What on Earth were Adam and Eve Thinking?
The Genesis account of the Garden of Eden events is full
of puzzling symbolism. The “original”
humans, Adam and Eve, had a lot to learn, and their curiosity about their
environment is understandable.
At first blush, it seems that God’s instruction to stay
away from the Tree of Knowledge of Good and Evil was meant simply to protect
the fresh new humans from a fatal mistake.
Don’t all new packages that need assembly include obligatory safety
warnings?
The symbolism though is made difficult for us because of
some important details left out of the story.
In what parts of the Garden had Adam and Eve wandered before coming upon
the unique Tree? This particular plant
was not the only plant in the Garden.
The couple had to have already “observed” uncategorized good and evil
and must have wondered what to think of it. God surely knew that putting a “wet
paint” sign on The Tree would invite their curiosity. This would be “leading them into temptation.” Something more than “obedience” is going on
here. God is not the Great Teaser.
So why the restriction?
Genesis tells us that God put a lot of trees in the garden for scenery
and for food. No explanation is given
why one was chosen to be fenced off. Like
all metaphors, the Tree symbol breaks down if pushed too far. We can know this particular plant was a
pseudo tree singled out for the convenience of symbolism, because it wasn’t
like the rest of the trees. We also know
that snakes don’t talk. These are pictorial images set up to make an esoteric
point, but a symbol must have consistency to convey meaning. Without consistency, the message is blurred,
maybe even distorted.
When you think about it (with our God-given brains), the
label “Knowledge of Good and Evil” is self-contradictory and must have confused
Adam and Eve as beginning learners. A
tree that nurtures both good and evil knowledge is a conundrum. A generic plant cannot produce blooms of both
poison and nutrition. If the symbolism holds any whiff of meaning, we should
presume that the truth of the matter is that God wanted these earliest of
children to “know” that life is all that is “good,” and that which is “evil” is
as gaunt as death. In story imagery God
was saying a diet based on toxic fruit leads to starvation. Most of today’s commentators interpret the
story rather as a lesson in obedience and punishment, with layers of guilt,
finger pointing and sexism. Let’s blow the lingering fog away and focus in on
the key point of the story—“knowing” reality.
The untapped depth of meaning nestles here in the word
“know.” The symbolism works only if we
drop the literalism and allow understanding
to whisper to us the truth about “knowingness.” Literalism casts a confounding curtain over
profound knowledge. To see the story of Eden as a drama about rules and
obedience is superficial and does not plumb the deep meaning of “life” and our
relationship to our Creator. Sin and
punishment is not the point here. What
God sought to teach is a lesson about “knowing” reality, wherein is life. Life
is “knowing” what is “good.” Anything else is not-life, is unreality, and thus
is death by default. Evil serves only as an empty contrast.
Adam and Eve had no sense of the distinction between good
and evil. Their understanding was
shallow, but they were anxious to learn.
Eating from the Tree of Knowledge no doubt sounded like a good idea to
them. But monitoring the situation, God stepped
forward to give stern direction. Adam
and Eve thought “tasting” knowledge would do the trick, but there was more at
stake than taste recognition. To “know” evil by taste is to quaff
unreality. And what is unreality but
absence of life. The knowledge of good
is the opposite of knowledge of evil.
We inappropriately infer from the symbolism that God was
telling the new humans that fully rounded knowledge is toxic—that to add
knowledge of evil to knowledge of good spoils the stew. So we think God was telling his new children
to leave “knowing” of good and evil up to Him; that they should stay away from
the Knowledge Tree entirely and not risk death.
Really now; how could this be? How
can good knowledge combine with evil knowledge to kill us? This
image mixture throws us off the scent.
To think the Tree symbolized the good and evil as two
halves of a whole is a blunt misunderstanding. Life can’t be half dead, nor can
death be half alive. To “know” good (real life) is to realize that evil is a big pretender.
Knowing has a taste, but taste is not essence. Taste is mere recognition; it is
not knowledge. God’s warning was a red
flag about the danger of half knowledge.
Sure enough, when Adam and Eve bit into the apple they tasted the wrong
half, the sweat and tears part of real life’s opposite. They thought they now knew reality, but it
was pretend reality. They hadn’t
“learned” anything. God was right; they
swallowed life’s impostor.
Before eating of the Tree, Adam and Eve had been in a
fog. Biting the apple did not clear
things up. Bystanders can "recognize" both
good and evil as these two things parade by, but to “know” both is a contradiction. God did not say the knowledge of these
polarized perceptions sits together in the Tree’s foliage (or waves at us from
the same parade float). Deep
understanding is to imbibe the reality of one or the other. To “know”
goodness is to be energized with life; to “know” evil is to hitch on to death—hence
God’s predictive warning. To “know” is to join in, which gives credibility to
what you choose. If evil is nothingness
and non-life, then to give it countenance is to shut the door on life and all
that is good.
There was more at stake that day in Eden than whether or
not Adam and Eve would disobey God and be judged as sinners for it. It appears that the knowledge they bit into
gave them a taste of eternal unreality,
a taste they could not get out of their mouths. That is why God said they would
die if they tried to taste (know) evil. Jesus would tell us later that God wants us to
“know” goodness (reality). But we have to be “born”
again, which means disposing of false life. We need to start over with the
awareness that Adam and Eve impulsively forfeited. And
the wonder of it is that Jesus said we could have it for the asking. There is
no need to climb a ladder and dislodge the fruit from its stem.
For the story to have truth, the symbolism must make
sense. Adam and Eve’s punishment for
defying God’s warning was not judgment for sinning; it was the simple consequence
of following bad advice. Here is where
Satan introduced himself and said hello.
Enter stage right—a talking snake.
In symbolic guise Satan brushed aside God’s warning with a “sleight of
hand.” The serpent claimed that real “knowing”
could be had by harmless tasting. Yes, a nibble of this shrub would provide a
distinct taste, but taste is not knowledge.
The bad result of Adam and Eve’s impetuous acceptance of Satan’s counsel
was not literal death. It was simply
the natural payoff one can expect from any scam—unending floundering in a haze
of unreality.
If you were wondering why Adam and Eve did not die on the
spot as God had threatened, it is because God was talking about death to
reality, not physical death. This is the
problem with schoolbook “literalism.”
Looking for the deep meaning of the Genesis story in the images of trees
and apples and words like “sin” and “punishment” leaves actual parts of the
account unexplained. Adam and Eve did
not literally, physically die as punishment for sinning. They lived on to toil for a living and
progenerate unreality.
“Sinning” supplies
its own self-punishment. Remember Cain
and how God let him off the hook too? Today’s style of capital punishment is to kill
murderers as if we are God’s executioners.
God just put Cain under protective custody. The Old Testament is a
wearying narrative of God’s people making the same mistake that Adam and Eve
pioneered. “Judgment” is not a juridical
mechanism; it is a rendering of to-be-expected consequences. In deeper reality, God is a God of mercy; and
the Divine message to us sprinkled amidst the slide-rule literalism of the Old
Testament is that open-eyed reality is not translatable in leaden symbols. Mercifully, Jesus later arrived (in recorded
history) as the Great Realist with God’s Word about “knowing” forgiveness as
the antidote for addiction to the taste of bad apples.
Adam and Eve’s lunch break gained them nothing. What they found out by taking “learning” upon
themselves was that self-guided searching results only in frustration and
confusion, as God had warned them. All
their descendants—you and I together—experience the taste of false
understanding the same way. That’s what
makes myth so true. Whether Adam and Eve
were the original first humans or just a story, doesn’t matter. We all are divine images created to know the
life of goodness.
In essence God’s command about Garden protocol was
instruction on what happens if one “falls” for a scam. Whether they learned the lesson personally we
don’t know. But the Old Testament is a
narration of God’s people making the same mistake ad nauseum.
The Good News lost in the static of storytelling is that
tasting the bad fruit does not separate us from our image as Divine prototypes.
The best part of the whole story is the genius of the Author’s plot. The shame is how we continue Adam and Eve’s
reaction of pointing at each other the finger of blame for the mess up. It is
hard to understand that guilt is not in Reality’s dictionary. This particular
Tree was in God’s Created Garden, and God expected Adam and Eve to encounter
it. It was almost like a set-up, but we can
expect that these “first” humans were divinely wired from the start to handle
evil’s appearance on the scene. If not,
God is either sinister or bungled the start-up. If you want knowledge about symbolism’s
truth, drink “water,” don’t eat bad apples. The water of life is all around in
the symbolic Garden of creation and it is free.
The food of good, healthy life doesn’t come from stale, expensive, apple
shaped bottles of water hanging on trees.
[I realize this blog is getting too long, but don’t quit
yet—just two more paragraphs. The ending
is upbeat and puts it all together. I
did not want to cut it.]
With full exposure to the meaning of good and evil we can
see in the “story” how God’s plan developed.
What the Creator had in mind for the Garden was a pair of Beings who,
like Godself, could recognize goodness instinctively without a rule book at
hand—Beings who could assemble life
without instructions (in three languages).
Instinct is not senseless; it
can smell bad apples at a distance. God
wanted Adam and Eve to “learn” good instincts.
If God had sent a couple of angels to new Eden for rest and relaxation,
I expect the Tree would have been no temptation for them because angels
apparently don’t have ideas of their own.
Curiosity and the golden gift of “free will” is not part of their makeup. In God’s presence angels are “under orders,”
like a grown up child who never leaves home. How satisfying is that to a
parent? God ap-parently does not find
the kind of “communion” with angels that can be experienced in common with divinely
created human “children.”
In all reasonable likelihood, God’s gift of a learning
opportunity for the two “first humans” was not about learning the rules, but
about how to stay alive, i.e., how to “know” life. God did not say we are better off without
knowledge. The message of Eden is that knowledge is not channeled through the
tongue. To “taste” evil is to learn nothing about “real” life. The Tree’s fruit has a nasty bite and teaches
nothing about the goodness of reality. The Tree was not about the discoveries
of good and bad taste, but about “knowing” reality and how to live. Sinning (tasting bad apples) does not teach
us anything about God, it leads only to the experience of literal insanity.
We can’t claim ignorance of the Good News any longer. The symbolism of the Garden and the Tree of
Knowledge should be understandable by now.
Doug Good
Doug Good
Labels: Adam and Eve, Capital Punishment, Garden of Eden, Jesus, literalism, Symbolism, Temptation, Tree of Knowledge of Good and Evil
