Friday, September 12, 2014

Adam My Hero


 Considering the  preciousness of what Adam gave up, immortality, it's not reasonable to consider that Adam ate an apple. No matter how tasty, the fruit he ate couldn't have been an apple. He must have eaten a fruit more precious than an apple. It must have been such a precious fruit that that it outweighed even the preciousness of immortality.

The only fruit that is more precious and more tasty than immortality is the fruit of the woman, namely her reproductive organs.

To die in the arms of a beautiful woman has been the wish of many a full blooded male. Sad to say some men have caused terrible pain to woman on whom they cruelly forced their ardor when the woman they loved didn't love them in return.

This was not the case with Adam and Eve. The Bible makes it clear that they loved each other dearly and that should be a comfort to us, the descendents of that marriage. We were born out of a relationship of love not one of violence and cruelty. This is why we should learn to live up to our loving ancestry and love one another.

Eve's temptation of Adam wasn't a bad thing. She didn't tempt him out of lust guided by the desire to achieve pure physical pleasure. She tempted Adam because they were alone and needed to stick together, to comfort each other.

Sure the snake represented evil; it's obvious that he did something bad to Eve. This is why she needed Adam to show her love, kindness and affection. Adam's love saved Eve from being forever in the arms of the evil snake.

Adam is the great hero of the world. He gives up immortality to save Eve. He does this by giving her love and shows her that there can be goodness in the mortal world.

Sure he sinned in the eyes of God and God punished him and Eve but he had saved Eve, the woman of his dreams, who he loved and who procreated the world together with him.

God's holy place

The Holy Place

 

The great question facing religion today as always is: "  Where is God's holy place?"


The question appears in the book of Psalms in a very clear way and virtually screams out of every word  of the Bible. I would go so far as to say that the purpose  of the Bible is to reveal the holy place of God.

A person who doesn't seek the answer to this question will be quite disappointed and will wonder why the Bible is such a popular book.

It's popular because there are obviously many people at all times in history, primitive times and modern, who want to know where is God's holy place.

Of course the Bible doesn't tarry with the answer and gives it straight away; God's holy place is the Garden of Eden.

There's no beating around the bush. Plane and simple, the holy place of God is The Garden of Eden and Man was in it and as long as he was perfectly good he was entitled to be there and like everything else over there he was immortal.

The Bible encourages man to search for immortality by searching for God's Holy Place.

I think that one can safely say that, in the physical world, the world of the 5 senses, man has resigned himself to the fact of death. Modern science may lengthen the span of life but I don't think any scientist thinks that immortality is attainable in the physical world.

All religions, however, promise immortality – of the soul. According to them man has a soul and if he is religious it is immortal. If he isn't religious – well, either he doesn't have a soul or, anyhow it doesn't  matter because a soul that isn't immortal isn't worth having.

This is the basis for the religious justification of the death penalty and in fact for all punishment. Because by committing a crime a person damages his soul and it needs to be repaired by punishment.

Having chosen to eat the fruit of Eve man is expelled from The Garden of Eden. In other words the eating of the fruit of Eve has made him imperfect and not entitled to be immortal.

Religion, however, comes to his rescue, to save his soul, as it were. It offers him an alternative holy place and a myriad of tools for repairing his damaged soul; sacrifices, ceremonies, prohibitions of certain types of behavior, foods, cloths etc.

Thursday, January 2, 2014

Introducing Disobedience Gen 2:16-17


Introducing Disobedience.

“You may surely eat of every tree of the garden, but of the tree of the knowledge of good and evil you shall not eat, for in the day that you eat of it you shall surely die.” (Genesis 2:16–17).

 
Obviously disobedience did not exist until Adam and Eve disobeyed this commandment of God. The snake succeeded in tempting Eve to be disobedient by telling her she wouldn’t die from eating the fruit, and he was correct in that, because she knew which fruit was poisonous and which not and apparently the fruit she saw was not poisonous, as the verse says: “and she saw that it was good to eat” Gen 3:6.

She possessed that kind of knowledge. She didn’t have to be disobedient to learn that eating poisonous fruit could kill her. But she obviously didn’t know that there was another kind of death, namely death as a punishment for carrying out a morally evil act.

When God told Adam “for on the day you eat of it you shall surely die” he didn’t understand that it referred to a morally bad act. He thought it referred to the fruit being bad, meaning poisonous, that’s why he would die if he ate it. But God meant that if he ate from the fruit he would be disobeying God’s commandment, which is a morally evil act and warrants punishment, perhaps even the punishment of death..

The snake’s crime is that he led Eve into carrying out a moral crime, the crime of disobedience. This was a crime which never existed. Eve brought it into existence by falling into the trap of the snake.

This therefore is the sin of Adam and Eve. They brought disobedience into the world. Now it was necessary to make laws regarding the various punishments for various crimes, hence the creation of Torah, the book in which God tells us what we may and what we may not do and the various punishments for disobeying His word.

The words “for on the day you eat of it you shall surely die” aren’t a threat, they are meant to teach Adam that moral evils are punishable by death. Disobedience to the word of God is a morally evil action, although not so severe to be punishable by death. That is why they don’t die after eating the fruit. That’s why after Adam and Eve eat the fruit God doesn’t carry out the death penalty and gives them lighter punishments instead.

So Adam learns, the hard way, something he didn’t know before, namely that a morally evil action, like disobedience, can lead to death as surely as a physically bad action, like eating poison fruit.

It’s not the fruit which carries the death penalty. The snake isn’t lying when he says that Eve won’t die from eating the fruit. He and Adam and Eve all possess knowledge that the fruit wasn’t poisonous. It’s disobedience to the word of God which is liable to be punished by death.

The punishment for disobedience isn’t death but expulsion from the Garden of Eden because that is the place for obedient people. It is the place of perfection where perfectly obedient people have access to the tree of life.

But it’s difficult because now the inclination to disobedience has become part of our nature and it’s become impossible to be perfectly obedient. That is why God gave us the Torah, which is the tree of life outside the Garden of Eden.

God gave us His Torah so that we can learn knowledge of good and evil and by doing the good and rejecting the evil we have life. God wanted Adam and Eve to have life and to have knowledge of moral goodness and moral evil.

The two things, life and knowledge go together as is made clear from this verse, hereunder and many others like it in the Torah.

“Ye shall therefore keep my statutes, and my judgments: which if a man do, he shall live in them: I am the LORD.” (Lev 18:5)

I don’t think that Adam and Eve saw their act of eating the fruit as an act of disobedience. They were also confused by the crafty snake who told them that God’s warning that they would die didn’t apply to eating the fruit of the tree of knowledge. He was referring to the physical qualities of the fruit, but he was aware that eating that fruit as healthy as it was, constituted an act of disobedience of the word of God. He tricked them into being disobedient.

It would be wrong to assume from our verse above that God doesn’t want Adam and Eve to acquire knowledge. Had this been His intention He would not have created a tree of knowledge and planted it in the Garden of Eden. Neither, for that matter, would he have planted a tree of life in the Garden. The fact that He planted these trees in the Garden is a clear sign that He wants Adam and Eve to have life and to have knowledge of Good and Evil; knowledge is a moral good not a moral evil.

The verse isn’t talking about knowledge as such, on the contrary, God wants them to acquire knowledge and the most important knowledge of all is to know that moral evil is punishable by death.

So, therefore, in my opinion we must consider God’s prohibition here anew, and we should consider this in the light of Torah. Because God tells us in the Torah that the Torah is life and the Torah is the way to acquiring knowledge of good and evil.