G
grannymh
Guest
Going back and forth with Genesis 3: 19, I keep returning to the fact that Adam and Eve’s nature is essentially our nature which is a union of both the material world and spiritual world. This is a key sentence from CCC 1008. “Even though man’s nature is mortal, God had destined him not to die.”Gen 3:15 tells about how jesus will overcome satan. But then in Gen 3:19 “for dust you are and to dust you shall return.” so didn’t Adam and Eve just return to dust, therefore their bodies couldn’t be resurrected?
Link to CCC 1008 scborromeo.org/ccc/para/1008.htm
Paragraphs above and below CCC 1008 are also valuable.
As long as Adam remained in divine intimacy, he would be free from suffering and material death. (CCC 374-376) It was Adam’s Original Sin which brought human death into the world. (CCC 1008, Romans 5: 12-21) The specified verse Genesis 3: 19 is one of the references for these last sentences in CCC 400.
“Finally, the consequence explicitly foretold for this disobedience will come true: man will “return to the ground”, for out of it he was taken. Death makes its entrance into human history.”
In practice, Genesis 3: 19 invokes many thoughts and many symbolisms.
(see Aloysium’s post 273 & Granny’s post 272). While God is speaking directly to the individual first human parent, He is also speaking to us, reminding us that we are mortal and we need to factor that in when we make serious decisions as to the way we live our lives, in divine intimacy with God or not.
Adam and Eve died like we all do. Being true humans like us, they will be part of the resurrection of the dead and the life of the world to come.
In the specific verse Genesis 3: 19, the translation of *material/physical *dust, dirt, clay, ground refer symbolically to our material/physical blood and guts. We cannot deny the fact that our material anatomies decompose in one way or another returning to the earth when our spiritual soul departs.
A companion passage is Psalm 103: 11-18. And naturally, Psalm 23 should be engraved on our forehead.
Link to the Catechism of the Catholic Church, Second Edition
scborromeo.org/ccc.htm