T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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963.1 | The dawn of human consciousness | POWDML::FLANAGAN | I feel therefore I am | Tue Sep 06 1994 10:28 | 20 |
| A popular interpretation of the Adam and Eve myth is that it represents
the dawning of human consciousness. As humans evolved, the ability to
think for oneself evolved as did human free will. Animals act out of
instinct and the law of the jungle emerges from animalistic
instinctionual behavoir. Humans beings make decisions about what they
wear, what they eat, who they worship, when they engage in sex, who
they have relationships with.
Humans have the ability to understand what is good and bad and to make
conscious decisions about what is good or bad. Adam and Eve eating the
apple is humans decision to take responsibility for themselves and use
there freedom to choose what is good and what is bad. When we have the
ability to choose what is good, we also have the ability to choose what
is bad. With Freedom and Responsibility comes the ability to screw up
and "sin".
Would we choose to live without Freedom and Responsibility and without
the potential for sin or with Freedom and Responsibility.
Patricia
|
963.2 | The Feminist version | POWDML::FLANAGAN | I feel therefore I am | Tue Sep 06 1994 11:34 | 17 |
| Another interpretation of the Adam and Eve myth is a feminist
interpretation. The Serpent is a symbol in Pagan religions of the
Goddess. The Adam and Eve story represents the time in human
consciousness when The Divine moves from being worshipped as a woman to
the Divine as a Man.
In the myth, Eve chooses the advice of the Female Goddess rather than
the Male God. The "Goddess" tells her, that The Male God will not kill
her if she eats the fruit of good and evil, but that she will have
knowledge that the Male God wants to reserve for himself.
Even has Faith in the Divine as she images the Divine and follows her
advice. With knowledge of good and evil comes responsibility for the
choices we make. When a woman chooses to make decisions for herself
she no longer lives in childlike dependency on a man to make everything
pleasant and fairy tale like as long as she pays 100% obedience to the
men in her life.
|
963.3 | The Male version | POWDML::FLANAGAN | I feel therefore I am | Tue Sep 06 1994 12:30 | 14 |
| This is an explanation from my minister regarding the Male version. I
do not fully understand it but post it as I do.
The Adam and Eve myth represents the movement of History from a time
controlled by women and the Female Diety to the emergence of Men as
independent. At one time Men's role in procreation was not well
understood and all life came from Women. The Goddess gave birth to all
of creation. Men were off hunting most of the time, often far away
from the home and hearth. The earliest forms of tribal government were
dominated by women who stayed close to home, raised the children and
the staple foods. The Adam and Eve myth represents Man's understanding
of his own role in procreation and the movement away from a Female
Deity to a Male deity.
|
963.4 | | POWDML::FLANAGAN | I feel therefore I am | Tue Sep 06 1994 13:23 | 18 |
| What I would like to encourage is discussion of the story from a mythic
perspective. What is the mythic value of this story. What other
interpretations have you heard and how have they been valuable to you?
I invite discussion of these interpretations from a mythic perspective.
Are they useful interpretations, what implications do the
interpretations have, how do these myths impact our lives?
My personal premise is that myth is valuable and necessary for humans
and impacts us on multiple levels. By defining myself as Christian, I
am acknowledging the impact of Christian stories and myths as part of
my psychic and spiritual development. Adam and Eve is the myth of our
beginnings as humans, as spiritual beings.
What does the story mean?
964 or any other note can be used by those who want to debate the
viability of these stories considered myth or by those who want to discuss
the stories from a historic perpective.
|
963.5 | | CSC32::J_CHRISTIE | Crossfire | Wed Sep 07 1994 19:43 | 9 |
| I would suggest that the term myth here is not being used in the
the ordinary sense, but more in the specialized sense.
I, too, tend to see the Adam and Eve stories (and there are more than
one) as allegorical, as even the name "Adam" seems to imply.
Shalom,
Richard
|
963.6 | | POWDML::FLANAGAN | I feel therefore I am | Thu Sep 08 1994 09:55 | 14 |
| Richard,
Can you help me to understand the difference between allegory and myth
in the Adam and Eve Story and how you find allegorical meaning in the
story.
Paul also seems to use the story as allegory. Adam for Paul becomes
the archetypal man as in fact Jesus also does. (Romans 5:11-21)
Humans participate first in Adams fallness and then in Jesus.
Are the two in fact combined? If myth is sacred story, then the
allegory is a deeper way of comprehending the story.
Patricia
|
963.7 | | AIMHI::JMARTIN | | Thu Sep 08 1994 10:48 | 17 |
| Patricia:
I for one brought up the term allegory because of your first few
replies. If you recall in Galatians 5, Paul uses the allegory of
Abrahams relationship with the bondwoman (Hagar), and the free woman
(Sarah). He allegorically depicted the difference between law and
grace. He depicted law with bondage, and grace with freedom. These
in themselves have deep Spiritual significance, yet they are not myth
but allegorical.
If you are seeking meaning in the Adam and Eve account and are trying
to depict the actions as having significant meaning in our current
condition, then to me it is more allegorical than myth.
Peace,
-Jack
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963.8 | moderator action | LGP30::FLEISCHER | without vision the people perish (DTN 297-5780, MRO3-3/L16) | Thu Sep 08 1994 17:41 | 5 |
| I moved a string of notes starting with 963.8 to topic 964
(the "general discussion" topic) since they clearly were not
supportive.
Bob
|
963.9 | | POWDML::FLANAGAN | I feel therefore I am | Thu Sep 08 1994 17:56 | 18 |
| <<< LGP30::DKA300:[NOTES$LIBRARY]CHRISTIAN-PERSPECTIVE.NOTE;2 >>>
-< Discussions from a Christian Perspective >-
================================================================================
Note 964.38 Adam and Eve as Myth (for general discussion) 38 of 39
CSC32::J_CHRISTIE "Crossfire" 12 lines 8-SEP-1994 16:24
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Actually, an allegory need not be based on actual events. What is
important in an allegory, as I see it, is the meaning of the story
and not the story itself. An allegory is a teaching tool, not unlike
the parable.
Genesis is believed by scholars to have been originated after Exodus
as a kind of backfill introduction. I think it's helpful to see Genesis
in this context.
Shalom,
Richard
|
963.10 | | POWDML::FLANAGAN | I feel therefore I am | Thu Sep 08 1994 18:03 | 26 |
| Richard,
I agree with you that it is the meaning of the story and not the story
itself that is meaningful. I believe that the stories themselves do
not so much reveal the Divine to us but point us to a relationship to
the Divine.
When Jesus tells a story about a child leaving home and sowing wild
oats so to speak, and the parents Joy at the child's return, it does
not matter whether the story is Historical or literary. The message is
clear. So also with Myth.
It does not matter whether God came down to earth and physically had a
wrestling match with Jacob. What matters is that the story has a
spiritual meaning for me and for you.
I do have an easier time accepting allegory as a part of literature
than as a part of a historic account. For instance, if Adam is a real
man, how could you and I participate in the sin that Adam commits. If
he is a archetype of the capacity of a human being to Sin, than each of
us participate in that capacity.
I see allegory and myth going hand in hand.
Patricia
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963.11 | What can the story tell us?? | CSC32::J_CHRISTIE | Crossfire | Thu Sep 08 1994 20:30 | 13 |
| There's a flavor of poetic allegory even within the classical Greek
and Roman mythology.
There's something allegorical about beauty (Aphrodite/Venus) giving
birth to sensuous love (Eros/Cupid), for example.
There's also something of an allegorical parallel that may be drawn
between the story of Prometheus (the bringer of fire) and Christ (the
bringer of light).
Shalom,
Richard
|
963.12 | Observations | DNEAST::DALELIO_HENR | | Fri Sep 09 1994 10:50 | 32 |
|
Here are some observations ;
Obviously, I dont have my hebrew texts (or english) here at my desk, so
this is from memory, which I (or someone else) can confirm later.
Before Elohim cursed the The "serpent" he was classified as "a beast of the
field" which is the biblical classification of a warmblooded ruminating
furbearing animal with split hooves and is "legally" clean.
Eve was not surprised when the "serpent" spoke to her.
Adam and Eve were "enlightened" via the advice of the serpent while he
was still a "clean" mammal.
After the curse the serpent became a coldblooded unclean reptile going
on its "belly". The pit viper seeks the heat of blood and has a set
of senses that humans do not have; infra-red "sight".
The word "serpent" has a dual meaning in Hebrew ; serpent or "copper".
Copper is forbidden in worship (as oppossed to gold and silver) under the
mosaic covenant. Although the descendants of Cain used it extensively.
The only exception is the "brazen" serpent which Moses held up on a stick
in the Hebrew camp, those who looked at it lived, those who did not died.
"As Moses lifted up the serpent in the wilderness, even so must the Son
of Man be lifted up. That whosoever believes in Him should not perish
but have eternal life" John 3:14-15 NKJV.
Just a few observations.
Hank
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963.13 | | TINCUP::BITTROLFF | Creator of Buzzword Compliant Systems | Fri Sep 09 1994 12:25 | 3 |
| Off the topic, slightly, but what does SRO mean?
Steve
|
963.14 | | POWDML::FLANAGAN | I feel therefore I am | Fri Sep 09 1994 13:30 | 8 |
| It means Sympathetic Responses Only(i think).
For me in this entry it means that I desire to discuss the story from a
mythical, allegorical, symbolic perspective and did not want to have
the discussion bogged down with whether that is a legitimate way to
view the story. I seek meaning in the Bible as a work of literature
and am very interested in how others find meaning in the Bible as
spiritual literature.
|
963.15 | | CSC32::J_CHRISTIE | Crossfire | Fri Sep 09 1994 13:36 | 5 |
| Supportive Replies Only = express your disagreement in some other
string.
Richard
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963.16 | I thought it was Standing Room Only | FRETZ::HEISER | Maranatha! | Fri Sep 09 1994 13:58 | 1 |
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