It looks like you're using an Ad Blocker.
Please white-list or disable AboveTopSecret.com in your ad-blocking tool.
Thank you.
Some features of ATS will be disabled while you continue to use an ad-blocker.
Originally posted by Valhall
I call it a perfect gift...and the recipients less than perfect.
Originally posted by tututkamen
According to legend, God created all then Adam, he wanted company and God willed it. Now did God give us free will or did Eve exercise it?
For Gods restriction was not to eat the fruit of one particular tree of knowledge. Thus not allowing us free will, our will was to be subservient to his will [ie; "thine will be done here on earth as it is in heaven"]
Therefore God did not give us free will. Eve, Adams desire and gift, exersized free will.
Originally posted by Valhall
I agree that there may have been freewill involved in Adam's decision, however this disobeying of God's DIRECT commandment cannot be classified as such.
Here is why I make these two seemingly contradictory statements: 1.) To take the fruit (temptation in the matter does not figure into this part) in direct violation of commandment given by God to Adam is pure disobedience. This is equivalent to that of the disobience of fallen angels. 2.) But this must have been driven by something else. When Eve came to Adam, and tempted him with the "false knowledge" she had acquired, there must have been some doubt (read - lack of faith) in Adam concerning the powers of God; concerning the role of God relative to Adam's life. There could be no question of the EXISTENCE of God...Adam conversed freely with - had communion with - HIM. But, in this instance there must have been a doubt (fueled by Adam's pride) of what powers God truly engulfs.
For this reason, I believe we are both correct, in this we see the first act of free-will, and the first HUMAN act (at least in our age) of disobedience...but appears that the act of negative exorcising of free-will is the most contagious...hmmmm.
Originally posted by Seekerof
First off define 'free will'/choice. Then define 'rightness' and wrongness'. Then ask yourself, is there an actual 'rightness' or wrongeness' in relation to 'freewill'/choice?
__________________________________________________________________________________________
I do believe I asked first Valhall.
regards
seekerof
[Edited on 2-7-2003 by Seekerof]
Originally posted by Valhall
Okay, you're not helping me out any. See, my point in asking you to state YOUR definition is to avoid an argue, and further a debate.
So I'm going to state what I interpret YOUR definition of freewill to be:
The power of choice.
Am I clear so far on how you are using the term?
Originally posted by MaskedAvatar
Following unserpentine logic:
Adam found an appendage that seemed to insert itself quite well in Eve's orifice.
Why did the Almighty Creator Of All Things Good provide an appendage, an orifice, and a snake to make things add up?
Who was the evil one?
The Almighty Creator Of All Things Good, or the very observant and creative snake/engineer?
Originally posted by Seekerof
Originally posted by Valhall
Okay, you're not helping me out any. See, my point in asking you to state YOUR definition is to avoid an argue, and further a debate.
So I'm going to state what I interpret YOUR definition of freewill to be:
The power of choice.
Am I clear so far on how you are using the term?
Here's how I see this whole thing:
Adam and Eve --- the mythical names we have given to represent first Man and first Woman --- were, in my opinion, the Father and Mother of the human experience.
What has been described as the Fall of Adam was actually, in my opinion, his actual upliftment --- the greatest single event in the history of humankind. Why? For without it, the world or relativity would not exist. The act of Adam and Eve was not original sin, but, in truth, the first blessing. I thank them from the bottom of my heart. Why? Cause I know those eyebrows are raising. For in being the first to make a 'wrong' choice, Adam and Eve produced the possibility of making any choice at all.
regards
seekerof