How could Adam and Eve be punished for doing wrong when they didn’t know right from wrong before they did it?
This implies that the concept of original sin is based on a logical absurdity.
I didn’t read through all posts to see if someone else pointed to a view similar to this or not, so if someone has, then forgive me. But I’ve also heard some interpreting the Tree of Knowledge of Good and Evil like this:
Adam and Eve had perfect ‘knowledge’ of good (in the sense of living in and experiencing it), as they were created to be “good.” However, only when they reached out and took from the Tree did they have the “knowledge of good
and evil,” because whereas before they’d known only good–now they knew evil, as well.
My guess is the Hebrew word used to denote “knowledge” is the same, or similar to, the word in Hebrew used to denote sexual intercourse (“he knew his wife,” etc.), and if this is the case, then “knowing” evil to our First Parents was a matter of personally experiencing it. Being created as “good,” they therefore knew what was contrary to goodness, as well. (In other words, having known goodness, they knew that there was *none *in disobedience, even if “no-good” is not as substantial a realization as “the action is evil.”) Satan’s lie was that he would give them “knowledge” of good and evil–a “knowledge” God was depriving them of. Well, he was right in one sense: They did obtain a knowledge of good AND evil (the latter of which they had not formerly known), but by selling guilt and depravity and fall as “knowledge” which they didn’t already have, Satan distorted the truth of the matter (as much a lie as there ever was).
God’s culpability in the ordeal really can’t legitimately be called into question, though it’s a common thing to do. Say God is a gentleman asking a girl out to the prom, he gives her the option of letting him take her or declining. So it is with humanity–and so it was from the beginning. He is inviting us into his embrace, into the Paradise that is him. That is Eden. That is the pure Goodness that our Forbears rejected. God is always a gentleman. He will always give us a choice: to draw near or to run from him, and end up cowering in the bushes like Adam and Eve did–afraid and naked and helpless, vulnerable to their own schemes.
I hope this helps.
Peace.