Genecystic God: The Source of Evil, Lies and Hypocrisy
If God is Christian then he is the creator of and responsible for all Evil and for allowing it to continue to exist.
'Free Choice' you say?
How can we have free choice when we are not free to decide between Good and Evil, you might ask?
I'll tell you why the ability to have free choice instilled in humanity has no bearing whatsoever and is not required to have in any way, the choice of Evil.
I've heard numerous Christians employ just such an argument, in favour of the existence of Evil. They would say things such as "What is there to choose between if not Good and Evil?" I don't see how they cannot see the obvious fallaciousness of this flimsy, tired excuse for an argument. Perhaps they are drinking too much from the Holy Grail.
Let's consider free choice apart from any Good vs. Evil constriction.
How can we exercise a free choice? Ok. Hmm. I wake up in the morning and I go to have some breakfast, and freely choose Reese's Peanut Butter Puffs over Raisin Bran. Is Raisin Bran Evil? Some may figuratively consider it as such, but consensus would tell us that no, Raisin Bran is not Evil; it is just a brand of cereal. I could easily extend this choice to as many brands of cereal that I might have available for breakfast, numbering easily into dozens.
Does this begin to bring light on the situation with respect to Good, Evil and free choice? If not, I'll spell it the fuck out then.
Evil is not necessary in order to have "free choice."
Read it again. Until you understand why. Analogize with breakfast choices.
Why is Evil one of the choices?
We can freely choose between myriad options. The overwhelming majority of that free choosing that we can do is between various actions innocuous to our soul's judgment. Most of the choosing we do has no bearing on our fate in Heaven or Hell. Whether I choose Corn Flakes or Rice Krispies cannot fathomably render us in need of atonement now can it?
If you doubt this claim, just consider all the choices we must make each day. There are literally thousands. When to wake, what to wear, when and how much to clean ourselves, what to read, what music to hear - all these things and more comprise the bulk of our freedom in choosing.
So then, is Evil necessary for humanity to have the ability to freely choose?
Absolutely not.
Freedom of Choice is exercised between perceived options. Period.
Now it is clear that free choice does not necessitate the existence of Evil. Why then does Evil exist at all?
Perhaps we should digress then, and attempt to first define "Evil"
The common lexicon shows us these as defining Evil:
–adjective 1. morally wrong or bad; immoral; wicked: Evil deeds; an Evil life. 2. harmful; injurious: Evil laws. 3. characterized or accompanied by misfortune or suffering; unfortunate; disastrous: to be fallen on Evil days. 4. due to actual or imputed bad conduct or character: an Evil reputation. 5. marked by anger, irritability, irascibility, etc.: He is known for his Evil disposition. 6. Characterized by anger or spite; malicious: an Evil temper.
–noun 1. that which is Evil; Evil quality, intention, or conduct: to choose the lesser of two Evils. 2. the force in nature that governs and gives rise to wickedness and sin. 3. An Evil force, power, or personification. 4. That which causes harm, misfortune, or destruction: a leader's power to do both Good and Evil. 5. Something that is a cause or source of suffering, injury, or destruction: the social Evils of poverty and injustice. 6. the wicked or immoral part of someone or something: The Evil in his nature has destroyed the Good. 7. harm; mischief; misfortune: to wish one Evil. 8. anything causing injury or harm: Tobacco is considered by some to be an Evil. 9. a harmful aspect, effect, or consequence: the Evils of alcohol. 10. a disease, as king's Evil.
Most all of the words used to describe Evil are merely vague synonyms for Evil: wrong, bad, immoral, wicked, sin, harm.
Focusing only on the noun Evil, we see some few distinctions.
In the least sinister sense, Evil is seen as an outside objects that are passive against humanity, i.e. which have no force to act upon us: tobacco, alcohol etc.
Moving from an object being Evil in and of itself, the breadth of Evil then encompasses outside, active agents which do have force upon us: misfortune, destruction, injury, disease.
Now more sinisterally and perhaps poignantly, Evil also includes human intent or emotion/state: anger, irritability, irascibility, immoral, wicked, harmful, bad, anger, spite, maliciousness, injustice. The definition of Evil extends from without to include from within, humanity. Evil does not just exist outside of humanity, it is considered to come from within humanity as well. The saddling of humanity with the Original Sin lays claim to explain such failings.
Since what is exactly bad or immoral is subjective, so far, this digression has led nowhere. The only thing collectively purloined from the definition of Evil is succinctly: "things we don't like."
Most malevolently, Evil is considered as an outside, active force at total odds with Good, separated entirely from humanity, yet acting upon it. Evil of this nature is often personified because of humanity's inclination to anthropomorphize. Evil personified is The Devil; Lucifer; Satan.
What then is the Source of Evil, this entity which may be coming from within us or coming from some outer, malevolent, powerful entity? Has the title of this post given that away?
Since all three major Abrahamic religions, Judaism, Christianity and Islam, all begin with the Hebrew scriptures, let's look to Genesis (King James Version) for clarification on what constitutes Evil:
Genesis 1:25 And God made the beasts of the earth after its kind, and cattle after their kind, and all creepers upon the earth after their kind. And God saw that it was good.
Of course the beasts of the earth include serpents. Did God see even the serpents as Good? Hold that thought till further down.
Genesis 1:26 And God said, Let Us make man in Our image, after Our likeness. And let them have dominion over the fish of the sea, and over the fowl of the heavens, and over the cattle, and over all the earth, and over all the creepers creeping on the earth. Genesis 1:27 And God created man in His image; in the image of God He created him. He created them male and female. Genesis 1:28 And God blessed them. And God said to them, Be fruitful, and multiply and fill the earth, and subdue it. And have dominion over the fish of the sea and over the fowl of the heavens, and all animals that move upon the earth.
Does man having dominion over these beasts imply somehow that these beasts can deceive/persuade us? Dominion means rule; control; domination. Is it possible then logically that any beast would have the ability to control man? Again, hold this thought too till further down and I will conflate these and other indications of the Source and Nature of Evil.
Genesis 1:29 And God said, Behold! I have given you every herb seeding seed which is upon the face of all the earth, and every tree in which is the fruit of a tree seeding seed; to you it shall be for food. Genesis 1:30 And to every beast of the earth, and to every fowl of the heavens, and to every creeper on the earth which has in it a living soul every green plant is for food; and it was so.
Tangentially, it seems God is espousing vegetarianism here plainly by the fact that he calls plants food and does not call animals food. By contrast, animals, like humans are said to have a soul.
Genesis 2:9 And out of the ground the LORD God caused to grow every tree that is pleasant to the sight, and good for food. The tree of life also was in the middle of the garden, and the tree of knowledge of Good and Evil.
...
Genesis 2:15 And the LORD God took the man and put him into the garden of Eden to work it and keep it. Genesis 2:16 And the LORD God commanded the man, saying, You may freely eat of every tree in the garden, Genesis 2:17 but you shall not eat of the tree of knowledge of Good and Evil. For in the day that you eat of it you shall surely die.
Let it not go unnoticed here the blatant contradiction of the statement implied by 2:16/2:17, also contradiction 1:29 from above.
"you may freely eat of every tree...you shall not eat of the tree of knowledge of Good and Evil"
One cannot both freely eat of every tree and not freely eat of every tree. The former excludes the latter - if the second stipulation is maintained, i.e. eating from the forbidden tree, then the first declaration is invalid and useless.
Secondarily, why might this Tree of Knowledge of Good and Evil have been put there in the first place? A temptation? Which biblical character is most often associated with temptation? Do you see where I'm going with this? I'll tie this notion down more firmly after I continue with a few more quotes from Genesis.
Suffice it to say, at least insofar as Adam's choices, there was but ONE "bad" choice and the entirety of the rest of his choices were merely between various "good" things.
Continuing with excerpts from Genesis in order to further implicate God as the true source of Evil:
Genesis 3:1 Now the serpent was more cunning than any beast of the field which the LORD God had made. And he said to the woman, Is it so that God has said, You shall not eat of every tree of the garden? Genesis 3:2 And the woman said to the serpent, We may eat of the fruit of the trees of the garden. Genesis 3:3 But of the fruit of the tree which is in the middle of the garden, God has said, You shall not eat of it, neither shall you touch it, lest you die.
Now it has become known that God has personally placed not only just a single, forbidden temptation in this Garden of Eden, but even more dangerously, he has placed a tempter - The Serpent. I guess the test wasn't adequate enough that Adam and Eve only had to resist one forbidden choice. They now are subject to an influencer who God put in his own Garden of Eden, a persuader whose first and only inclination was to convince Eve to do the one forbidden choice.
Genesis 3:4 And the serpent said to the woman, You shall not surely die, Genesis 3:5 for God knows that in the day you eat of it, then your eyes shall be opened, and you shall be as gods, knowing Good and Evil.
Let us pay particular attention to these statements by The Serpent. The Serpent, who very recently was placed in this Garden of Eden, as per 1:25 cited above, has more knowledge regarding this Tree of Good and Evil than does Eve.
How did a lowly serpent become privy to such ideas and inclinations to persuade against God... a serpent whom is ostensibly under the control, under the dominion of man?
Let us also analyze the veracity of The Serpent. The Serpent boldly tells Eve that if she did eat from that tree, she "shall surely NOT die" - in TOTAL negation of God's prediction in 2:17: "you shall surely die." We'll find out soon who was telling the truth, God or the Serpent. The Serpent then adds some very peculiar details. The Serpent claims to know what is in God's mind regarding this Tree. The Serpent proclaims possessing this knowledge, knowledge to which Eve was not yet privy, they "shall be as gods, knowing Good and Evil." This means that it is a both a requirement and a fulfillment of being a god to have knowledge of Good and Evil, according to The Serpent.
The Serpent tells the same story as God, insofar as what the Tree contains and that consuming it will result in them possessing knowledge of Good and Evil. The Serpent adds one more claim, an even BOLDER claim - that knowing of Good and Evil will make them as gods. This indicates a possible multiplicity of gods and more glorious perhaps even, that anyone can attain it by merely consuming from that one Tree, the one choice God had forbidden. Did not God already say, though, in 1:26 and 1:27 that man was to be made, by His own hand, in his own image? Of course he did. It's cited above.
Did God lie when He said that man was made in His image? Why would making man in his own image include an ignorant, superficial, less powerful, less knowledgeable image?
We'll see further down how and if God corroborates anything else of what The Serpent has claimed.
Genesis 3:6 And when the woman saw that the tree was good for food, and that it was pleasing to the eyes, and a tree to be desired to make wise, she took of its fruit, and ate. She also gave to her husband with her, and he ate.
So mere suggestion to flout God's ONLY forbidden "choice" Eve was easily, gullibly persuaded by a beast that was under her own dominion, according to God in 1:26 and 1:28, cited above. Did God lie about this dominion because this dominion was easily circumvented by its dominioned, i.e. the beasts, i.e. The Serpent?
Keep this notion of who was lying and who was Knot, till further down, for results.
Also, the Tree made by God and placed by God was "pleasing to the eyes" and its fruit was edible. Another, further temptation for man to act against God - a temptation, like The Serpent and like the Tree's existence itself, placed there by God himself! God could not stick with his first assertion that Adam and Eve were free to harvest from any tree. He decided, for some mysterious reason, to place a tree that if harvested, would render the consumer apprised of what is Good and what is Evil. It should be stressed here that aside from eating of this tree, there was nothing else made explicit from which Adam and Eve were forbidden. Nothing. God placed it there for His own unfathomable reason - or perhaps He had no choice! It wasn't enough for God to give His creation choices limited only to Good. He placed one Evil (bad; forbidden) choice amongst the infinite Good choices - The Tree of Knowledge of Good and Evil.
Summarily for this point, it is implied then that it is Evil to be aware of what Evil is!
Why did God not want man to have knowledge of Good and Evil? If it were so dangerous and malevolent, why should He place the Tree there to begin with? Why place beasts in the Garden of Eden who are able to easily persuade their own ignorant rulers against His orders? Furthermore, why the fuck make the tree aesthetically pleasing? Tripartite temptations here. A test then? It sounds rather specious to consider that God would place a test upon man, with multiple temptations to renounce Him, and not even tell man he was being tested. God only told them that they would die if they were to eat from it.
Irregardless, let's see who lied and who died:
Genesis 3:7 And the eyes of both of them were opened. And they knew that they were naked. And they sewed fig leaves together and made girdles for themselves.
The Serpent was correct at least in that their eyes would be opened. This led to their realization that they were naked, i.e. lacking clothes to cover themselves. Knowing they are unclothed has now made them compelled to be clothed? The underlying assertion here is that there is some compelling reason now to cover themselves, knowing that they are naked. why should anyone feel compelled to wear coverings after realizing they didn't have any coverings, merely by learning that coverings are things which could be done? This newfound knowledge seems to imply to them also somehow that they should be ashamed to be without garments. Is it Evil to wear garments? Is the Evil in the shame of nakedness which compels man to clothe himself? I'd think the weather and protection of vitals would also factor into this equation. What made Adam and Eve ashamed merely by learning that there were such things as coverings for their bodies? Or was it the shame of their own body that they learned, precipitating the compulsion to clothe, to cover themselves up? Consensus would tell us that there is nothing outwardly "bad" about nudity. Most people realize this. So that leaves us with the only choice that the Evil associated with this issue of clothing themselves must have been borne out of erroneous knowledge, information which told them they ought to be ashamed of being naked.
So this ominous Tree that God Himself placed in His Garden of Eden was in fact edible but seems to contain knowledge which is erroneous, i.e. lies. Something from that consumption of that Tree immediately made Adam and Eve aware that they ought to be ashamed to be naked. Whatever mode by which they acquired this notion from that Tree is irrelevant to the fact that they did in fact get imparted this notion of shame/nudity immediately after consuming from this forbidden Tree. The notion that nudity ought to cause shame was and is a lie.
Why would God put a Tree of Lies & Temptations in his Garden of Eden but deceptively and even attractively call it the Tree of Knowledge of Good and Evil? This first piece of knowledge that Adam and Eve learned from this forbidden Tree was a lie. Lies do not fit under the heading “Knowledge of Good and Evil.” Knowledge of what is Good and what is Evil is only an exposure to what is Good and Evil and a distinguishment between Good and Evil. The title of this Tree does not imply that the first or any knowledge gleaned therein would necessarily be erroneous. Knowledge implies Truth.
Were it called simply The Tree of Good and Evil, then one could expect it to be spouting all manner of lies and truths. But it wasn’t. It was called the Tree of Knowledge of Good and Evil.
Knowledge = facts.
When we consult a book of knowledge do we expect it to be full of errors and outright lies? Of course we don’t. We expect it to be attempting to approximate the Truth.
God put a Tree of Knowledge whose first effect on humanity was to instill a notion that they ought to be ashamed to be naked – a lie. If God had told Adam and Eve beforehand the Truth that the Tree of Knowledge of Good and Evil was actually a misnomer and that this Tree would cause man to believe deceptions, to believe lies, then Adam and Eve would have had much more incentive against using this Tree for any purpose.
Shrouded now in shame of their nudity, a notion imparted by this Tree of Lies, Genesis continues with Adam and Eve:
Genesis 3:8 And they heard the voice of the LORD God walking in the garden in the cool of the day. And Adam and his wife hid themselves from the presence of the LORD God in the middle of the trees of the garden. Genesis 3:9 And the LORD God called to Adam and said to him, Where are you? Genesis 3:10 And he said, I heard Your voice in the garden, and I was afraid, because I am naked, and I hid myself.
This confirms the earlier assertion that the wearing of clothing was only to cover up the body from others' view because it was learned to be somehow shameful to do as such, from the Tree of Knowledge of Good and Evil.
Perhaps the Tree of Temptations & Lies would be a more appropriate moniker?
Genesis 3:11 And He said, Who told you that you were naked? Have you eaten of the tree which I commanded you that you should not eat? Genesis 3:12 And the man said, The woman whom You gave to be with me, she gave me of the tree, and I ate.
Tangentially, God appears to not even know what Adam and Eve have been up to in the Garden of Eden or to whom they have spoken, although this does indicate that there was in fact someone whom He knew (The Serpent?) who had knowledge of this nakedness/shame issue which Adam and Eve only learned by eating from the forbidden Tree.
It seems God isn't all knowing - either that or again, God lied.
Moreover, had some beasts then also been given this opportunity, this test of God's will, to not consume from this Tree, and also failed? Otherwise why would He ask them “who” told them they were naked? The Bible does not describe any person who may have been privy to any knowledge outside of Adam and Eve, though it clearly shows The Serpent was privy to some such information. God seemed to suspect that there was someone capable of enlightening them about the nakedness/shame issue aside from getting that information from the Tree. He must have been suspecting the only other character introduced, the character whose only purpose in the story was to persuade Adam and Eve that consuming from the Tree of Knowledge of Good and Evil would open their eyes to the knowledge of Good and Evil and make them as gods in so doing.
Genesis 3:13 And the LORD God said to the woman, What is this you have done? And the woman said, The serpent deceived me, and I ate.
How does Eve yet know she was even deceived? So convincing was this erroneous notion of shame to this gullible Dominatrix of beasts, Eve, that she and Adam immediately saw the plausibility in having shame and moved to clothe themselves. Yet now, in merely being questioned by God why she did what he forbid, she only states that she was "deceived" by The Serpent.
What deception has she realized? What new information has she learned that helps her to understand that she was deceived? The Serpent made three simple claims.
The first was that she surely would not die. This claim was valid, as Eve was still alive and now talking to God (This points out that GOD LIED in fact when he said that they would "surely die" if they ate from that Tree. They did not die. God made a mistake?). So Eve was not deceived by this claim - this claim was true.
The second claim by The Serpent was that their eyes "would be opened" to Good and Evil. This claim was confirmed in the narrative in Gen 3:7, cited above. Their eyes were in fact opened to Good and Evil. So Eve was not deceived by this claim either - this claim was also true.
The third claim made by the Serpent, the boldest claim of the three, regarding the consumption from the Tree of Knowledge of Good and Evil, was that in learning of this knowledge of Good and Evil they would become as gods. Does God also corroborate this third, bold assertion by The Serpent? He sure does:
Genesis 3:22 And the LORD God said, Behold, the man has become as one of us, to know Good and Evil. (This verse was truncated leaving only the first, relevant portion. The entire verse is cited below in wider context)
God Himself confirms that The Serpent's third claim was also true, making unanimous the veracity of The Serpent!
Was Eve lying about being deceived by The Serpent? Either Eve was lying, or she suspected that The Serpent had lied with no call to suspect it. Perhaps her fear of God’s wrath inclined her to lie about The Serpent’s claims being deceptive purely out of her own compulsion for self-preservation. One must admit, God does sound sort of pissed off at them. Was this possible fear of reprisal justified, for Eve, to feel? Did God in fact punish Adam and Eve? We’ll find out below.
So, keeping score for God then, in the Game of Truth, we have God lying that Adam and Eve would die upon eating from this Tree. They did not die.
GOD LIED.
Either that or he is not omniscient - you Christians can choose which type of God is more palatable to worship - I'd rather Knot.
And keeping score for The Serpent, we see only three claims, and all three have been substantiated: they did not die, their eyes were opened to Good and Evil, and as God then confirmed, Adam and Eve did in fact become "as us" (gods).
Why the plurality and to whom is God referring, this “us” who pre-existed Adam and Eve's ascension to that same distinction?
Who are these mysterious other gods to which he is referring to as "us"?
And most importantly, at the crux of this digression into the biblical Source of Evil, is the question of why God did not want man to have his eyes opened to Good and Evil, to become "as gods"? He earlier claimed that His intention was to make man in His own "image" yet not intending to be a facsimile image, with all the knowledge of Good and Evil which He allowed himself and whoever comprised the "us" but forbid Adam and Eve from knowing. Why is becoming "as gods" - "as one of us" - something God did not want?
Let's see if God gives us any indication as to his motivations, further into this 3rd chapter of Genesis:
Genesis 3:14 And the LORD God said to the serpent, Because you have done this you are cursed more than all cattle, and more than every animal of the field. You shall go upon your belly, and you shall eat dust all the days of your life.
The Serpent made three claims about the Tree; all three claims were substantiated; all three were Truth. The Serpent was telling the Truth. The three claims that The Serpent made were all true – they would not die, their eyes would be opened to Good and Evil, and they would become as gods.
For speaking this truth, and speaking no lies, what did this serpent, this beast under the dominion of man then receive? Cursed to eat dust for all its days. This God does not value Truth. He punishes The Serpent for proffering The Truth to Adam and Eve. Nothing that The Serpent said can be construed as a lie or any type of deception.
Genesis 3:15 And I will put enmity between you and the woman, and between your seed and her Seed; He will bruise your head, and you shall bruise His heel.
Because Adam and Eve exercised their initially free choice to eat of any tree in the Garden of Eden, which was then amended by God to all trees but one, what fate do they suffer? Now is God’s big chance to make good on the ostensible lie that they would surely die from consuming it.
Do they yet die? Nope.
Is eating food intrinsically Evil? Of course not. What made consumption from this Tree “wrong” or “bad” or Evil was only because God said that it was such without ever saying why it was Evil to partake in the knowledge of Good and Evil. He basically said “Don’t do this because I said so.” And we still have no indication yet from God as to why gaining this knowledge of Good and Evil is negative.
An aside to those of us who are parents, as I am: When teaching a child who is ignorant of the dangers that may arise from some action, is it more likely that the child will not engage in a dangerous, forbidden activity if they are in possession of the knowledge as to why it is dangerous? Of course it is! Without comprehending why an activity is dangerous, it is much more likely that a child will engage in it, even if it is forbidden.
The punishment then meted out to Adam and Eve by God that did not include their Death was as follows:
Genesis 3:16 To the woman He said, I will greatly increase your sorrow and your conception. In pain you shall bear sons, and your desire shall be toward your husband, and he shall rule over you.
God leveled that He would, in retribution for Eve’s defiance, increase her sorrow. This implies that Eve was already subject to sorrow, somehow. What could possibly have pre-existed to cause Eve any sorrow in this Garden of Eden I cannot fathom. Nonetheless, God was intent upon increasing her sorrow only because she did what He forbid: ate from the Tree of Knowledge of Good and Evil. Increasing her sorrow, though, was not enough to sate God’s lust for vengeance. He added that she shall bear sons in pain. So because she ate some food from a tree that God forbid her to eat from, her sorrow gets amplified by God and He also feels the need to inflict physical pain upon her. Is there a word for people who inflict pain upon other people? Yes, there sure is. They are what we call sadists. Most industrialized Western democracies have totally eliminated any form of torture or infliction of pain upon people convicted of even the worst crimes. It’s considered more humane. Democratic consensus has led societies to conclude what God cannot: inflicting pain as retribution does nothing to deter people from doing as they are told, and it does nothing to make up for any pain a person may have already caused. A murdered child cannot be replaced. At least, not in God’s world.
Genesis 3:17 And to Adam He said, Because you have listened to the voice of your wife and have eaten of the tree, of which I commanded you, saying, You shall not eat of it! The ground is cursed for your sake. In pain shall you eat of it all the days of your life. Genesis 3:18 It shall also bring forth thorns and thistles to you, and you shall eat the herb of the field. Genesis 3:19 In the sweat of your face you shall eat bread until you return to the ground, for out of it you were taken. For dust you are, and to dust you shall return.
Is Adam sentenced to Death? Nope. More metaphors for pain are dealt out from the sadistic hand of God though: cursed, pain, thorns, thistles, sweat, and dust. One could make the assertion that Adam being sentenced to “dust” was in fact a Death sentence of sorts. I will refute this point after my final extraction from Genesis. One more salient point first regarding nudity, as we continue through Genesis 3:
Genesis 3:20 And Adam called his wife's name Eve, because she was the mother of all living. Genesis 3:21 And for Adam and his wife the LORD God made coats of skins, and clothed them.
Wait a minute! Now God is making clothes for them?? How fucking fickle is that? First He is outraged and punitive over the fact that they realized they were naked, a notion purloined from the forbidden Tree. He was obviously displeased that they had learned that being naked was somehow shameful, otherwise he wouldn’t have asked them “who told you that you were naked?” God sure as hell didn’t tell them that to begin with. Despite his earlier displeasure with their shame over their nudity God now encourages it?!
Finishing off now with the end of Genesis 3 we find God’s final vengeance upon Adam and Eve for their insubordination:
Genesis 3:22 And the LORD God said, Behold, the man has become as one of Us, to know Good and Evil. And now, lest he put forth his hand and take also of the tree of life, and eat, and live forever, Genesis 3:23 therefore the LORD God sent him out from the garden of Eden to till the ground from which he had been taken. Genesis 3:24 And He drove out the man. And He placed cherubs at the east of the garden of Eden, and a flaming sword which turned every way, to guard the way to the tree of life.
In 3:22 God seems to be implying that because man has become one of “Us” he cannot “also” take of the Tree of Life and live forever. This seems to imply that being one of “Us” (gods) means that one cannot live forever. Gods are not eternal? Only eating from this Tree of Life, placed there by God, would make one eternal? How can something that is not eternal create something that is eternal?
Or perhaps God just didn’t want any competition as man, now on equal footing with God insofar as exposure the Knowledge of Good and Evil, would soon learn this Knowledge and possibly usurp His eternal power?
Coming full circle now, we see that humanity never needed this option of Evil. Humanity could have been left to choose among infinite Good choices. God placed Evil in His own Garden, misrepresented it to Adam and Eve, and allowed beasts He declared were under their dominion to persuade them against His orders.
Must not Eve have already been Evil then, to even consider defying God at the mere suggestion by some beast under her dominion?
Many Christians like to define Evil simply as “turning away from God” and if this were the true meaning of Evil, then Eve was Evil before she ever consumed anything from The Tree of Knowledge of Good and Evil. She turned away from God’s only precondition to her survival by a beast’s mere suggestion that God was wrong about this Tree. If Eve was already Evil prior to consuming from that Tree then whose fault is it, ultimately? God placed the Evil choice in His Garden and made it tempting. God created man and man’s inclinations. God knew what would tempt His own creation and he allowed for them to be tempted by a Tree of Lies and Temptations. Because God created the entire scenario, the buck must ultimately stop with God and God alone.
Cataloguing the Lies of God, then summarily we have the Lie of God that all trees could be eaten from for sustenance. He later contradicted this making the claim a Lie.
Another Lie of God was that the beasts are under man’s dominion, which they clearly were not if the beasts could so easily persuade man from God’s wishes. More accurately and conversely, man was under the dominion of The Beast.
Another Lie of God was that man was created in His image. This Lie I will concede as truth, if God will admit then that He is a hypocrite for making us so much in His flawed image that we are as much a disappointment to Him as He is to me.
Another possible Lie of God was his feigning ignorance of Adam and Eve’s actions in His Garden of Eden. Is it really possible for one who creates everything to be unaware of any of it? Is God restricted by time and distance? If God created the universe then, by extension, He also created time and distance, which are features which define the universe. Is God ignorant? Did He really have to ask Adam and Eve any questions at all to know the Truth or did He just want to watch them squirm (more sadism)? We cannot extrapolate anthropomorphically from humans to God in assessing what we know of the state of our own creations. I can create a table, and soon know nothing of its whereabouts or its condition. The glaring difference here is that I did not create the molecules that comprise the table or the space in which those molecules interact. God did. God created man and the universe and allegedly everything else. It is implausible to think that one who created time and space would then be subject to, imprisoned by them. If God isn’t subject to time and space, then he stands outside of it and can see all things at once, simultaneously. There is much talk of a known, prophesized future in the Bible. These prophecies were revealed to the Prophets by God. That leaves us with the conclusion that God is omniscient, omnipotent and a Liar – by feigning that He didn’t know what Adam and Eve had done. The only other option, were God not lying in this instance, is that God is ignorant, something less than omniscient – not a great feature on His resumé to be accepted as Supreme Being.
And rounding out this list, another Lie of God was His declaration that Adam and Eve would surely die upon eating from The Tree of Knowledge of Good and Evil. Eating from that Tree alone would not of itself have harmed them in any way. It was God and only God who was capable and willing to cause harm to anyone. God exiles man from The Garden of Eden then and blocks all access to The Tree of Life. Was this then the Death of which God foretold to Adam when He cautioned against consuming from the Tree of Knowledge of Good and Evil? If it was, then God should have been more honest in his claim that in eating of that Tree that they “surely” would die. “Die” is a much more passive term than what He was really trying to convey.
What God should have said to Adam, to be more honest and accurate, is “Do not eat of this Tree or I will murder you!”
In conclusion then, we see quite clearly that The Serpent who was somehow privy to knowledge, to man brought Truth.
We see that God who feigns or is in fact ignorant, to man brought Lies, temptation, sorrow and pain.
Let’s finally turn to the prophet Isaiah for the final word on the Source of Evil in this totality of existence:
Isaiah 45:7 I form the light, and create darkness: I make peace, and create evil: I the LORD do all these things.
Who created Evil? God did.
Where did Evil come from? From God.
What is the ultimate Source of Evil? God.
There is no longer any reason to ask why God allows Evil to exist. Evil exists inside of God and we being in His image are no less Evil.
It stands to reason then why God is such a hypocrite for expecting us, who He created in His own Evil image, to somehow be immune to Evil when even He Himself is not!
© 2006 Knot4Prophet.com All Rights Reserved. (May 2006)
_________________
|