R
R_McGeddon
Guest
You don’t have to apologise.My apologies, I wasn’t aware of the fact that you’re not Catholic.
If it’s a fact, there will be some evidence to back this up. If not then it’s just faith.But, for Catholics, Adam and Eve’s preternatural gifts are a fact of which we are certain de fide.
I’m a pretty kind of black and white person myself. Vague symbolism is not my thing, particularly when only a select few say they’re qualified to interpret.I think it’s very clever, myself. It’s specific enough to express some certain fundamental truths to all people at all times, yet “vague” enough that our understanding of the details is able to improve over time (in light of other discoveries and revelations) without actually ever being in error. Plus, there’s a lot of symbolism, and a whole lot of deeper significance hidden in the text, especially when you go back to the original language.
I know, it’s hard to convey sarcasmwe don’t share any DNA with dirt. Dirt doesn’t have DNA.![]()
I don’t think it’s quite that simple, or alchemists would have transformed base metals into gold.But I still don’t understand why this isn’t reasonable? Whether you believe God picked up a handful of dirt (I think the correct translation is more literally “earth”, anyway) and fashioned it into a human body, or guided an evolutionary process over time, all the way back from a giant puddle of primordial slime (which had to have been made from the earth)… it all comes down to the same thing. I mean, earth (“dirt”) is composed of protons, neutrons, and electrons… and so are our bodies. The point is simply that our bodies, ultimately, came out of the earth in some way, and are composed of the same materials. Proof for this being that, when we die, our bodies break down and decompose into simpler elements.