juantoo3
....whys guy.... ʎʇıɹoɥʇnɐ uoıʇsǝnb
Some good answers, all. I haven't a lot of time.
I think some interpretation hinges upon whether the serpent is viewed as a corporeal entity or not, and whether or not he was acting as some agent of evil.
First, the cave paintings at Lascaux and many other places suggest there were humans here long before Adam and Eve...either that or Adam and Eve are much older than is usually suggested.
Second, if I understand correctly, the Jewish interpretation of the "Accuser," the one Christians call the devil, was not an agent of evil but a sort of "district attorney" for G-d. So I am not certain of any connection with "ha-Satan" and the serpent.
Having said that, I am inclined to believe the serpent was a corporeal entity, and that he seduced Eve. Later, when she was in childbirth, she "continued" in labor bearing twin sons...by different fathers. Adam of course sired Abel, and the serpent whose surname is lost to us sired Cain. Consider that Cain's name is omitted from Adam's geneology, and Cain took a wife from another land (there were other peoples and tribes alive at the time).
I do think that Adam and Eve were a "transplant" of sorts, or were in some way a special creation of humans. I think the whole "fruit of the tree of knowledge" episode denotes a period when their minds were opened into a deeper consciousness than "animals," including other humans, were capable of at that time. I think this episode also notes mythologically the advent of agriculture, because Adam became a farmer. I have found material that suggests a diet of grain chemically alters the mind.
So I think there is a lot of symbolism and mythology, but at the core I also think there likely was some "couple" that either by accident or design stumbled through a door of consciousness, and this is an early (tribal) way of describing the event. It is also the beginning of the Biblical narrative in that as the story develops, the whole Bible is about the family(s) of Adam and Eve.
I think some interpretation hinges upon whether the serpent is viewed as a corporeal entity or not, and whether or not he was acting as some agent of evil.
First, the cave paintings at Lascaux and many other places suggest there were humans here long before Adam and Eve...either that or Adam and Eve are much older than is usually suggested.
Second, if I understand correctly, the Jewish interpretation of the "Accuser," the one Christians call the devil, was not an agent of evil but a sort of "district attorney" for G-d. So I am not certain of any connection with "ha-Satan" and the serpent.
Having said that, I am inclined to believe the serpent was a corporeal entity, and that he seduced Eve. Later, when she was in childbirth, she "continued" in labor bearing twin sons...by different fathers. Adam of course sired Abel, and the serpent whose surname is lost to us sired Cain. Consider that Cain's name is omitted from Adam's geneology, and Cain took a wife from another land (there were other peoples and tribes alive at the time).
I do think that Adam and Eve were a "transplant" of sorts, or were in some way a special creation of humans. I think the whole "fruit of the tree of knowledge" episode denotes a period when their minds were opened into a deeper consciousness than "animals," including other humans, were capable of at that time. I think this episode also notes mythologically the advent of agriculture, because Adam became a farmer. I have found material that suggests a diet of grain chemically alters the mind.
So I think there is a lot of symbolism and mythology, but at the core I also think there likely was some "couple" that either by accident or design stumbled through a door of consciousness, and this is an early (tribal) way of describing the event. It is also the beginning of the Biblical narrative in that as the story develops, the whole Bible is about the family(s) of Adam and Eve.