One of the things I enjoy about the first three genuine chapters of Genesis is that it is so easy to picture myself there especially Genesis 2: 18. This time, I can imagine that Adam is not quite sure what God is going to do.
As I am thinking about your words about God
"He first creates the animals and tells man to name them. Why? Precisely so that man could first know and realize he was alone in the universe as a person, and that his first love must always be God. "
I stumble a bit that Adam needed to first realize that he was alone as a person. Then I decided that Adam needed to recognize that God was offering him a supreme friendship relationship between Divinity and humanity. Not only must Adamâs first love must always be God --God accepts that love as part of the original relationship between God and Adam.
Iâm not quite sure what youâre looking for, and it probably isnât what follows in this post. But I have sometimes wondered whether much of the Bible is more literal and less figurative than we sometimes think. Yes, undoubtedly much of it is figurative or allegorical. But years ago I really was struck by the Big Bang Theory, and how it was very literally âlet there be lightâ. Anything as intense as the âstringâ or whatever was there before, almost certainly did not emit light and likely âlightâ didnât even exist before the âstringâ or whatever, blew, because the energy couldnât form light wavelengths in its state prior to the âbangâ.
And of course, now and then some archaeologist or someone will talk about the âpillar of fireâ being Thera, and so on. Might be so.
Now to man. Among other things, I am a rancher. Animals have instincts and inherent reactions, but they donât know right from wrong. In their own limited way, theyâre like Adam before the Fall. They are in perfect harmony with Providence. They totally do âwhat God tells themâ; what He has imprinted in them. And so, was Adam the same way, initially? Was Eden even a paradise, or did Adam perceive it as perfect contentment in the same way a cow appears to be perfectly content in a pasture, even if there are cockleburs here and there. She doesnât think about anything. She doesnât worry about anything. She doesnât pause to admire sunsets either, or the beauty of a spring morning or the shimmering heat waves rising above a country road. She obeys God, but she doesnât âseeâ Him in His creation.
But, she is in perfect harmony with Providence. Now, was Adam (even if just one person) that way to begin with? Did it get hot in Eden? Did it get cold? Did he even get hungry or stub his toe?. But was Eden truly paradise to him because he accepted Godâs Providence totally? We know of saints who accepted Providence without reservation and found no dissatisfaction in it. Was Adam, then, really so different from us, and was his world any different at all? Were his conversations with God in the garden, the directives of Adamâs own nature, which he knew were Godâs and which he answered with a âyesâ, and without fail for a time?
But the Fall. Leaving Eve aside for a moment, the message of the great denier tempted humankind with knowledge. Did âknowledgeâ include personally engaging in it? And was the very act of exercising his will other than in accordance with providence the departure, the Fall? In other words, did man make a decision to depart from Providence; from the Will of God and arrogate decisionmaking; the âdecision=knowledgeâ of good and evil?
(Yes, I know, Iâm making the âfruitâ allegorical, yet its consumption could literally have been the culmination of a decision to âdepart from the menuâ in the same sort of way we do now; consuming all kinds of things we know full well we werenât naturally meant to consume.)
I think maybe thatâs the crux of it, and it could have happened to one person singly or by a duo. Or it could have happened as a sort of joint âawakeningâ to a latent power that was there all along; the power to depart from Providence, and the choice to do it. Even saints had and have that.
And so, we might ask whether Original Sin is a latency exercised. Weâre all born with the power to depart. Some few of us (certainly Mary) never exercise it. Most of us do. And at some point, we exercise it. All of us do (other than Mary). But itâs always willful. Itâs always a choice. And perhaps itâs âoriginalâ and coming from our first parents because the very first actuation of the latency exhibited it to every person who came later, further activating it. And so perhaps Eveâs very act against the Will of God made it inevitable that Adam would fall too. Weâre not as independent as we think we are.
So why is that any kind of gift from God? Because itâs a choice. Itâs a freedom that many (most?) of us know we can exercise properly and often do, thus glorifying God as free beings rather than as more simple creatures like cattle. Because of the Fall, we canât âtalkâ to Him anymore in quite the same way because we resist His part of the conversation. But we can still âseeâ Him and hear Him in other ways, and in ways that cattle do not and cannot.
Does that even contradict evolutionary changes if, indeed, evolution formed us? Doesnât seem so to me, but thatâs another story.
Having said the above, Iâll leave.