DocM
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To me the story of the garden of Eden is a pure allegory and may be uninterpreted on more than one level. But for me, it is about God's love for his creation in allowing individual people to separate themselves out to explore existence. The idea of a divine punishment is, to my mind ridiculous.
In the garden, there is a symbiosis, as there is in heaven. Adam's initial state is one of unity with everything in the garden, and no physical ailment or need. This is much like a description of heaven. God has a plan to allow individual people to explore what it is to be apart from the whole, but he wants them to do it on their own, and in the end, share the experience. Separation is artificial, it is not real, but in the physical world, outside of Eden, it appears to be real. This is suffering. God sets the tree of knowledge in the garden, knowing full well that man will decide to explore this separate existence. I agree with Don, that he rejoices in the decision, even if the deck was stacked.
The tree of knowledge is knowledge of the physical world, and the false dichotomies it contains. So, in some ways, the wisdom of unity before the fall trumps the tree of knowledge in spiritual understanding. But be that as it may, Adam decides, whether seduced by the serpent or not, with his own choice (free will) to eat of the apple.
The idea that man must be banished from the garden lest he eat of the tree of life and live forever is ludicrous. The state of separation when we believe ourselves apart from God, love and the whole is incompatible with Eden. Adam and Eve, by separating consciousness out into individuals banished themselves! In doing so, they created their own consciousness system (earth) and all the suffering that is now in it due to the belief systems that support it. When God mentioned the trials to come, it was simply to state a fact, not to inflict punishment as people misinterpret. The inner heavens have no disease, no pain, and no physical death because they have no concept of separation from God and love.
If it were possible to stay alive indefinitely in a human form, compressed into flesh, without the full ability to grow and manifest with mind, how sad would that be? Darn straight, I would keep my kids away from the tree of life if it maintained the human form forever, as we are meant to learn while in this virtual world on earth, but not to be imprisoned here.
I think it unfortunate that people take the story so literally, though I admit that there can be teaching points about honesty, betrayal, and love to be found, even on that literal level.
M
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