Adam & Logic, Genesis 1, 2, 3, CCC teachings

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Eve is a human creature.

Adam and Eve were constituted in an original “State of Holiness and Justice.” This grace of Original Holiness was “to share in … divine life.” Genesis 1: 27; CCC 375. In other words, both Adam and Eve were established in a friendship relationship with their Creator. As human creatures, both could live in God’s friendship (sharing in God’s divine life) only in free submission (obedience to God). Genesis 2: 15-17; CCC 396 & CCC 1730.

By yielding to the tempter, both Adam and Eve committed a serious personal mortal sin. Adam’s personal sin is also known as the Original Sin because he is the original human. As the original human, the whole human race is in Adam “as one body of one man.” CCC 404. Because of this “unity of the human race” all human nature would have received Original Holiness and Justice. CCC 404. Unfortunately, Adam abused his freedom and disobeyed God’s command. Genesis chapter 3; CCC 397-399.
Clarification.
The CCC paragraph references are sources for general, not necessarily complete, information. I use quotation marks when I actually quote something from a paragraph.

I am not sure about translations of Vatican II documents. However, I have The Companion to the Catechism of the Catholic Church – A Compendium of Texts Referred to in the Catechism of the Catholic Church. In general, this book provides the context for a CCC footnote.

In post 214, I tried to anticipate diverse explanations for parts of the first three chapters of Genesis. In other words, in my humble opinion, post 214 contains the Catholic teachings for many of the points in post 215. I did not repeat earlier comments that Genesis 2: 15-17 refers to God’s serious command and the result of disobedience.
 
I am not sure about translations of Vatican II documents. However, I have The Companion to the Catechism of the Catholic Church – A Compendium of Texts Referred to in the Catechism of the Catholic Church. In general, this book provides the context for a CCC footnote.
If you read the compendium, it still proves the same basic point as the English translation on the Vatican website; even the compendium does not come right out and say they had divine life; but merely says “… raise up men to share in divine life.” Man’s purpose, destiny, or ultimate goal was to share in divine life, but there is nothing even in the compendium which explicitly says they already had it and that divine life is not a planned future “destiny”.

This is such an important point for distinguishing between whether Adam and Eve were granted supernatural graces, vs. preternatural, vs. only natural; that I am quite surprised that I can find no clarification for it in the CCC. It’s as if they don’t want us to know…

The CCC 374 does say that the original state would be: “surpassed only by the glory of the new creation in Christ.” by which, I again infer, that the graces given to us through Jesus differ in some fundamental way from those given to Adam and the first Woman.
CCC 54, again says “he invited them to intimate communion” but does not say they actually achieved that communion. Ugh! Any number of erroneous opinions could be formed as to the relative nature of the graces which Adam and Eve had, vs. us now.
Tentatively, I want to say they had supernatural graces, but I can’t prove it from the CCC. And yet, I have to hold – as a matter of teaching – that whatever graces Jesus brings must supersede and surpass those of our first parents.

The vagueness of the teaching we have in the CCC is very confusing and frustrating to me.
In post 214, I tried to anticipate diverse explanations for parts of the first three chapters of Genesis. In other words, in my humble opinion, post 214 contains the Catholic teachings for many of the points in post 215. I did not repeat earlier comments that Genesis 2: 15-17 refers to God’s serious command and the result of disobedience.
Sigh.
You appear not to understand the reason for my question, or the point I’ve been repeatedly making:

Genesis 2:15-17 was given to Adam, alone, not to the woman, and not to Eve; That law was explicitly given by the Lord God to Adam. Does this make sense?

eg: Eve quite clearly did not directly receive that law you mention as stated in Genesis 2:15-17 for she was 1) created later 2) quotes it differently and 3) does not attribute it to the Lord God, but merely to a being who is in the place of God. 4) The CCC does not explicitly say that Eve received the law from the Lord God, himself; but only vaguely indicates she got it somehow “with” (through?) Adam.

So, much of what you are putting in post 214 – is speculation.

We don’t have definitive church teaching on these subtle points, and logic is insufficient to determine the answers from the CCC’s text because of ambiguities in how the CCC’s written as well.

God can communicate with man – but does always do it directly, or sometimes though angels?

Please note: Many places in scripture where “God” is written – other scriptures will show us that an angel was acting as an intermediary and spoke in the person of God.
For example, the burning bush is really an angel acting the part of God.

Exodus 3:2 & 4
2 And here the LORD revealed himself through a flame that rose up from the midst of a bush. 3. … said Moses I must go up and see more of it, a bush that does not waste by burning. 4. But now when he saw him coming up to look closer, God called to him from the midst of the bush, Moses Moses."
So, The Lord God [YHWH] saw Moses – but the Lord God is not said to explicitly speak, himself, from the bush; rather merely God speaks. In Hebrew, the second word is “Elohym” So; In this case, we know that an angel (messenger) was the one who made the vocal sounds on behalf of the eternal God. Eg: God’s words were spoken by an angel.

How can I show this more certainly? The distinction is reasonably regular. Whenever “Elohym” (plural gods) is said and not “YHWH” or “YHWH Elohym” (eg: Lord God) the lack of the word Lord, means we don’t know for certain that God himself is speaking, but may be using an angel to carry his words, much like a telephone.

St. Luke and St. Paul regularly interpret old testament scripture that way, and understood angels to be involved more often than not:

Acts 7:30-35 (Ronald Knox Catholic Bible)
Forty years later a vision came to him in the wilderness of mount Sinai; a bush had caught fire; and an angel was standing among the flames. Moses saw it, and was astonished at the sight.
The author of Hebrews also tells us that angels were the mediators who spoke to Man and gave them the law thorough-out the old testament (which includes Genesis by the way 😉 )

Hebrews 2:2-3 (Ronald knox translation).
The old law, which had only angels for its spokesmen, was none the less valid; every transgression of it, every refusal to listen to it, incurred just retribution. and what excuse shall we have, if we pay no heed to such a message of salvation as has been given to us? One which was delivered in the first instance by the Lord [eg: Jesus] himself, and has been guaranteed to us by those who heard it from his own lips?"
So, again, I’m trying to point out – angels can very much be understood to have affected the message that the woman received. We are only told the “LORD” gave the law to the man; but all bets are off with the woman who was deceived.

If you still don’t understand the point I’m trying to make, we probably should just let it go.
Perhaps it’s too subtle.

Blessings to you.
Your brother in Christ, Jesus; Andrew.
 
The vagueness of the teaching we have in the CCC is very confusing and frustrating to me.
I totally understand. Shall we start with basic Catholic terminology?

The CCC Glossary, page 898, definition for Sanctifying Grace is
SANCTIFYING GRACE: The grace which heals our human nature wounded by sin by giving us a share in the divine life of the Trinity. It is a habitual, supernatural gift which continues the work of sanctifying us—of making us “perfect,” holy, and Christlike (1999).

This is the definition of Soul, Glossary, page 900
SOUL: The spiritual principle of human beings. The soul is the subject of human consciousness and freedom; soul and body together form one unique human nature. Each human soul is individual and immortal, immediately created by God. The soul does not die with the body, from which it is separated by death, and with which it will be reunited in the final resurrection (363, 366; cf. 1703).

In addition, I hope you will re-read CCC 355- 357 as one unit, non-stop if that is possible. Take the paragraphs as they are. Do pay attention to the information in small print. It is probably best that you read CCC 20-21 first.

I remember you from a long ago thread which, in part, addressed evolution. You taught me some basic genetic biological principles. I owe you. I wish it were possible to draw a “soul”, it would make understanding so much easier. Maybe it is possible to draw one’s impressions from CCC 355-357.
Sigh.
You appear not to understand the reason for my question, or the point I’ve been repeatedly making:
Actually, I do understand a number of “questions” which have been proposed.
Genesis 2:15-17 was given to Adam, alone, not to the woman, and not to Eve; That law was explicitly given by the Lord God to Adam. Does this make sense?
I do not mean to be rude. Yes, “That law was explicitly given by the Lord God to Adam.” does make sense when one omits the principles of basic human nature. Omitting basic human nature principles leaves us with a decomposing biological anatomy. That is exactly why I am asking you to read about Sanctifying Grace and Soul and then enjoy reading CCC 355-357, that is, reading these paragraphs without intellectual pressure.
So, much of what you are putting in post 214 – is speculation.
Then it is time to test it. As in science, it is important to start with a clear understanding of basic information. Therefore, I have chosen the basic information about Sanctifying Grace and Soul as a beginning test. As in science, which has the fundamental principle “Observe Without Prejudice”, perhaps we need to re-observe human nature.
If you still don’t understand the point I’m trying to make, we probably should just let it go.
Perhaps it’s too subtle.

Blessings to you.
Your brother in Christ, Jesus; Andrew.
First. My apology for not replying to most of your concerns. What I learned from science is that to understand our physical anatomy, we need to get down to the genes. The origin of HLA-DRB 1 alleles is forever implanted in my brain.

On the other hand, when it comes to understanding Adam as the original human, we need to get to the nitty-gritty of Sanctifying Grace and Soul from the Catholic position. Personally, something too subtle never stopped me when I worked as a “journalist.” Today, working part time, something too subtle is now a green light for me.

Let’s continue the discussion. 😃

Blessings,
granny

Truth is the reward for all the adventures of the journey.
 
Yes, Eve repeats the commandment, though imperfectly, but by inference from this we can see that she was under the commandment. The story is not a legal text as it is also not a scientific text. Not all facts have to be definitely stated like a court room transcript. It is just understood that as part of Adam she is under the same commandment.

My doubt of her personal sin’s mortality does not come from the gravity of the sin that she did commit, but from her understanding.
There are three conditions that make an act a mortal sin:
  1. An act of grave matter that is…
  2. Committed with full knowledge and…
  3. Deliberate consent.
My doubts come from #2 that she had full knowledge since she was deceived. Not from 1. or 3. nor her not being under the commandment.

I think it’s clear she was personally guilty to some extent because of the particular punishment (that curiously doesn’t include death or returning to dust).
Gen 3:16 - To the woman he said:
I will intensify your toil in childbearing;
in pain* you shall bring forth children.
Yet your urge shall be for your husband,
and he shall rule over you.
Another point of curiosity is that the “toil in childbearing” is considered to be past on to all women giving birth (with the possible exception of Mary). This is another reason to believe that her participation is also propagated along with contracted Original Sin. Therefore, she has at least a partial role in the whole sorted mess of OS’s creation; in a sense they team up against God.
 
The story is not a legal text as it is also not a scientific text.
The text is not a scientific text, but I will have to absolutely disagree with you about it being a legal text. The first five books of the bible, including Genesis, are called Torah in Hebrew; and that means “law”. In the Catholic Church, (and I’m going through the annulment process, so I’ve been studying this) – The precedent of Adam and Eve are the very and only reason that marriage is understood to be intended by God to be indissoluble.
Not all facts have to be definitely stated like a court room transcript. It is just understood that as part of Adam she is under the same commandment.
I’ll agree that the literary form of Genesis supposes different ways of representing facts than does a modern court room transcript. So, there is some danger in trying read 21st century legal definitions and especially assumptions into Genesis. But, by the same token – we can’t just “understand” things without having some idea of “why”.

I think facts need to be stated, logically inferred, historic examples (test cases) known, or else revealed later on in scripture or by the church, otherwise a Catholic is free to doubt (or at very least cross-examine);

I first notice scriptural evidence that Adam was to rule over Eve only after the fall has occurred. (Genesis 3:16.) But: that arrangement could be argued as something that happened because Eve proved irresponsible and deceived.

God gives them marriage with included suffering and domination as part of the penitential phase of the fall; and note: Our first parents didn’t consummate marriage except after including a “mortal” sin which attempts to pervert (pornea) marriage.

After all (logical inference), Adam and Eve were married – so why bother with fig leaves… unless something became perverted ?

Matthew 5:32, NAB. (one sentence).
But I say to you, whoever divorces his wife (unless the marriage is unlawful/perverted/pornea) causes her to commit adultery, and whoever marries a divorced woman commits adultery.(“Matthew, CHAPTER 5 | USCCB”)
To demonstrate the legal aspect of Genesis, consider this quote: Matthew 19:3
Then the pharisees came to him, and put him to the test by asking, Is it lawful
to man to unbind [divorce] his wife for all causes?
[Jesus answers] Have you never read that in the beginning [Genesis=“in the beginning”] God made them male and female … … … therefore, I say to you what God has joined let not man divide.
Jesus is actually pointing at Adam and Eve as a legal precedent for an argument with Pharisees on a legal issue.
Now consider: Adam assuredly had evidence against a perverted wife…? I mean, if he had wanted it.

Genesis 3:11-12 ; (I’m going to do a very crude translation to emphasize some aspects of the the ancient phrasing that don’t translate well into English.)
καί εἶπον αὐτός τίς ἀνα-ἀγγέλλω σύ ὅτι γυμνός εἰμί μή ἀπό ὁ ξύλον ὅς ἐντέλλομαι σύ οὗτος μόνος μή ἐσθίω ἀπό αὐτός ἐσθίω
… and [God] said to him,"Who/What carries-again-an-angel/message-to you that naked I-AM? Not from the tree, which I commanded you [eg:singular
], “this alone I-continually-do-not-eat from”, [but] him I-continually-do-eat from ?

καί εἶπον ὁ Αδαμ ὁ γυνή ὅς δίδωμι μετά ἐγώ οὗτος ἐγώ δίδωμι ἀπό ὁ ξύλον καί ἐσθίω

and saith Adam,“the wife who I-give with; this I give from the tree and I eat.”
The present tense in Greek stresses an ongoing or continuing action.

The way God phrases the question, he specifically indicates the law was given to the man as a single person [you singular]. God then brings out the idea of his message being distorted and even reversed by “someone” (besides Adam), who is acting as a perverted messenger of divine decrees.

eg: What I am noticing is that God seems to hint by using the verb based on “angel” what kind of person God is looking for; but Adam does not immediately point to the devil – rather, after saying his wife was involved, Adam immediately qualifies his statement in the first person; “the woman I give with”. eg: the woman I am united to. The English translation makes Adam’s response seem rather more severe toward her than it actually is. Adam is not passing the buck to her alone, for God already said the law applied to him as a single person…
My doubt of her personal sin’s mortality does not come from the gravity of the sin that she did commit, but from her understanding.
My doubts come from #2 that she had full knowledge since she was deceived. Not from 1. or 3. nor her not being under the commandment.
I think it’s clear she was personally guilty to some extent because of the particular punishment (that curiously doesn’t include death or returning to dust).
I see. But, I’m still not certain she was under the commandment – although, she knew Adam was, and so giving him the fruit is indeed her sin.

Food for thought:
Jesus was perfectly innocent, although he died and was punished for our sins.
Mary, too, had a sword pierce her heart.
So: I see punishment is evidence of sin, not necessarily personal guilt.
But I see: Corruption,eg: returning to dust, as evidence of unexcused personal sin – because God says “I will not allow my faithful one to see corruption.”
Another point of curiosity is that the “toil in childbearing” is considered to be past on to all women giving birth (with the possible exception of Mary). This is another reason to believe that her participation is also propagated along with contracted Original Sin. Therefore, she has at least a partial role in the whole sorted mess of OS’s creation; in a sense they team up against God.
There is a definite participation by the woman in the whole mess, yes. I have absolutely no intention of denying that! 😃
 
Sorry my last post is so difficult to read. I I ran out of time to edit it, and I see some ideas are still very incompletely expressed. 😊 There are days like this…
 
God help me, but I’m back…

If the commands of the creator are for both male and female beings, why would sole responsibility be placed upon the male being?

Genesis 1 is quoted in the OP. No confusion there that God commands both the creatures he creates.

Genesis 2 reads to me very much like a patriarchal society, which the writer I think only could write about as he lived it/in it, because then in Gen 3, the woman is the one who sins first, was deceived, misunderstood etc etc, the Man doesn’t do anything, just follows his wife and then is all goes wrong…🤷
It’s written that God even says “because you have listened to the voice of your wife”

God begins to sound very much like a human, angry that the man listened to the woman. rather than him.

I know posters are quoting evidence as it was written thousands of years ago, but we do have the new testament, the good news, where a female is asked to participate in the life of the son of God.

I don’t believe Jesus was promoting a patriarchal society, his message was about loving God, forgiveness and mercy toward one another. Much we have learnt and discovered from this view of God, and much we have to learn.
 
I agree the patriarchal model of society is not required. I do think it is included in the narrative (not a legal style) of Genesis. Mostly from a male human writer’s perspective being part of it’s making.

I also agree that the Commandment was given to Adam more directly to be administered; not that it only applied to him, but that he was to be the authority as the members of the legal system and enforcement are today.

Therefore, Eve’s first sin is also Adam’s first sin of omission in his duties to protect and serve his public of one.

God’s anger is at the depth of ruin that Adam has fallen into. Not some means to pit men against women.
 
God begins to sound very much like a human, angry that the man listened to the woman. rather than him.
But God should be opposed whenever creation listens to anything-Eve, the devil, your best friend, yourself-over Him; that’s the very cause of evil in the first place. IMO Adam’s sin was worse-he just gave in to peer pressure perhaps whereas Eve was deceived.
 
I agree the patriarchal model of society is not required. I do think it is included in the narrative (not a legal style) of Genesis. Mostly from a male human writer’s perspective being part of it’s making.

I also agree that the Commandment was given to Adam more directly to be administered; not that it only applied to him, but that he was to be the authority as the members of the legal system and enforcement are today.

Therefore, Eve’s first sin is also Adam’s first sin of omission in his duties to protect and serve his public of one.

God’s anger is at the depth of ruin that Adam has fallen into. Not some means to pit men against women.
I think the point of the first few chapters of Genesis is divine revelation and not on some concept of patriarchal society. According to the word of God, the man Adam is the first human being created by God and then God created Eve, the woman, from the side of Adam. So the man says “This one shall be called woman, for out of ‘her man’ this one has been taken.” Adam, therefore, being the first human being, is the head of the earthly human race as all people are the descendants of Adam and Eve, our first parents. Jesus is the head of redeemed humanity and the true head of all humanity as St Paul says Adam was a type of Christ. Our Blessed Lady is the new Eve and the mother of all the living, that is, those who are spiritually alive with supernatural grace. As Eve played a role in the ruin of humanity, our Blessed Mother played a singular role in cooperation with her divine Son in the restoration and redemption of humanity.
 
But God should be opposed whenever creation listens to anything-Eve, the devil, your best friend, yourself-over Him; that’s the very cause of evil in the first place. IMO Adam’s sin was worse-he just gave in to peer pressure perhaps whereas Eve was deceived.
I just don’t think saying one sin was worst than the other.

God saying “you listened to the voice of your wife” rather than saying you listened to the serpent, God here shows that Adam listened to his wife, because it isn’t written that he heard or spoke to the serpent. God doesn’t even say you disobeyed my command that I gave only to you, not to the woman.
From this thread that’s all I keep reading, that the command was given to Adam only, Eve sinned first, then needed the man to sin too…of course she did :rolleyes:

What I find puzzling is if Eve committed a personal sin first, before she needed Adam to, to complete her quest, how did she do it alone? She fell first so to speak, being deceived and all, yet there was no sin, no inclination to sin yet present in the garden. Sin comes into the garden after Adam sins?

Anyway, I can’t help but think that both were equally responsible for sinning, the headship thing doesn’t really exist in my world, a part from Christ being the head, as he is the creator, and both male and female humans are made in his image.
 
I’d like to move on, presupposing the Church is correct that Adam is the single source of OS, to a point that Grannymh said and I don’t disagree, but would like to understand why:
…we cannot tamper with the revelation of original sin without undermining the mystery of Christ.
What is it about Adam being the singular source of OS that would undermine Christ being the one source of salvation?

Yes, it is said in the New Testament and it’s falsehood would undermine these verses of the the NT, but is that the only reason it is necessary that Adam is the source of OS? Why is it necessary?
 
I think the point of the first few chapters of Genesis is divine revelation and not on some concept of patriarchal society. According to the word of God, the man Adam is the first human being created by God and then God created Eve, the woman, from the side of Adam. So the man says “This one shall be called woman, for out of ‘her man’ this one has been taken.” Adam, therefore, being the first human being, is the head of the earthly human race as all people are the descendants of Adam and Eve, our first parents. Jesus is the head of redeemed humanity and the true head of all humanity as St Paul says Adam was a type of Christ. Our Blessed Lady is the new Eve and the mother of all the living, that is, those who are spiritually alive with supernatural grace. As Eve played a role in the ruin of humanity, our Blessed Mother played a singular role in cooperation with her divine Son in the restoration and redemption of humanity.
👍
 
I just don’t think saying one sin was worst than the other.

God saying “you listened to the voice of your wife” rather than saying you listened to the serpent, God here shows that Adam listened to his wife, because it isn’t written that he heard or spoke to the serpent. God doesn’t even say you disobeyed my command that I gave only to you, not to the woman.
From this thread that’s all I keep reading, that the command was given to Adam only, Eve sinned first, then needed the man to sin too…of course she did :rolleyes:

What I find puzzling is if Eve committed a personal sin first, before she needed Adam to, to complete her quest, how did she do it alone? She fell first so to speak, being deceived and all, yet there was no sin, no inclination to sin yet present in the garden. Sin comes into the garden after Adam sins?

Anyway, I can’t help but think that both were equally responsible for sinning, the headship thing doesn’t really exist in my world, a part from Christ being the head, as he is the creator, and both male and female humans are made in his image.
I agree-both were culpable for their sin. Both knew they were disobeying God.

As to why they did so-why they sinned-it would be right to say that neither fully believed God’s words, that neither trusted Him IOW, to give them all that they could have or need to maximize fulfillment and happiness. They were cast, along with the rest of us, into a state of being or life where we can all learn that God was right after all.

We know that Adam and Eve had free will, and we know that they abused it. We don’t know much more about this fact than to say that the reason they willed wrongly must simply lie in the difference between whatever they lacked in perfection, relative to God, and whatever perfection He intended to ultimately lead them into.
 
I’d like to move on, presupposing the Church is correct that Adam is the single source of OS, to a point that Grannymh said and I don’t disagree, but would like to understand why:
…we cannot tamper with the revelation of original sin without undermining the mystery of Christ.
The mystery of Christ Himself is His Divinity.
 
The mystery of Christ Himself is His Divinity.
Truly it is mysterious. I’ve read Roman’s Chapter 5 and hear in it many times that by one entered death for all, even the innocent, and by one man grace entered for all; so, the single man to single man parallel is not in question, but the reason this parallel was maintained is not revealed. A mystery in deed.
 
Truly it is mysterious. I’ve read Roman’s Chapter 5 and hear in it many times that by one entered death for all, even the innocent, and by one man grace entered for all; so, the single man to single man parallel is not in question, but the reason this parallel was maintained is not revealed. A mystery in deed.
There is a very interesting CCC section devoted to mysteries pertaining to Christ. It starts with paragraph 512.

The basic mystery of Christ Himself is the Hypostatic Union, CCC Glossary, page 882. Christ is one Person with two natures. Christ is True God and True Man. The issue of Christ’s Divinity occurs in the Gospels. For example: Matthew 16:15. Who do you say I am?

Interestingly, only a handful of people recognize that the ancient heresy of Arianism, which denied the full Divinity of Jesus as the Second Person of the Most Holy Trinity, is now a modern heresy, most likely with a cell phone in one hand. 😉 This is the link to a Catholic Answers tract which includes the original Arianism. Google contains more definitions and explanations.
catholic.com/tracts/the-great-heresies

This link presents some of the signs of modern Arianism.
romancatholicman.com/stealth-arianism-the-pervasive-heresy-of-our-times/

Knock out Adam which knocks out Original Sin which knocks out the need for a Divine Redeemer. Jesus is then a wonderful prophet among [human] prophets. So, what happens to chapter six, Gospel of John, the mystery of the Eucharist?

Given the current questions and comments about Genesis 2: 15-17, this thread may not be ready to deal with what is currently happening regarding stealth Arianism. On the other hand, it will take time and effort to get to the bottom about what is said concerning modern Arianism.
 
I agree-both were culpable for their sin. Both knew they were disobeying God.

As to why they did so-why they sinned-it would be right to say that neither fully believed God’s words, that neither trusted Him IOW, to give them all that they could have or need to maximize fulfillment and happiness. They were cast, along with the rest of us, into a state of being or life where we can all learn that God was right after all.

We know that Adam and Eve had free will, and we know that they abused it. We don’t know much more about this fact than to say that the reason they willed wrongly must simply lie in the difference between whatever they lacked in perfection, relative to God, and whatever perfection He intended to ultimately lead them into.
Interesting, I’m not sure how much more fulfillment and happiness they would have needed being in the garden, but maybe they did seek more from God and were impatient, much like we are now. There isn’t much difference between them and us anyway, except the direct communion with God that they enjoyed in their sinlessness.
 
Interesting, I’m not sure how much more fulfillment and happiness they would have needed being in the garden, but maybe they did seek more from God and were impatient, much like we are now. There isn’t much difference between them and us anyway, except the direct communion with God that they enjoyed in their sinlessness.
A belief in the wisdom of Holy Spirit as the Third Person of the Most Holy Trinity…

A belief in the divine power of Jesus Christ as the Second Person of the Most Holy Trinity…

A belief in the love of the Father as the First Person of the Most Holy Trinity…

…assures each human individual that the Catholic Church provides direct communion with God through the doctrines based on Divine Revelation and through the Seven Sacraments, especially in the Catholic Eucharist.
 
A belief in the wisdom of Holy Spirit as the Third Person of the Most Holy Trinity…

A belief in the divine power of Jesus Christ as the Second Person of the Most Holy Trinity…

A belief in the love of the Father as the First Person of the Most Holy Trinity…

…assures each human individual that the Catholic Church provides direct communion with God through the doctrines based on Divine Revelation and through the Seven Sacraments, especially in the Catholic Eucharist.
👍

I was pointing to the fact that they enjoyed some sort of similar communion with God that they were given directly as the first two spiritual humans, which they had to maintain of course. It’s a slightly different story for us…born without those gifts, given them and then having to develop and maintain the communion, but only if we choose to.

Anyway, it says in the CCC somewhere that all this was supposed to happen to man.
 
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