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30: ADAM AND EVE 122 |
Answer.—In the Bible it is written that God put Adam
in the garden of Eden, to cultivate and take care of it, and
said to Him: “Eat of every tree of the garden except the
tree of good and evil, for if You eat of that, You will die.”
1
Then it is said that God caused Adam to sleep, and He
took one of His ribs and created woman in order that she
might be His companion. After that it is said the serpent
induced the woman to eat of the tree, saying: “God has
forbidden you to eat of the tree in order that your eyes may
not be opened, and that you may not know good from
evil.”
2
Then Eve ate from the tree and gave unto Adam,
Who also ate; their eyes were opened, they found themselves
naked, and they hid their bodies with leaves. In
consequence of this act they received the reproaches of
God. God said to Adam: “Hast Thou eaten of the forbidden
tree?” Adam answered: “Eve tempted Me, and I did
eat.” God then reproved Eve; Eve said: “The serpent
tempted me, and I did eat.” For this the serpent was
cursed, and enmity was put between the serpent and Eve,
and between their descendants. And God said: “The man
is become like unto Us, knowing good and evil, and
perhaps He will eat of the tree of life and live forever.” So
God guarded the tree of life.
3
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If we take this story in its apparent meaning, according
to the interpretation of the masses, it is indeed extraordinary.
The intelligence cannot accept it, affirm it, or
imagine it; for such arrangements, such details, such
speeches and reproaches are far from being those of an intelligent
man, how much less of the Divinity—that Divinity
Who has organized this infinite universe in the most
perfect form, and its innumerable inhabitants with absolute
system, strength and perfection.
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We must reflect a little: if the literal meaning of this
story were attributed to a wise man, certainly all would
logically deny that this arrangement, this invention, could
have emanated from an intelligent being. Therefore, this
story of Adam and Eve who ate from the tree, and their
expulsion from Paradise, must be thought of simply as a
symbol. It contains divine mysteries and universal meanings,
and it is capable of marvelous explanations. Only
those who are initiated into mysteries, and those who are
near the Court of the All-Powerful, are aware of these
secrets. Hence these verses of the Bible have numerous
meanings.
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We will explain one of them, and we will say: Adam
signifies the heavenly spirit of Adam, and Eve His human
soul. For in some passages in the Holy Books where
women are mentioned, they represent the soul of man.
The tree of good and evil signifies the human world; for
the spiritual and divine world is purely good and absolutely
luminous, but in the human world light and darkness,
good and evil, exist as opposite conditions.
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The meaning of the serpent is attachment to the human
world. This attachment of the spirit to the human world
led the soul and spirit of Adam from the world of freedom
to the world of bondage and caused Him to turn from the
Kingdom of Unity to the human world. When the soul
and spirit of Adam entered the human world, He came out
from the paradise of freedom and fell into the world of
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bondage. From the height of purity and absolute goodness,
He entered into the world of good and evil.
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The tree of life is the highest degree of the world of
existence: the position of the Word of God, and the supreme
Manifestation. Therefore, that position has been
preserved; and, at the appearance of the most noble supreme
Manifestation, it became apparent and clear. For
the position of Adam, with regard to the appearance and
manifestation of the divine perfections, was in the embryonic
condition; the position of Christ was the condition
of maturity and the age of reason; and the rising of the
Greatest Luminary
4
was the condition of the perfection of
the essence and of the qualities. This is why in the supreme
Paradise the tree of life is the expression for the
center of absolutely pure sanctity—that is to say, of the
divine supreme Manifestation. From the days of Adam
until the days of Christ, They spoke little of eternal life
and the heavenly universal perfections. This tree of life
was the position of the Reality of Christ; through His
manifestation it was planted and adorned with everlasting
fruits.
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Now consider how far this meaning conforms to the
reality. For the spirit and the soul of Adam, when they
were attached to the human world, passed from the world
of freedom into the world of bondage, and His descendants
continued in bondage. This attachment of the soul
and spirit to the human world, which is sin, was inherited
by the descendants of Adam, and is the serpent which is
always in the midst of, and at enmity with, the spirits and
the descendants of Adam. That enmity continues and
endures. For attachment to the world has become the
cause of the bondage of spirits, and this bondage is identical
with sin, which has been transmitted from Adam to
His posterity. It is because of this attachment that men
125
have been deprived of essential spirituality and exalted
position.
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When the sanctified breezes of Christ and the holy light
of the Greatest Luminary
5
were spread abroad, the
human realities—that is to say, those who turned toward
the Word of God and received the profusion of His bounties—were saved from this attachment and sin, obtained
everlasting life, were delivered from the chains of bondage,
and attained to the world of liberty. They were
freed from the vices of the human world, and were blessed
by the virtues of the Kingdom. This is the meaning of the
words of Christ, “I gave My blood for the life of the
world”
6
—that is to say, I have chosen all these troubles,
these sufferings, calamities, and even the greatest martyrdom,
to attain this object, the remission of sins (that is, the
detachment of spirits from the human world, and their
attraction to the divine world) in order that souls may arise
who will be the very essence of the guidance of mankind,
and the manifestations of the perfections of the Supreme
Kingdom.
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Observe that if, according to the suppositions of the
People of the Book,
7
the meaning were taken in its exoteric
sense, it would be absolute injustice and complete predestination.
If Adam sinned by going near the forbidden tree,
what was the sin of the glorious Abraham, and what was
the error of Moses the Interlocutor? What was the crime of
Noah the Prophet? What was the transgression of Joseph
the Truthful? What was the iniquity of the Prophets of
God, and what was the trespass of John the Chaste?
Would the justice of God have allowed these enlightened
Manifestations, on account of the sin of Adam, to find
torment in hell until Christ came and by the sacrifice of
Himself saved them from excruciating tortures? Such an
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idea is beyond every law and rule and cannot be accepted
by any intelligent person.
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No; it means what has already been said: Adam is the
spirit of Adam, and Eve is His soul; the tree is the human
world, and the serpent is that attachment to this world
which constitutes sin, and which has infected the descendants
of Adam. Christ by His holy breezes saved men
from this attachment and freed them from this sin. The sin
in Adam is relative to His position. Although from this
attachment there proceed results, nevertheless, attachment
to the earthly world, in relation to attachment to the
spiritual world, is considered as a sin. The good deeds of
the righteous are the sins of the Near Ones. This is established.
So bodily power is not only defective in relation to
spiritual power; it is weakness in comparison. In the same
way, physical life, in comparison with eternal life in the
Kingdom, is considered as death. So Christ called the
physical life death, and said: “Let the dead bury their
dead.”
8
Though those souls possessed physical life, yet in
His eyes that life was death.
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1. | Cf. Gen. 2:16–17. [ Back To Reference] |
2. | Cf. Gen. 3:5. [ Back To Reference] |
3. | Cf. Gen. 3:11–15,22 [ Back To Reference] |
4. | Bahá’u’lláh. [ Back To Reference] |
5. | Bahá’u’lláh. [ Back To Reference] |
6. | Cf. John 6:51. [ Back To Reference] |
7. | Jews and Christians. [ Back To Reference] |
8. | Matt. 8:22. [ Back To Reference] |