At what point do Adam and Eve “fall from grace”? How does Original Sin fit with a natural
interpretation of the Eden
texts? Actually, these theologies are not
biblical, so they do not. Without the
unbiblical constraints of perfectionism, God treats each individual uniquely. Grace abounds with love, mercy, and
forgiveness.
Sin is the choice to transgress law. Choice is not hereditary, however
consequences can be.
Adam and Eve listened to bad advice and made a bad choice
before touching the fruit.—Yes, they sinned before touching the fruit.—Eating
gave them God-like knowledge of good and evil plus the byproduct of shame,
neither of which are inherently sinful or evil.
Along with the Breath (our spirit), these were their children’s
inheritance. Each person must choose how
to manage these God given gifts.
People can live sinless lives (like Enoch or Jesus) by
always making good choices. For the
majority of us who continue to make stupid, bad, or rebellious choices against
God’s law, God is gracious to provide a cleansing process. From the beginning, He chose to forgive the
sins of a repentant heart. He chose to
wash sins clean with the blood of animals, then with His own blood.
God is patient and His grace abundant. Abba Father meets our failures with a smile
and open arms. He forgives every time we
repent. That forgiveness is complete
with no reservations. Humans do not
forgive fully. Often we do not forgive
ourselves. God does.
Only our hard heart interrupts that process. Pride tells God we do not need His help, His
guidance, or His mercy. Arrogance tells
God that it is not His place to criticize our decisions or interfere in our
life. Tradition tells us we can redeem
ourselves through ritual. That grieves
His Spirit, but He honors our choice.
It is natural for humans to defend their actions. However, if we rationalize and justify evil, then
shame no longer softens our heart. If people
do not try to be good, then evil becomes “normal.” Repentance seems ridiculous. Eventually, God cleanses a population that
thinks evil is good and good is evil.
Without repentance, each bad choice corrupts our soul (our
mind) and slowly kills our spirit (God’s image). We “die” of a hard heart before our physical heart
stops beating. This is second
death. Physical death locks-in our non-repented
choices as final. We condemn ourselves.
God begs us to choose differently than that kind of arrogant
death.
God did not kick Adam and Eve
out of the garden for eating forbidden fruit.
Nor did they get the boot for sinning, lying, hiding, or even bringing
evil into the world. God separated them
from the tree that gave eternal life. He
restored our access to that life through the death of Jesus. If we eat His sweet flesh and drink His “juice,”
life is ours. But, we must make the
choice to repent of our rebellion, submit to His guidance, and “die” to our
selfishness. This grows a clean soft
heart.
God died so that we could know
how much grace He always offers. He graciously
gave Adam and Eve the opportunity to repent.
They chose to pass blame. God
gave Cain the opportunity to repent. He
chose a lie. God did not instantly kill
them. He let them live, hoping they
might eventually learn to take responsibility for their actions. Biblically, God’s grace begs us to learn
repentance each time we transgress law, each time we think of transgressing His
law, and each time we do not love our enemies.
He desires our goodness.
When we enact that knowledge, God rejoices. Life is not based on religious ritual. Life finds salvation in relationship. This was God’s plan from the beginning.
To be continued:
[Lessons from Creation’s Parables: Genesis and Standard
Science, Sung as One, by Jo Helen Cox.]
[Lessons from God Makes Us Holy, by Jo Helen Cox.]
Eden Revisited #1:
Powerful Love vs. Limited Perfection
Eden Revisited #2:
A Safe Place to Grow
Eden Revisited #3:
The Garden River
Eden Revisited #4:
Humanity’s Origins
Eden Revisited #5:
Creation of Death
Eden Revisited #8:
The Lesson of Blessing
Genesis Revisited
Also in this series:
Eden Revisited #1:
Powerful Love vs. Limited Perfection
Eden Revisited #2:
A Safe Place to Grow
Eden Revisited #3:
The Garden River
Eden Revisited #4:
Humanity’s Origins
Eden Revisited #5:
Creation of Death
Eden Revisited #6: Curse? What Curse?
Eden Revisited #8:
The Lesson of Blessing
Also see series:
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