Not all are medicinal. The one about everyone else being kicked out of the Garden of Eden was just harsh.
Something from Fr. John Hardon,
God the Author of Nature and the Supernatural Part Two: Creation as a Divine Fact
Terminology
Adam in context means first of all the man, described in Genesis and St. Paul as distinct from Eve. This is the term also found in the documents of the Church. However we do not use the word of him alone but extend it to Eve, in fact apply it to human nature as represented in our first parents.
The expression “before the fall” simply states the fact that Adam possessed grace [defined doctrine] and the preternatural gifts, without committing ourselves as to when the infusion took place.
By sanctifying grace we understand that permanent gift, which is now given through Christ and by which a man becomes formally justified, a partaker of the divine nature, an adopted son of God and heir of eternal life. In the present order, sanctifying grace is associated with the uncreated gift of the Holy Spirit and such created gifts as the infused virtues of faith, hope and supernatural charity.
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The three gifts of bodily immortality [defined by the Church], integrity [theologically certain] and infused knowledge [common and certain doctrine] are called preternatural because they are not strictly due to human nature but do not, of themselves, surpass the capacities and exigencies of created nature as such. In other words, they are not entitatively supernatural.
Bodily immortality is the converse of mortality, i.e., the possibility of separation of soul from body. Adam was therefore capable of not dying. Yet the gift was conditional, provided he did not sin; it was gratuitous, since Adam’s nature by itself did not postulate this prerogative but came from the divine bounty; and it was participated, since only God enjoys essential immortality.
The gift of integrity is equivalent to exemption from concupiscence. It is called “integrity” because it effected a harmonious relation between flesh and spirit by completely subordinating man’s lower passions to his reason.
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Adam’s infused knowledge was not acquired, in the sense of natural cognition derived from experience and the reasoning process; nor was it intrinsically supernatural as giving a knowledge of the mysteries, such as the souls enjoy in the beatific vision. It was infused because not naturally acquired, but yet entitatively not beyond the capacity of man’s faculties in his statu viae. Theologians commonly refer to three areas of special knowledge possessed by Adam: regarding God and His attributes, the moral law or man’s relations to God, and the physical universe both material and spiritual.
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Dogmatic Value
It is defined doctrine, at least implicitly in Trent, that Adam possessed sanctifying grace before the fall.
Regarding Adam’s integrity, theologians distinguish between immunity from carnal and spiritual concupiscence. They say it is implicitly defined in Trent (DB 792) that Adam was free from sense concupiscence; or according to others it is
proxima fidei. Immunity from spiritual concupiscence is said to be at least theologically certain; or the composite of integrity as such may be called
proxima fidei.
Adam’s immortality of body has been defined by the Church, and is found in a series of documents: DB 101, 174, 788.
The possession of infused knowledge is held to be common and certain doctrine, though some assign a higher dogmatic note.
therealpresence.org/archives/God/God_013.htm