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From a biblical perspective, the answer to the question, Why are we here? — meaning, why are we where we find ourselves to be right now: in a chair, at a desk, writing or reading these words, alive as far as we know, more or less content with that, but never far below the surface tormented by the gnawing fear of illness, financial disaster, shame and loneliness, all the while hours, then minutes, now seconds closer to death and the grave — can be found in the first book of the Bible, Genesis, in the Garden of Eden, specifically at the event commonly called The Fall.
The Fall. There has always been something fishy about that particular Bible story. In fact, I find there are numerous passages in the Bible which seem to make no sense. Many of these, I realize, are the result of misunderstandings or confusion in translation or transcription. These are procedural and editorial errors, and as such harmless enough. Others may have actually been intentionally misrepresentations, conceived to serve some cause or conflict among ancient Jewish and early Christian sects. In effect, shepherds fighting over custody of the flock. Thus, I have read that Mark is thought to have been written for consumption by new and potential converts in Rome after the unsuccessful Jewish insurrection in Palestine against Roman colonial rule which culminated in the fall of Jerusalem in 70 A.D. And, so as not to offend that audience, negative references to Pontius Pilate and other things Roman were softened or left out. For example, in Mark’s report of the crucifixion, Pilate is cast in the more reasonable role (”Do you want me to release Jesus?”) while the Jews play the heavy (”Crucify him!”).
None of this should surprise us, for the Bible is no ordinary publication in the sense that we think of books in our time. It was never a single manuscript, complete from Genesis to Revelation, submitted by some aspiring author to one publisher after another until eventually it appeared on bookstore shelves and TV talk shows just in time for the Christmas buying season. In fact, the Bible’s route to us was far more tortuous than ever that one could be, and while this is not the place to review the not entirely happy or untarnished history of the Bible’s compilation into the single unit we now love so wisely, it is never inappropriate to recall its flaws, for ultimately they are our own.
But still, having said all that, there remains a category of biblical enigma that does not lend itself to the careless scribe or ruthless rabbi solution. In this group, the element of mystery seems to be built right into the passages themselves, shamelessly calling attention to itself, and fairly defying the reader to abandon the orthodox interpretation in search of what else may, or may not, be discovered beneath the surface, disguised and hidden from ready view. And of all the passages that fit into this mold, the Genesis account of The Fall has been for me one of the most frustrating and tantalizing. Like a loose tooth, it has been an irritant I could not ignore, could not seem to fix, and could not spit out.
The first thing to recognize about The Fall is that none of us can afford to ignore it. Whether we consider it to be fact or fancy, a myth or just a silly story, its effects on us are real. Psychiatrists make much of the scars we collect from experiences that occur in our childhood, for these, they say, can shape and determine the way our lives will unfold. For example, to oversimplify for purposes of illustration, if there lies hidden deep in our subconscious a shady, fearsome memory of having one morning as an infant spit up our breakfast oatmeal all over father’s new suit eliciting the predictable spontaneous outburst from him, we may never again be able to enjoy oatmeal or, in the extreme case, even sit comfortably at a breakfast table with another, all without realizing why. Until, that is, a psychotherapist helps us in unearthing, confronting, and defusing that memory, so that we may recognize that that event was not the calamity we subconsciously recall, but rather an ordinary routine morning at the family breakfast table; indeed, that it is in the very nature of babies to spit up oatmeal and of fathers to be spit up upon. Hence, no blame, no guilt, no complex.
Now, put The Fall into that clinical context, and imagine the potential effects on the human psyche, individual and collective, of being ceaselessly reminded and tormented, from pulpit and subconscious, that in our cosmic infancy not only did we foul our Father’s Day (and, remember, by that point in time, there had been only about a week of them) but we soiled Paradise itself! Clearly, therein lies the seed of an insatiable guilt complex of mega-proportions. Again, I expect it makes little difference how we think we think about The Fall, or whether or not we consider ourselves religious. Those of us raised in a Judeao-Christian-Islamic culture and particularly those shaped by the Puritan ethic, are bound to have had this element of that heritage firmly imprinted upon them. (And, please note, virtually every religion and spiritual tradition includes some kind of story like the Genesis account of The Fall.) The only resolution is to unearth and confront the offending memory, as we did with the oatmeal incident, and discover, if we can, the real meaning of what happened that day in Eden.
There is a children’s game called “What’s Wrong with This Picture?” which, like many children’s games, can be usefully adapted to adulthood; in this case, to help discern reality from illusion, fact from foolishness. The game consists of a simple picture, usually suitable for crayon coloring later, drawn with numerous intentional errors which the players must locate. For example, the scene might be of a country barnyard showing a farmer milking a cow, a horse grazing, and a hen clucking about her brood. But sharp-eyed youngsters will quickly notice that the cow is depicted without udders, the horse with antlers, and the brood composed of ducklings. While some may be more subtle, all the errors will be of that order. The lesson or moral of this game presumably is that first impressions can be deceiving; in life, we are urged to take the time to look again, carefully, without expectations or prejudice. Sound advice, and it is precisely what we wish to do here as regards the picture of The Fall presented to us in Genesis.
But just before we do that, let us take a moment to rehearse the scenario for those who may have forgotten the particulars. In the beginning, after having created the heavens and the earth, God planted a Garden in Eden called Paradise, and there He placed Adam and Eve, warning them gently but very specifically (there is no way this incident can be faulted to inadequate or misleading instructions) that they could eat freely of whatever they might find there EXCEPT FOR ONE THING, the so-called forbidden fruit, which they may not even touch, much less eat. The words barely out of God’s mouth, Adam and Eve not only touched the one thing, but they ate it! Now, there was also present in the Garden a serpent (”more subtle than any other creature”) who it was that persuaded Adam and Eve to eat the forbidden one thing. (Actually, to be precise, the serpent persuaded Eve who persuaded Adam.) When God discovered this unhappy turn of events, He punished Adam and Eve, just as He had promised He would. The two were banished from Eden, and sentenced to a variety of ugly consequences known to us now collectively simply as “life”. We are told that, when confronted by God, Adam tried to implicate the Creator Himself (can you imagine such nerve?) by pointing the finger at Eve and noting that, after all, she had been His idea. For her part, Eve blamed the serpent, who apparently did not feel the need, or was denied the opportunity, to defend himself, for he did not speak out on his own behalf. The serpent was nonetheless sentenced to go thenceforth “upon your belly” (suggesting, one supposes, that in the beginning serpents were erect) and to be generally despised by all creation from that day forward.
That is the picture. Now, what’s wrong with it? Well, right off, it is apparent that there are at least two items in the Garden which do not even belong there: the fruit and the serpent. If God did not want Adam and Eve to eat the fruit, why did He put it there? He had an entire Universe in which to hide it from them. And if that was not space enough, He could have created another. Still, if it had to be in Eden (perhaps the tree would not grow in any other soil), then, as every parent knows, the worst thing God could have done was flag it to their attention by forbidding it. To every child’s ear, the words “you can’t have this” sound “I want that”. Had He not mentioned the tree and its fruit, it might have been eons upon epochs before any of us stumbled across it. Or, at the very least, He could have put an insurmountable fence around it.
As for the serpent, practically by definition, Paradise is a place without serpents, certainly venomous or otherwise nefarious serpents. There is no other way for it; the serpent does not belong in this picture. Yet, there it is, and apparently with free run of the garden. Also, why was the serpent created by God to be more subtle (that is, mentally acute, clever, discerning, cunning) even than Adam and Eve? It makes no sense. Can you imagine a parent putting a newly born infant into a playpen with a poisonous snake and a toxic apple, and then leaving it there unattended with no more protection or advice than the warning, “Don’t get bitten and don’t eat the apple”? And then getting angry at the child when it does?
Or, look again at the behavior of Adam and Eve described in this scene: Eve walks over to Adam and says, in effect, “Honey, this nice snake said it’s okay to eat that forbidden fruit God told us never to touch. Have a bite; it’s good”. To which Adam replies, “You mean to tell me you have there in your hand the very one thing God specifically insisted we must neither eat nor handle on pain of exile, a life of endless work and pain, death and eternal hellfire, punishment without end? Sure, I’ll have a bite”.
I mean, really. Why was Adam so dense? Why did Eve not simply step on the snake’s mouth? And, perhaps most confusing, why was God surprised when this disaster just waiting to happen happened? Worse, as we alluded to above, why did He punish mankind, not to mention serpentry, for realizing an event whose potential, nay whose inevitability, was His own making, and which must have been as evidently apparent to Him as it is now to us playing this game? The fact is, this picture has gone beyond the bounds even of our children’s game. It is literally riddled with errors. This cow not only does not have udders, this cow is not a cow.
Now that you and I cannot plead otherwise than shamefully guilty to the charge of treating this cosmic issue with gross disrespect and blatant flippancy, we do well to take momentary refuge in a different, more serious approach to it. Distilling the issue down, the unanswerable question seems to be this: How is it possible that in a Universe created by a Perfect Creator inhabited by beings created by Him and like Him that an event so overwhelmingly reeking of imperfection as The Fall could occur? In a word, how, where nothing could go wrong, did something go wrong?
The orthodox response is that the created beings were provided at birth with freedom of choice, which included the freedom to choose imperfectly, or to choose to be imperfect, which they did. Everything that ensued from that choice for imperfection, or out of that imperfect choice, was caused by it, and we have only to glance at today’s newspaper headlines and obituaries to be reminded of its continuing influence upon us. He warned us, so stop whining. The logic is flawless. Or is it? As in every card game, watch the dealer’s hands closely. Theologically speaking, we may be being dealt a fast shuffle here, and it has something to do with that business about freedom of choice.
Let’s look at that this way. God is Perfect. So perfect, in fact, that when applied to Him, the word is capitalized. Now, instantly I acknowledge that one might fairly argue that that observation about God is arguable. That is, God’s condition or nature, at least as we know it from where we sit now, is far less a matter of fact (or of fact to which we have access) than it is of perspective or paradigm. To my way of thinking, for example, God may be male or female, a warrior or a huntress, a unity, a trinity, or a multiplicity; but to yours, a product let’s say of an entirely different culture, God may be something else altogether. After all, in a very real sense each of us creates God for ourselves, perceives God in our own image or through our own imagination. We see everything, including God, through the only lenses we have, our own. How else could we? But whatever may be our views on the matter, however we describe God, I expect we could agree on this one point: that to be God is to be perfectly whatever God is. After all, that is in part how we differentiate between ourselves as humans and God. We are imperfectly good (or bad, or whatever), whereas God is perfectly good (or bad, or whatever). Thus, the word or label “God” suggests perfection.
Again, while we might disagree over what God is, we could likely agree that whatever He (!) is, He is perfectly that. Even those who are uncertain about other aspects of God’s nature, or about whether or not God as such exists, presumably can agree that whatever God is, or if God is, God must be perfect, or Perfect, to be God. Otherwise, we are not talking about God but about something else. In the same sense, while there are numerous varieties of, let’s say, horses scattered throughout the world, and perhaps just as many uses to which man has put them, everyone who knows horses — whether polo player, railbird, or ploughboy — would surely agree on at least a few basic characteristics common to every horse or which define horse-ness. Thus, to be God is to be Perfect.
Now then, perfect is an adjective which describes a thing in its entirety or in its every aspect. That is, it is a condition. It affects or informs the whole entity so described, and is evident in that entity’s every respect. If something is perfect, there cannot be any aspect or element of it that is not also perfect, and which does not reflect the perfection of the whole. There cannot be a trace or a hint of imperfection to the thing, not even the potential or capability of a trace or a hint.
Otherwise, the thing would not be entirely perfect, and if it is not entirely perfect, then it is not perfect at all. In common speech, we might say that a thing is perfect “except for such and so,” but, like many colloquialisms, although it communicates well enough, that construction will not stand up to the scrutiny of logic. Clearly, it is impossible for a thing to be partly perfect, sort of perfect, more or less perfect; either a thing is perfect or it is not. Additionally, once perfect is always perfect. For a thing to deteriorate from perfection to imperfection the thing has to succumb to the deterioration process. But so long as the thing is perfect, the deterioration process cannot take place, for there will be nowhere that it can take hold, no fertile ground in which to grow. It is impossible to introduce imperfection into a perfect thing. The perfect thing, being perfect, simply cannot be otherwise. It cannot deteriorate to imperfection even should it want to! Thus, once perfect is always perfect.
Similarly, a perfect being can be the cause of only a perfect effect. The creation of a perfect being cannot be other than like itself, perfect. Indeed, wholly perfect. Were it to be otherwise, were the creation to be other than like its creator, then where would the stuff of it have come from? The characteristics of a creation must be the characteristics of its creator. If not, then it is the creation of another. A light bulb can emit only light; it cannot emit darkness. If darkness should issue from a thing, then whatever that thing is, it is not a light bulb. Likewise, a cow cannot give birth to a colt. The natural issue of a cow will always be a calf, and if the issue is other than a calf, then the mother is other than a cow.
Just so, we are told in Genesis that God created man “in His likeness”. Of course He did. How else could He? It could have been no other way, and it was not. The biblical blueprint, “in His likeness”, confirms that. In the beginning, God was Perfect. Being Perfect, He can cause or issue only Perfect effects. Thus, God’s issue is perfect, just as surely as a cow’s is a calf. Like Him. Sharing or reflecting His perfection. The creatures in Eden, Adam and Eve, the issue of God that made the fateful choice for the forbidden fruit, were perfect. They had to be; there is no way they could have been otherwise. So, The Fall could not have been caused by their imperfection because they could not have been imperfect.
But what about the choice itself, their choice for the fruit? A choice is none other than an idea or a thought. Its place of birth and its residence is the mind. It may have apparently external ramifications, as for example if I should choose to upend a water bucket over your head, but the choice itself, the act of choosing — from the initial inception of the idea as a possibility, through the weighing of the pros and cons, to the enabling decision, including the command to the muscles to act and move appropriately — all occurs in the mind and nowhere else. Also, the factors that enter into the choice-making process, the pros and cons, reside solely in the mind, and are of the mind alone. To be sure, they too appear to be external, but they are not.
In the water bucket example, your pleas for mercy and threats of retaliation may seem to me to originate from a source (you) which I ordinarily consider to be beyond or external to my mind, but my consideration of them, even my awareness of them, occurs entirely within the confines of my mind. Indeed, despite the obvious appearances, it is not your pleas and threats that I consider, but my reaction to them, my thoughts or ideas about them, what I think of them. In fact, what I understand to be a plea or a threat may have been intended by you to be neither. But that matters not at all. What matters is what I understand, for that is all that I consider. And all of that is in my mind and never anywhere else. Thus, wherever the presumed stimuli for our thoughts may seem to originate, or even if they can be said actually to have come from anywhere, is ultimately irrelevant. Witness in this context so-called compulsive fears which need have no basis whatsoever in external fact in order to be chillingly real, and literally physically crippling.
The mind considers only what is in the mind and only in the mind does it consider. How could it be otherwise? To answer that, one need only try to shift the locus or site of mental consideration outside the mind. Shall we say across the street? Obviously, it cannot be done. We might say the same thing somewhat differently: the mind considers only what is in it, or only what it already knows. Once again, how could it be otherwise? Try to consider something about which you know absolutely nothing. It cannot be done. We cannot consider anything that is not already in the mind. If we do not already have in our minds the conception of a thing, at least in potentiality, we cannot think about it at all or ever. And the extent to which we can think about it is only as regards those aspects and characteristics of it which are already in our minds. In fact, it is those which we use as the building material for putting together or constructing what seem to us to be new mental images. Thus, a “new” idea is always explained or thought about in the terms of old ideas. In fact, new ideas are really old ideas, or the stuff of old ideas, reshuffled and reshaped.
We cannot put into our minds anything that is not already there. How would we get it in? I fully realize that this concept must seem extraordinary, not to mention absurd, to many, but it is inescapable. Indeed, the confusion over it is the same confusion that exists about the source and intent of our word “educate”. The common explanation is that it stems from the Latin word educare meaning “to bring up, rear, or train”, suggesting a function perhaps better suited to an animal farm than a classroom. On the other hand, the classic teacher would choose the Latin word educere which translates “to bring out or draw forth”, as in, to elicit from within the student what is already there, or to encourage the student to blossom, from the inside out, like a flower. Here school is a garden, there an exercise yard. And it is the one which fosters genius, while the other creates robots.
So, at that fateful, pregnant moment of choice in Genesis, the mind of Adam and Eve, ultimately of mankind, wherein that choice was taken, was perfect. As the issue of God, it had to be perfect. Further, it could not have known imperfection, even as a potential, because there was no imperfection in it, and a mind cannot know what is not in it. Being unable to consider imperfection even as a potential alternative, Adam and Eve could not have made the choice for imperfection which we are told they made, for clearly it is impossible to choose what it is impossible to consider. So, being creations of the Perfect God, they were perfect, and their choice had to have been perfect. But still something went wrong. Could it have been possible that some outside agent (say, a snake) could have convinced or tricked Adam and Eve to imperfection?
Consider that this way. If, as regards the water bucket I now have poised over your head, you plead and threaten in a language I do not understand, there is no way I will grasp what you are trying to communicate, no matter how hard you try (leaving aside other components or forms of language, such as gestures, facial expressions, body movements and the like. To get the feel of this, imagine the conversation as taking place in writing). From the point of view of my mind, and I can have no other point of view, you would not be saying anything intelligible to me, and the practical outcome would be the same as if you were not even speaking. For us to communicate, for me to hear you, I must have already in me the sounds, the concepts, the images, even the values — in a word, the language — that you are using. In this context, the word “hear” is appropriate in both its meanings: not only the current usage which expresses the sharing or exchanging of ideas, but also the biological explanation of the auditory process. If your vocal chords are not designed to the specifications of my eardrums, I will most assuredly not hear you. In this respect, the mind and the eardrums function similarly. The only way I can hear you — again, in both senses of the word — is if you and I can vibrate at the same frequency. It is that resonance which permits, which is, communication.
In a practical sense, this explains, for example, why sometimes we simply cannot bring another to our way of seeing an issue. If our parameters, the blueprint or measure which defines and determines the way we see the thing does not exist in that other’s mind, it does not matter how vehemently we insist, he will not see it our way precisely because he cannot. (Some years ago, while working in a foreign country, I had a colleague who, because he had virtually no command of the local language, had always to conduct business in English. When confronted by visitors who spoke as little English as he did their language, my friend would simply raise his voice, as if increasing the volume could somehow resolve the language barrier!)
Thus, getting back to our attempt at communicating in writing about this water bucket situation, even if you should underline every word, I would still understand none of it. At the very most, I would comprehend no more than that you were intent on something, and even that only if you and I shared an understanding of the function or meaning of underlining. Indeed, if I were from a culture without a written language, I might assume your words were intended to be pictures of some kind. So, it follows that if at Creation Adam and Eve did not know imperfection and could not know imperfection, then neither could an outside agent (again, like a snake) persuade them, either by logic or by trickery, to consider imperfection.
The serpent’s arguments would have been as unintelligible as a foreign language; worse, just so much gibberish. Neither Adam nor Eve could have understood a word the serpent was telling them. They could not hear him! Any suggestion from him or anyone else that they be or act in any manner not in strict consonance with the characteristics of their Creator, characteristics which were also their own (for, as we have seen, He could not have given them any others), would have fallen on their eardrums as if upon a stone wall. In fact, what their ears could not hear and their minds could not consider, their eyes could not see, and for all the same reasons. Come to think of it, if the serpent was in fact unlike Adam and Eve, as it must have been if it was capable of contemplating, much less pushing, imperfection, then too it must have been unlike God. And if it was unlike God, then it could not have been created by God, for reasons which we have already explored. There having been no other creator in the beginning than God, if the serpent was not created by God, it was not created at all. And certainly what was not created could not exist. So much for herpetology!
On reflecting our progress so far, we seem to have proven here that Adam and Eve could not have committed the act which every Sunday school student knows they did commit. To be sure, it is by our own logic that we have cleared our two primeval ancestors which may admittedly be like accepting the not-guilty plea of a fox caught in the henhouse picking his teeth with feathers. But then, remember, like the chicken still in its egg, we have no other choice than to use the means (logic and reasoning) within our reach, and, while conceding the merit of the objection, there is no escaping the conclusion that The Fall, at least as it has been preached and pounded into us over the millennia, could not have happened. After all, what could not happen, could not happen; and therefore did not happen. And yet, clearly something did happen in the Garden of Eden that day. Something important enough to warrant specific reference and relatively lengthy treatment in Genesis.
This much at least is certain: Whatever The Fall was, it was not a fall. It was not a manifestation or an expression of imperfection. That, we have seen, would have been impossible. Also, there is no escaping the conclusion that whatever happened has to have been planned. The Garden, as we have observed, was staged for it; the tree was in place, the serpent was more subtle, and the humans were suckers! Further, accidents do not occur in Paradise any more than imperfection can reside there. In the end, we can conclude that, despite the reports to the contrary, God was neither surprised nor disappointed by it, for it had to have transpired exactly as He had intended. It had to do so: This was Paradise, where God’s Will reigns alone and supreme. If it happened, it had to have been His Will. Everything in the Garden, being a creation of the Perfect God, was perfect, and behaved perfectly. Nothing else was possible.
So, it had all been prearranged by God. The Fall was every bit an aspect of creation as every other aspect of it. Indeed, there is no other satisfactory conclusion than that The Fall was no calamity at all, but a conspiracy, and God the Principal Conspirator. Father wanted us to soil his new suit with half digested oatmeal! Like the circus clown’s threatening water bucket that is revealed at the last terrifying moment to contain not water but harmless confetti, The Fall is a fraud!
No blame, no guilt, no complex.
Everyone is sociable, until a cow comes into
the garden.
Irish proverb
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