Adam already knew right and wrong but he had not experienced evil until he disobeyed God. "Knowing" good and evil means a firsthand experience, but putting them together indicates knowing good and evil distinctly. I learned this in seminary from my OT professor who also teaches Hebrew. The word "to know" is important here. It is like a man knowing his wife - it's not just head knowledge but experiencing something.
Until Adam disobeyed, he did not "know" good and evil. He did know good because all was good before the Fall; God said it was. So we know it was. Knowing evil made Adam now familiar with good and evil, and therefore, good from evil (a distinction). I know the word is not in the text, but using reasoning and going by the text does allows us to draw certain conclusions. I realize this is not absolute truth and I'm not claiming it is.
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Actually, the way I read your analysis, we are pretty much saying the same thing.
You say ""
Knowing" good and evil means a firsthand experience, but putting them together indicates knowing good and evil distinctly".
I have to agree with this statement. Both are true. Adam had no first hand experience of good or evil. Of course this is "good" in the contrast to evil as I had said, and it is not a kind of "good" like a "good food" or the "cool breeze is good" or the "warm sun is good". The only way to understand what is meant here by "good" is to place it up against what is "evil". So it would be morals that is in focus when it says "good and evil".
So you say it is a distinction, and I see now that you are correct. I said it was a "contrast" , same thing so we agree. However, this does not change the fact that Adam had no "knowledge of good and evil" or even a "distinction of good and evil".
"Knowing" good and evil means a firsthand experience
Correct, but what you want to do is to drop the "good" part and only accept the "evil" part. You want to say Adam knew (Hebrew "to know") "good" but did not know "evil". But the text says Adam did not know either "good and evil". And even using the "distinction" context, Adam still did not "know" (Hebrew context) what "good and evil" was.
The word "to know" is important here.
Agreed. And "to know" is in front of the "good" just as it is in front of the "evil". God told Adam what the tree was for. It was for the knowledge of good and evil, not just for learning the evil part. So Adam had the head knowledge of the tree, he simply did not have the "to know" part.
It is like a man knowing his wife - it's not just head knowledge but experiencing something.
It's like when God gave Adam all the food and said it is "good". Adam then had head knowledge from God that it was "good", BUT Adam had to experience the food before he understood! God could have told Adam that He was "good" (morally) but Adam would have no idea until he experienced it! Therefore, even if God told Adam that He was good (morally), Adam could not "to know" (as the Hebrew expresses it as you said) unless Adam experienced it.
So my point remains valid even by the definition of "to know". We actually agree on this much. We both agree that Adam could not have "known" anything without experiencing it. So how would Adam "know" God's mercy?
Until Adam disobeyed, he did not "know" good and evil. He did know good because all was good before the Fall; God said it was.
You are mixing together different kinds of "good". God said everything He
made was "good". This is
material stuff. The "good" refered to in the verse "knowldge of good and evil" is not speaking of stuff. It is speaking of the distinction between God's goodness and evil. Surely you can see this difference between good stuff and good morals?
Knowing evil made Adam now familiar with good and evil, and therefore, good from evil (a distinction). I know the word is not in the text, but using reasoning and going by the text does allows us to draw certain conclusions. I realize this is not absolute truth and I'm not claiming it is.
Actually the text says "knowing good and evil" not just knowing evil. And you are right that "therefore, good from evil (a distinction). Your right, the word is not in the text but by using
inductive reasoning and going by the text does allow us to draw certain conclusions. I believe that it is the truth and we should proclaim it!
Thanks for the engagement sister! I believe we are getting closer to agreement than what you think. And it is for the glory of God's word, that we may know Him and understand His mercy,grace and love. :thumbs:
:jesus: