T
Tim_D
Guest
I’m afraid that the little letters of Ph.D behind a person’s name is not an infallible declaration that every word uttered from their lips should be taken as gospel. And “nihil obstat” simply means that the text does not contain anything contrary to the faith, not that it is perfectly in line with what the Church teaches.Scott Hahn is one of the most prestigious Catholic Bible scholars in North America and needless to say his books all have the nihil obstat, which at the very least demands that you don’t jettison this idea as in anyway contrary to the faith.
This might sound arrogant but I think I possess the intellectual ability to read the story of Adam and Eve and arrive at a conclusion that is based on and consistent with what the Church teaches about the subject. It is hardly Shakespearean in its complexity. According to the the text, Adam never even encounters the serpent; it was Eve alone who spoke with it. Also, when Adam was confronted with eating of the forbidden tree, his response wasn’t “I did it for fear of being killed by the serpent” (an ancient form of the “the devil made me do it”) but “the woman whom you put here with me gave it to me.” Adam’s response was the ultimate cop-out; he blamed God for his act. The saying is that “pride goes before the fall,” a particularly accurate description of Adam and Eve’s situation because their sin of disobedience was joined with the sin of pride (presumption) to be “like God who knows.” Nowhere is it said or can it be deciphered that Adam and Eve ate for fear of the serpent without reading things into the text that are not there. One could more accurately fit the role of Lilith into the creation accounts than the notion of man-killing dragon.