Hi Janis.
I doubt I'll have much to say that hasn't been already in prior discussion, but wanted to have a go just the same:
First question:
If Adam and Eve were completely innocent when committing the sin of disobedience, how could God punish them as if they should have known better? What did God really expect of two beings that could not yet conceive of evil actions?
Adam and Eve seem to me to be as innocent as animals prior to eating the apples, so they couldn't sin. Only once they eat from the Tree of Knowledge, then they know they've sinned. Their sin doesn't seem to them to be disobedience actually, but nakedness; that's what they're ashamed of once they know right from wrong. It doesn't say they felt guilty about disobeying God. However, God accuses them of disobedience once He sees they know they're naked and are ashamed. God says He's punishing them for disobedience which I agree doesn't make much sense. The only logical way out for an apologist I can see is to say God is really punishing them for the
consequences of this original act of disobedience: the acquisition of the knowledge of Good and Evil. So 'ethical knowledge' is original sin. (I think that's sort of what OSS 117 has been saying too.)
Second question:
Even given that Adam and Eve had actually committed a sin they could be found guilty of, what Justifies God's further decision of continuing the curse though every generation until the end of time?
Because, according to this interpretation, all A&E's descendants "inherit" the knowledge of G&E: apparently once acquired, the trait is passed on; very Lamarckian.
Third question:
Regarding being "reborn". After several thousand years of people living and dying (including a genocidal flood) God then decides to forgive the ancestors of Adam and Eve by the Sacrifice of the Third aspect of God "The Son". This allows people to embrace the forgiveness of God, however it does not reverse the curses that were placed on Adam and Eve such as Man having to 'till the soil' or women having to suffer childbirth or menstruation. Further, why do these curses not cease after one is "reborn"?
The apologist would probably argue there is no tillage, childbirth, or menses in the afterlife, which is what those "reborn" in Christ gain.
He might also argue that that's why God had to kick A&E out of Eden; had they also eaten of the Tree of Life and become immortal, God wouldn't have had any leverage to make them behave ("don't sin or you won't live forever!")
Fourth question:
The sin seems (to me) to be a sin of disobedience, the Sin of not listening to God. The result was that Adam and Eve knew of Good and Evil. The essence of my question is why is this such a bad thing? We do everything in our power to teach our children right from wrong, we carefully watch our children in their youth to make sure they do not harm themselves or harm others all in the hope they eventually take on responsibility in their actions.
So, why was the sin such a sin?
Again, on this interpretation original sin is knowledge of G&E. Once they know the difference, they might choose evil. God knows A&E are disobedient, so just telling them not to choose evil isn't enough; he needs a way to threaten them. Since the death penalty is the ultimate threat, God reserves the right to impose it for evil behavior by expelling A&E from Eden before they can eat of the Tree of Life (BTW, what was the fruit of the Tree of Life? Does it say anywhere? I've always imagined plums, but that's just a guess.)
Final question:
In the age of Moses God makes ten commandments that man is to follow. I find it odd that God did not make the ten commandments in the age of Adam and Eve. The law "thou shall not kill" could have helped when Cain slew Abel, but there was no such tablet in those days. So why did it take God so long?
I don't think God had decided on a "chosen people" until Abraham at least; the decalogue is a sort of graduation present to the Hebrews (descendents of Abraham through Isaac and Jacob) for sticking with the whole monotheism thing through thick and thin, maybe?
