Looking retrospectively at “the fall” it seems that it was a set up, but that is only because of the choice made by Eve and Adam that determined the outcome in one direction. If they had chosen differently, the results would have been radically different. This is another example of retrospective determinism. It happened therefore it had to happen.
As to “stacking the deck,” it was ONE tree in an entire garden of goodies. The odds would seem to have been stacked the other way.
Adam and Eve, just keep your noses clean, but no…
The “easy” way mindset that leads to addictions of all kinds is founded on the kind of thinking that talks itself into, “What’s the use?” and then uses that capitulation to reinforce its poor choices as if things couldn’t have been otherwise. From the point of view of an addicted mind (one quite amenable to retrospective determinism,) it appears that it couldn’t have been otherwise; so why try?
The pit is just too deep to escape from. Too bad that wasn’t considered before we started digging it. The Good News is that God himself has put himself into the pit as our brother.
The inordinate strength of the determinism mindset is, to me, proof that the “Fall” was an historical event precisely because our “go to” response is to deflect responsibility onto any excuse we can concoct.
It’s a psychological ego trick to salve over responsibility that we humans have perfected because it is far easier to point the finger (had to be, God allowed it, too hard, etc.) than admit where the problem really lies.
The other aspect that you haven’t mentioned is that God has promised his Kingdom and the power (grace) to achieve it, which would mean we have omnipotence stacked on the side of making all kinds empowered “good” free will choices.
No, let’s pass up on that promise for the sake of hiding behind our weaknesses that compel us to make bad choices because doing otherwise involves the challenge to overcome the temptation to fail.
That’s where
this falls apart for me.