Brian2
Veteran Member
I agree that if Adam and Eve didn’t know good from evil, partaking of the fruit could not have been considered sin. I think God forbad them to partake of the fruit in the sense that it would have consequences (of mortality/death)—maybe called a transgression (breaking of a law), rather than a sin (deliberate rebellion—as stated in James 4:17: “Therefore to him that knoweth to do good, and doeth it not, to him it is sin”).
They knew they were going against the command of God, whether they knew to call that evil or not does not matter. They knew it was evil after eating the fruit and they suffered the consequences.
I see God’s motivation not in preventing Adam and Eve from partaking of the fruit, but having a far greater plan in mind. If you assume that 1) we are God’s literal spirit children, 2) that His work and His glory is “to bring to pass the immortality (resurrection) and eternal life (exaltation/returning to live with God again) of man”*, then it makes sense that God would create a plan that would enable us to become the kind of people that would be worthy of living in his presence, i.e. without sin. If Adam and Eve (or us as well, if you think they could have procreated there in an innocent state) were to have stayed in the garden, they/we never would have experienced good and evil, and proven them/ourselves capable of and willing to choose the good or over the evil (or to repent when we sin/choose evil, and have it wiped away through Christ’s atonement). Yet, God being who He is (i.e. goodness), He cannot create evil—and so Satan is introduced/allowed into the garden (probably thinking that he is foiling God‘s plan) in order to create a dichotomy where Adam and Eve can either stay innocent and never progress, or have the choice to learn and progress, and become as God would have them be/reach their true potential. I see this as God’s motivation for allowing Adam and Eve the choice to partake of the fruit.
God seemed to have a bigger motivation than just us humans. The angels were at least beginning to rebel at that stage it seems and God was dealing with evil once and for all.
We do not know what would have happened had they not eaten. God may have been teaching them about good and evil with that tree without them actually experiencing what evil is.
The angels seemed to have known about good and evil without having sinned if Gen 3:22 is anything to go by.
But of course I believe tells me the only human to have come down to earth is Jesus and so there was no life with God before this human life and we are not here to grow further and so even if there may well be a better end to our story, with us becoming adopted children of God and growing into the image of Jesus,,,,,,,,,,we were first made in God's image and turned from it for the sake of gain and so it is really a journey back to what humans were, in that respect, instead of a journey forward to something better.
God placed an angel in front of the Tree of Life after they partook of the fruit (thereby entering a sinful state) so that they could not partake of the fruit of the tree of life, thereby living forever in their sinful state and without the possibility of returning to live with God.
*Pearl of Great Price, Moses 1:39
I believe the angel was placed there so that man would actually die physically and not live forever sinning continually.
What you said in that last paragraph seems contradictory to what you said before. Did they sin and end up in a sinful state or not?