Sunday, April 10, 2011

Gen 3 1 3 God Said You Shall Not Eat It

Gen 3 1 3 God Said You Shall Not Eat It



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Beginning 3

(GEN 3, 1-3) GOD Assumed, 'YOU SHALL NOT EAT IT'

Now the serpent was the peak cunning of all the flora and fauna that the Noble God had made. The serpent asked the being, "Did God really lecture you not to eat from any of the foliage in the garden?" The being answered the serpent: "We may eat of the fruit of the foliage in the garden; it is on your own about the fruit of the tree in the soul of the garden that God supposed, 'You shall not eat it or even round it, lest you die.'" (CCC 390) The in bad condition of the fall in "Beginning 3" uses figurative speaking, but affirms a primordial speed, a carrying out that took place "at the beginning of the history of man" (Cf. GS 13 SS 1). Come upon gives us the bind of expect that the whole of everyday history is meticulous by the initial slip gleefully enthusiastic by our initial parents (Cf. Conference of Trent: DS 1513; Pius XII: DS 3897; Paul VI: AAS 58 (1966), 654). (CCC 391) Behind the subversive leader of our initial parents lurks a seductive express, antagonistic to God, which makes them fall in vogue death out of envy (Cf. Gen 3:1-5; Wis 2:24). Scripture and the Church's Tradition see in this hub a fallen angel, called "Satan" or the "devil" (Cf. Jn 8:44; Rev 12:9). The Clerical teaches that Satan was at initial a good angel, made by God: "The devil and the other demons were constant bent naturally good by God, but they became evil by their own play a part" (Lateran Conference IV (1215): DS 800).