itwillend said:
In the beginning, Adam and Eve were naked and it was not a problem. Was it God's intent for us to be naked?
Yes, and no. We were made naked because we didn't need protection.
Good question. I suppose we'll never know since the account isn't that detailed.
Being insecure about one's appearance is extremely common. Clothes can hide flaws.
It... doesn't?
Sorry, I mean, I can't really think of writing an entire paragraph on being ashamed of one's physical flaws. Seems pretty straight foward to me.
Were not Adam and Eve in their youth? The Fall had not yet occurred so were their bodies not perfection? They had no imperfections to hide. When they ate the fruit of the Tree of Knowledge of Good and Evil, they became aware of thier nakedness. Christians don't go about naked because that would be sinful. Thus, the first couple, covered themselves in God's presence because they became aware of the sin of being naked in public. Perhaps in the privacy of their hut they would have no problem being naked.
In reality stone age people in warm climates (at least those anthropologists studied) had no concerns about being naked in public; whether their bodies were flawed was irrelevant. They accepted their bodies as is. The sudden concern with nakedness shown by Adam and Eve is really a reflection of Jewish cultural mores at the time the story was written.
"Being insecure about one's appearance is extremely common," you said, but this is not true in every culture. It was not true among the primitive stone age peoples photographed in
National Geographic and it is not true of nudists. "Seems pretty straight foward to me," you concluded, but it really is not straight forward at all. Being self conscious of our bodies is something that is culturally learned . Nudists and primitive people (who go about naked all the time) are proof that it is not normal human nature to show the timidity about nakedness that Adam and Eve displayed after eating the apple. The moral of the story is that there is something wrong with being naked when you go walking about. This is proof, it seems to me, that this is a cultural tale that reflects the values of the Jewish writer who composed this story. Adam and Eve were reflecting the values of the culture that created this story. And the story explains why people (actually, Jewish people) feel self-conscious about being naked. That is what myths do, they explain the reasons for things.
If two magical trees and a talking snake are not enough to convince you that this story is not a representation of actual events then the false claims it seems to make about our feelings regarding nakedness should give a bit more for a person to chew on.