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Luke: Many doctrines say that Adam and Eve knew the difference between right and wrong before they ate the forbidden fruit.
Luke: For instance the Nazarene doctrine states " We believe that the human race’s creation in Godlikeness included ability to choose between right and wrong," Is was an issue of obeying God or not. The Law did not come until after they broke it.
Many doctrines say that Adam and Eve knew the difference between right and wrong before they ate the forbidden fruit. Scripture tells me this is not so, that they would be like Gods if they had that knowledge. What is your belief?
They did not know it was wrong to eat. If Eve knew it was wrong to eat the fruit, she would not of believed Satan. .
Many doctrines say that Adam and Eve knew the difference between right and wrong before they ate the forbidden fruit. Scripture tells me this is not so
This is the innexplicable argument that nobody does wrong if they know it is wrong.
Yeah, that argument would be quite a surprise to Paul, who said that he found himself doing those things which he knew was wrong.
Many doctrines say that Adam and Eve knew the difference between right and wrong before they ate the forbidden fruit. Scripture tells me this is not so, that they would be like Gods if they had that knowledge. What is your belief?
Exactly.
Adam and Eve weren't predisposed to sin. Satan had to deceive her. She was ignorant of some things: not that it was wrong to eat the fruit, but rather she was ignorant of Satan's devises, she was ignorant of the full reality of the consequences of her chosen path, she was ignorant of the shame of sin, etc.
DWmoeller1: So, AandE were not perfect (they sinned), nor sinful (they didn't sin w/o outside influence). Thus they were innocent. The didn't know the difference between good evil, they didn't have an innate bent towards evil (as we do), but when presented with temptation they quickly fell to it. Both of them.
HP: Finally! Some disagreement so the debate can start.:thumbs::smilewinkgrin:
Why would they have been anything beside perfect before the fall?
You say that they did not know the difference between good and evil. I would disagree. They knew the positive command and how to obey, and knew what to do to disobey, so they certainly did know obedience (good) from disobedience (evil.) They certainly had not experienced disobedience nor its consequences but they did have some conception of good and evil although possibly not known to them as ‘evil.’ They clearly understood the concept of obedience so that had to have some concept of what it would take to disobey as well.
Why did they fall? Although it might appear quickly, we do not know that to be true do we? Could not there have been weeks, months or even years of hints of temptation before they actually yielded to it when Satan actually showed himself? Who knows? Temptation had to start in some limited way at the point of the command IMO. Do this and live, do this and die. Are not all humans subject to the temptation of curiousity, and is it not often veiled as that which will prove to be temptation?
Dw1: Perfect implies something that is unable to fail in its function/purpose. God is perfect - He cannot sin, He cannot fail, He cannot lie, etc. Adam and Eve were faultless and without sin, but not perfect. Human will not be perfect until the resurrection at which point they are confirmed in righteousness and can no longer sin.
Dw1: Plus there is the statement in Gen 3:5 which relegates knowledge of good and evil to God, implying strongly that A and E did not have such a knowledge. Also, Eve's knowledge of good/evil seems limited solely to its consequences - do this and you die. Such basic knowledge of good/evil animals also seem to have - pee on the carpet and get a whack. (Note, I am not making a direct comparison between A/E and animals - merely noting that her knowledge of good/evil doesn't see much more than what a dumb beast would have).
HP: I would disagree. We speak of a perfect diamond, a perfect marriage, a perfect game, ……and God spoke of a perfect man.
Perfection has a varying degree of connotations, but I never see it as something, especially in a moral sense, of something 'unable' to fail, but rather totally unwilling to fail.
If no contrary choice is within the realm of possibilities, there can be no morality predicated. Love could not be said to be perfect, for love denotes, and cannot exist without, the possibility of contrary choice. "Perfect love casteth out all fear."
HP: I would again disagree. Men are moral beings, animals are not. Adam and Eve were created as ‘moral’ beings, proof of which is the eternal punishment they would receive for disobedience. What separates us from the animal kingdom is that we have the ability to understand the ‘intrinsic value’ of a command apart from punishments or rewards, whereas animals do not.
As I see it, either Adam and Eve were created as moral beings or they were simply animals. I believe they were moral beings and as such just recipients of moral praise and blame, something unjust to apply to anyone not within the moral realm.
Why did they fall?
This is my take on the whole thing...
There are 3 basic conditions for man to be in: perfect, innocent, and sinful.
AandE were not perfect. This is shown by the fact that Eve was deceived and both sinned.
AandE were not sinful. They didn't know the difference between good and evil and they had no bent toward sinning. Barring temptation from the outside, there is every reason to believe that they would have continued in their sinless state.
So, AandE were not perfect (they sinned), nor sinful (they didn't sin w/o outside influence). Thus they were innocent. The didn't know the difference between good evil, they didn't have an innate bent towards evil (as we do), but when presented with temptation they quickly fell to it. Both of them.
This is my take on the whole thing...
There are 3 basic conditions for man to be in: perfect, innocent, and sinful.
AandE were not perfect. This is shown by the fact that Eve was deceived and both sinned.
AandE were not sinful. They didn't know the difference between good and evil and they had no bent toward sinning. Barring temptation from the outside, there is every reason to believe that they would have continued in their sinless state.
So, AandE were not perfect (they sinned), nor sinful (they didn't sin w/o outside influence). Thus they were innocent. The didn't know the difference between good evil, they didn't have an innate bent towards evil (as we do), but when presented with temptation they quickly fell to it. Both of them.