come into being. In this reading, Elohim is not a supernatural being but a metaphor for the meaning potential of language. His creation is not of stuff, but of meaning instances that actualise that potential. And the formation of man and woman marks the emergence of differentiated semiotic agency: the rise of the meaner.
2. Elohim as Meaning Potential
Genesis begins: "In the beginning, Elohim created the heavens and the earth." But how? Through speech. "And Elohim said, 'Let there be light,' and there was light." Each act of creation is a speech act. Elohim does not manipulate matter but speaks meaning into being. This is not magic, but metaphor: Elohim stands for the semiotic system of language, whose potential unfolds through actualisation.
Meaning potential is structured, not chaotic. It is ordered through systems of choice, just as language offers paradigmatic options. The refrain "And Elohim saw that it was good" signifies that each instantiation coheres with the system: the actualised meanings are well-formed.
3. Creation as Instantiation
The six days of creation symbolise a structured unfolding of meaning: distinctions are drawn (light/dark, water/sky, land/sea), functions are allocated (sun to govern day, moon to govern night), and living beings are brought forth in relation to their environments. These are not biological taxa but semiotic categories. The cosmos is being construed as a system of meaning, not as a collection of things.
Each "day" represents a phase in the instantiation of meaning from potential. Time itself is symbolic: not chronological sequence but logical progression in the unfolding of a semantic system.
4. Creation of Man: The Meaner Emerges
"Let us make man in our image, after our likeness." With this, the symbolic register shifts. Elohim does not create man by speaking him into being but deliberates on creating a being who can mean. Man is not simply another instance; he is the instantiator. He is not only in the image of Elohim as creator, but as semiotic agent.
In SFL terms, this is the moment where meaning potential becomes reflexive. The meaner is a being who can construe experience as meaning, who can instantiate reality through symbolic action. Man is not merely created; he is created to create meaning.
5. The Breath of Life: Yahweh Elohim and the Instantiation of Consciousness
Genesis 2 retells the story from a different angle. Here, the figure is no longer Elohim, but Yahweh Elohim—a name that marks a shift from the collective potential of language to a more individuated, interpersonal construal of it. Yahweh Elohim forms man from dust and breathes into him the breath of life. This "breath" is not about biology, but about semiotic activation. The dust is potential; the breath is instantiation.
With the breath, the man becomes a "living being" — a semiotic subject who construes reality, not merely reacts to it. This is the material grounding of meaning potential becoming active. It is the emergence of consciousness as meaning.
6. The Creation of Woman: Individuation of Meaning Potential
Yet the man alone is not enough. "It is not good for the man to be alone." Here, the narrative signals a further movement: from instantiation to individuation. The man symbolises collective meaning potential: undifferentiated semiotic agency. The woman symbolises the individuated meaner.
She is made not from dust, but from the man's rib — a symbol of shared semiotic substance. The rib is not a physical fragment but a sign of systemic differentiation. She is not a copy, nor a derivative, but a unique locus of meaning potential formed within the same system.
This man–rib–woman relation symbolises the shift from the collective to the individual: the individuation of the semiotic system into dialogic consciousness. Meaning is no longer construed alone but in relation to another. Language is not monologue, but interpersonal semiosis.
7. Conclusion: Meaning as the Ground of Reality
In this reading, Genesis 1–2 is not a cosmology but a semiogenesis. Elohim is the symbolic figure of language as a system of meaning potential. His speech acts instantiate reality. Yahweh Elohim represents that same potential in its interpersonal realisation. Man and woman are not simply biological beginnings but the emergence of meaners: semiotic agents capable of construing experience.
Woman's creation from man is not a tale of derivation but of individuation. It encodes the systemic logic of meaning potential differentiating into individual meaning-makers.
Read this way, Genesis affirms Halliday's radical claim: reality is meaning. And the story of its creation is the story of language — systemic, symbolic, and shared.