glorydaz
Well-known member
Was there really physical fruit on the tree of knowledge of good and evil?
Was it actually the fruit itself that contained a property that would open ones eyes to good and evil?
I've heard folks say that there was nothing special about the fruit itself (ie. it was just some regular fruit but had no such property), and that it was only the disobedience itself that was the problem, not the fruit.
If there was not actually something special about the fruit, then why block access to it?
If some other creature besides man ate the fruit, would their eyes have been opened to good and evil?
And what has, or is going to happen to that tree?
Is it an eternal (as in no ending) tree, or is it to be plucked up, axed down, burned up?
Drat...I almost missed this one. I don't think there was anything special about the tree or the fruit. It was only special because it was forbidden. That's the power sin gets from the law....making it look better than it is. The idea of the forbidden fruit is actually proven out time and time again. The grass is always greener on the other side of the fence and such as that.
Make a law against it and see how popular it becomes. :chuckle:
I don't think access to it was blocked. We eat the fruit of it the first time we know to choose good but choose evil instead.
When you read "Sin entered the world", what do you think of?
Why is sin personified like that? It reminds me of when God told Cain "sin lieth at the door".
I see sin as outside waiting to be tasted so it can have dominion over us.