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Conference lgp30::christian-perspective

Title:Discussions from a Christian Perspective
Notice:Prostitutes and tax collectors welcome!
Moderator:CSC32::J_CHRISTIE
Created:Mon Sep 17 1990
Last Modified:Fri Jun 06 1997
Last Successful Update:Fri Jun 06 1997
Number of topics:1362
Total number of notes:61362

671.0. "Was Eden a Stacked Deck?" by WELLER::FANNIN () Thu May 06 1993 18:48

    I got this idea from another note and wanted to open up a discussion.
    
    The fundamentalist Christian viewpoint believes that humans are sinners
    because of an action the very first humans did.
    
    This action -- some believe that they literally ate some fruit from a
    forbidden tree, some believe they engaged in sexual intercourse, some
    believe the fruit was unimportant and that the disobedience to God was
    the important thing -- this action caused them to forfeit their right
    to eternal bliss in an environmentally perfect Eden.
    
    Someone mentioned that if they hadn't taken that nefarious nibble
    they'd still be there today, happy as clams.
    
    Somewhere in the back of my mind there is this question:
    
         If you put a thousand monkeys in the Garden of Eden each with a
         typewriter and an unlimited amount of paper, how long would it
         take them to come up with _War_and_Peace?
    
         Translation:  If you place two humans in a garden for eternity and
         tell them _not_ to do something -- what are the odds that
         _eventually_ they will?

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671.1GRIM::MESSENGERBob MessengerThu May 06 1993 18:5819
Ruth,

>         Translation:  If you place two humans in a garden for eternity and
>         tell them _not_ to do something -- what are the odds that
>         _eventually_ they will?

If you put the human race on a planet and give them the brains and raw
materials needed to build nuclear weapons, what are the odds that
_eventually_ they will?

I see the Garden of Eden story as being just that - a story that tries to
explain how human beings fell from grace with God.  (Why else would there
be so much misery in the world?)  But when you try to look at it logically
it doesn't really hold up.  Was eating from an apple a more serious crime
than Cain killing Able?  Was the serpent really the most subtle of God's
creatures?  How could it talk if it had no vocal chords?  How could it
think if it had a reptilian brain?  And so on.

				-- Bob
671.2BSS::VANFLEETHelpless jelloThu May 06 1993 19:3820
    I take the Science of Mind viewpoint on this.  (Surprise, surprise,
    right Ruth?)
    
    To me the Garden of Eden story is an allegory of how we, as humans,
    choose to separate ourselves from God, i.e. deny the truth not only of
    who God is but who we are in relation to God...(deep breath) and how we
    pay the consequences of that choice.  I believe that God works in each
    of our lives to the extent that we choose to allow that work to take
    place.  If we deny God's presence (turn from God in denial, or
    disobedience as in the story) then we shoulder the burden of life alone 
    and make our own way with our limited resources.  This is what Adam and 
    Eve being shut out of the garden symbolizes.  On the other hand we do 
    have the choice to acknowledge and accept what we are, beloved children 
    of a loving and unlimited Creator and enter into a partnership with God.   
    
    I don't believe that the choice the story symbolizes a one time only
    deal.  I believe it's a choice we conciously or unconciously make
    in every thing we do, think and are every second of our existence.
    
    Nanci
671.3DEMING::VALENZAMy note runneth over.Thu May 06 1993 23:2613
>Was the serpent really the most subtle of God's
>creatures?  How could it talk if it had no vocal chords?  How could it
>think if it had a reptilian brain?  And so on.

    Not only could the serpent talk, it apparently could walk, too.  Note
    that Yahweh's punishment for the serpent was to make it slither on the
    ground.  The implication is that it *didn't* move around that way
    before; perhaps it had legs or something.

    In Aesop's fables, animals were often anthropomorphized and did things
    that they can't do in real life.

    -- Mike
671.4TLE::COLLIS::JACKSONRoll away with a half sashayFri May 07 1993 09:5113
  >Translation:  If you place two humans in a garden for eternity and
  >tell them _not_ to do something -- what are the odds that
  >_eventually_ they will?

Well, let's include a little more pertinent information.  The humans
we are discussing were perfect.  There is no doubt in my mind that
without the grace of God, that eventually our sin would lead us to
rebel against God if any of us would be there.

Now, in considering perfect people, I haven't a clue what the odds
are.  No data to compare against.  

Collis
671.5.-)TFH::KIRKa simple songFri May 07 1993 11:1412
re: Note 671.4 by Collis "Roll away with a half sashay" 

>Well, let's include a little more pertinent information.  The humans
>we are discussing were perfect.  There is no doubt in my mind that
>without the grace of God, that eventually our sin would lead us to
>rebel against God if any of us would be there.

But Collis, if they were so perfect, why did they choose to disobey God?

Peace,

Jim
671.6CSC32::J_CHRISTIEDeclare Peace!Fri May 07 1993 11:535
    It is my perspective that Eden is given *WAY* too much emphasis and
    significance, and that Genesis was basically backfill for Exodus.
    
    Richard
    
671.7TLE::COLLIS::JACKSONRoll away with a half sashayFri May 07 1993 11:563
Re:  .5

free will
671.8HURON::MYERSFri May 07 1993 12:298
    Characterizing people who sin, through their own free will, as
    "perfect" is oxymoronic (and I'm not too sure about the oxy- part :^)).
    I say this based on my understanding of the word "perfect" as defined in
    English dictionaries and in every other application of the word that I
    have seen... but I guess I could be wrong.  It could be a form of
    "religion-ese" (i.e. word convolution) that I am not familiar with. 
    
    		Eric
671.9DEMING::VALENZAMy note runneth over.Fri May 07 1993 13:348
    Yeah, I would define a person as "perfect" if they could not make
    mistakes.  If they make a mistake, or do something wrong, then they
    couldn't have been perfect after all.
    
    I don't know, perhaps what Collis means is that Adam and Eve were
    sinless, not that they were perfect.
    
    -- Mike
671.10TLE::COLLIS::JACKSONRoll away with a half sashayFri May 07 1993 14:058
I agree that sinless is a better term than perfect.

However, you might consider that pitchers can be
pitching a "perfect" game until someone gets a hit
(for example).  At that point (and only at that point)
is it no longer "perfect".

Collis
671.11CRONIC::SCHULERGreg - Hudson, MAFri May 07 1993 18:4328
    RE: .10

    Then that would only mean that the pitcher was performing
    perfectly up until that point.  It would be incorrect
    however (IMO) to state that the pitcher himself (or herself)
    were perfect.

    This (overall issue) is confusing to me.   If God created beings 
    which were supposed to be perfect but also gave them free will which He
    must have known ahead of time would lead them to make imperfect 
    choices, then what was the point?

    The whole setup seems rather absurd to me.  An omnipotent being
    could play out the entire history of human kind in his head
    before ever creating the first ray of light.  Why go to all the
    trouble only to have your creation "fail" ???  And if it were
    meant to fail in the first place, why the elaborate and highly
    praised idea that we *were* perfect and that we have "fallen" ???
    Is this a tease?  Kind of a "See!  Look what you *could* have had!!!"
    (seems kind of mean-spirited to me).  Or is it a picture of what is 
    to come (e.g. heaven) if we do right while here on earth?

    Why not just create us as "sinners" from the beginning, give us
    a (clear!) book of rules along with free will, and let the chips
    fall where they may?  Why all the trial and error?  Why couldn't
    God get it right the first time?

    /Greg
671.12CSC32::J_CHRISTIEDeclare Peace!Fri May 07 1993 18:5111
    RE: .11
    
>    The whole setup seems rather absurd to me.
    
    Greg,
    
    	I could be wrong, but I think you've hit upon the very issue
    posed to us in the basenote.
    
    Pax,
    Richard
671.13.-)TFH::KIRKa simple songFri May 07 1993 19:5514
re:   Note 671.11 by Greg

For more insight into your questions, I recommend Oolon Kolufid's trilogy

		_Where God Went Wrong_
		_God's 10 Greatest Mistakes_
		_10 More of God's Greatest Mistakes_

(Apologies to Douglas Adams' _HitchHiker's Guide to the Galaxy_ for probably 
getting the titles a bit jumbled.)

Peace,  & .-)

Jim
671.14imaginationTHOLIN::TBAKERDOS with Honor!Mon May 10 1993 10:239
    RE: .11 Greg

>    An omnipotent being
>    could play out the entire history of human kind in his head
>    before ever creating the first ray of light.  Why go to all the

    What makes you think this isn't what's actually happening now?

    Tom
671.15CRONIC::SCHULERGreg - Hudson, MAMon May 10 1993 13:2310
    >What makes you think this isn't what's actually happening now?
    
    Nothing, really.  
    
    What difference would it make to us if we experience everything God 
    imagines us experiencing?
    
    /Greg
    
    
671.16Good odds...CSC32::KINSELLAEternity...smoking or non-smoking?Tue May 11 1993 15:1710
    
    The sin wasn't taking a bite of a piece of fruit.  It was pride.
    Wanting to be like God...to know everything He knows.  Pride is a 
    choice, not a given.  It was this sin that got Lucifer and the 
    angels that followed him kicked out of Heaven and damned for eternity.
    I'd say the odds were in favor of Adam and Eve not sinning.  Angels
    are eternal beings too and the majority of them did not and have not
    fallen.
    
    Jill