Will Power:
Adam would not have understood anything about will power.
Up to this point, there were no "struggles of the will", and no understanding of sin.
Adam and Eve, and God, were in perfect communion.
There is only one thing understood about sin at this time, "If we eat the fruit, we die."
That was all they knew of sin, or sin's consequences, or of their own independent will.
Eve's Claim - God said not to touch the fruit:
Adam would not, and could not, have lied by adding more information to God's command.
Adam could not have said, "God also said don't touch it," because that would have been an intentional lie, and sin did not yet exist.
If he lied about what God said, the fall would have already occurred.
So when Eve claims that the proposition "do not touch it" is a statement that came from God himself, she is personally adding this, as Adam could not have changed God's words like this prior to the fall.
- It is possible Adam asked her not to touch it.
- It is possible Eve was confused when confronted by the serpent, and she mixed two ideas together out of some kind of confusion.
- It is debatable whether she made up the "do not touch it", or got it as extra instruction from Adam... but it is clear that, at the least, her attribution of this to God was her own addition... Adam could never have said, "God said don't touch it". He could never have said this prior to the fall.
- It is also debatable as to WHY Eve attributed this proposition to God himself, when it did not come from God, and when it also did not come from Adam.
Millennia of Study:
Many things in the story are clear, either explicitly or implicitly... many things can be logically inferred.
But there are a few things which are less clear, and are still debatable.
Please remember that this passage has been studied, and thoughtfully considered, and debated, for thousands of years by millions of Christians and Jews.
Every possible question has already been asked, and every tangential view has already been considered, measured and weighed.
Every question has already been fully considered, for thousands of years.
And through all of this... there remains a traditional view of the fall, and the fall story.
The reason it's traditional is because Christians have all been thinking about it, collectively, for millennia... and coming to the same basic understanding.
Nothing we're talking about is new.
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