01.  Ādam, آدَمُ  R+N+M* (= Heb. אָדָם  `ādām = "humankind’). 

Adam was the first man in biblical and Islamic tradition who was believed to have lived and flourished soon after the creation  (Q x 25 in 9 suras). Several of the genesis motifs and narratives about Adam / the first couple have qur’ānic parallels (Q. 7:20; 20:120ff, etc).1 Created from clay he was fit to be the  primoridial  father of humanity, a خَلِيفَةً khalīfa (`viceregent’, `substitute’) and a prophet‑Messenger  on earth who was taught the names of all things (Q. 2:28f ). As in Genesis Adam married Ḥawā (Eve) who was created from one of his ribs (Q. 4:1b cf. Gen. 2:22), the first couple being caused to slip by Satan. They were ultimately expelled from paradise (Q. 2:36).  On earth God forgave Adam guided him and made a covenant with him (Q. 2:36f; 20:115..etc). Influenced by Jewish, Gnostic, Christian and other traditions, post‑qur’anic Islam greatly elevated the first man. While his pre‑existence is implied in early Sunnī ḥadīth numerous Shī`ī sources additionally reckon Adam a major manifestation of the Logos‑like nūr al‑Muhammadīya  ("Muhammadan Light"). It was preeminently through his "loins" that this pre‑existent "Light" which is the essence of the Prophet and the Imāms  was transmitted  (Biḥār2, 15:1ff; Rubin, 1975). 

            For the Bāb Adam appeared 12,210 years before 1260 AH/1844 CE., an essentially composite (millennial + centennial + decadal) symbolic  dating (11x1,000 + 12 X 100+ 10 [adjustment] = 12, 210) which cannot be fully unravelled here (Lambden, 1985). Though there were `awālim qabl‑ i ādam  ("worlds prior to Adam") (Per-Bayan IV:14; BA* L. Qabl‑ i  ādam) he was the first maẓhar‑i ilāhī   (divine Manifestation), emanated from the mashiyyat  (Divine Will),  the Dhikr‑i awwal [azal]   ("Primal Remembrance") in a "prophetic  cycle" which to some degree terminated with the advent of the prophet Muhammad (P.Dal., 2‑3). Adam brought a "book" and founded an "embryonic religion" such that all subsequent maẓhar‑i ilāhī (divine theophanies) stood in need of him and were his "spiritual" return (P.Bay. III:13, VI:11, P.Dal. 3).

            As a  primordial Bābī‑ Bahā’ī messenger many narratives and details respecting Adam in Abrahamic and Islamic scriptural sources are given symbolic interpretations in the writings of the Bāb and BA*. The details of Gen.1ff are non‑literally interpreted, including the creation in six days and the biblical‑qur’ānic story of the fall of the first couple from an Edenic paradise (Gen. 3ff + qur’ānic parallels). Under gnostic and esoteric (`irfānī) Islamic and Shaykhī influences a multiplicity of exalted Adams are mentioned in Bābī‑ Bahā’ī scripture (T. Kawthar, 15b, 21b T. Qadr., 69:19; cf. K.Panj.S 100).


 

            1 Ḥawwā (Heb. חַוָּה, Havvah = Eve the wife of Adam) is not named in the Q. but is twice referred to as his "spouse" (7:18f; 20:120f). Also unnamed are their sons Cain (Qābīl), Abel (Hābīl) and Seth (Shīth, see 02). The sroty of the first couple is related in the probably late Medinan fifth Sūra (al‑Mā’idah, Q. 5:27[30]f).