Monday, February 4, 2019

Essay on The Holy Bible - Genesis 1-3 and the Downfall of Mankind :: Holy Bible Genesis Essays

Genesis 1-3 and the Downf every last(predicate) of Mankind      People hold legion(predicate) differing opinions about Genesis 1-3. Some people believe that God didnt demand Adam and hitherto to have the association of good and evil because it would throw off them as gods. The purpose of this essay is to show that Adam and Eve caused the ruination of mankind.  Now, to the untrained eye, it may be possible to interpret the aforementioned text as having certain scheisty tendencies coming from both the serpent and, believe it or not, God himself. As possible as it may seem, the main makeup of the passages of Genesis are not trying to show God as being greedy with the intimacy of good and evil. It isnt like God was overturned that Adam and Eve would gain knowledge that would empower them and make them as gods. That is almost preposterous to think that God, the almighty creator of heaven and earth, would be worried about two mortals obtaining a little bit of information. In all actuality, that idea is incredibly far from the truth. God gave Adam and Eve the world, literally. This perfect world, a heaven on earth, was just abandoned to them out of the goodness of his heart. All they had to do was look over Gods creations and be intimate true eternal bliss. As a matter of fact, the only regulating that God gave to Adam and Eve was to not eat of the tree of the knowledge of good and evil. All they had to do to live in the eternal paradise, with all the cookies and milk they could stomach, was to follow that one freakin rule. Acknowledging the fact that the serpent (a.k.a. Satan Incarnate) did do its part in persuading Eve to eat the harvest-time and to give the fruit to her husband. Even still, Eve should have realized that she was risking eternal happiness for the lecture of a snake.   God said, ... of the tree of knowledge of good and evil, kibibyte shallot not eat of it for in the day that thou neatest thereof thou shallot su rely die. He wasnt speaking of an instantaneous death, or even mortal death. He was more so saying that they would lose their deity lives, therefor being compromised by mortal death. The serpent knew of this and used his knowledge to bring about the inevitable demise of mankind.

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