The fact that the Bible never records Adam lying to his wife is not a fatal flaw, it is the End of this matter.
It is a fatal flaw, because you cannot prove that Adam lied. Your entire theory rests upon the idea that Adam lied. Therefore, your entire theory rests upon an assumption that you can give no evidence for. You claim to be teaching what Scripture clearly teaches, yet the foundation of your system at this point is not based on Scripture, but an assumption.
The Bible does not tell us that Adam could walk either; so, can we not believe that he could?
Walking is natural to humans. It's an amoral and trivial action. But we don't just assume a person told a lie in the absence of evidence. Imagine if a lawyer constructed his case in the same manner. A man, Jones, is on trial for murder. Jones claims he went straight home after work and so he wasn't at the scene of the crime when it happened. The lawyer, Mr. Black, asserts to the jury that Jones has lied. Jones says "what evidence do you have that I'm lying?" Mr. Black replies "Why do we need evidence? We all assume you can walk. We all assume you can eat. We all assume you can sleep. Thus, it's reasonable to assume you lied about going straight home after work."
For example: since Eve spoke of a commandment, so it is obvious that someone told her something even thought the conversation is not recorded in scripture.
That's not reasonable although it may be possible. It is also possible that no one told Eve "do not touch," it's possible that she made that part up. And this latter theory has the advantage of parsimony. If you ask me what the Ten Commandments are and I say "Do not have ice-cream after dinner, do not wear white socks with a black suite, do not spit in the wind, always wash your hands before eating, ladies first, etc..." would it be reasonable to assume that my pastor lied to me about the Ten Commandments? No, because it's an unnecessary deduction for which you have no evidence. Multiplying entities needlessly. It's more parsimonious to either say I'm lying or to leave it at the fact that I'm misinformed without needlessly postulating the theory that my pastor is a liar to me.
By reason, it had to be either God or Adam, or, as you may believe it possible, some angel.
First of all, you are confusing reason with possibility. Those aren't coterminous. Not all things that are possible are reasonable. And you keep forgetting that it is also possible that Eve made up the command and she is the liar.
And you said that the best we can do is say Eve started the lie
That's the best we can do *if* we assume the command is a lie. But I pointed out that it isn't necessary to believe that "do not touch" is a lie. But if it is a lie, it would be unreasonable to assume without any evidence that the lie came from Adam. Thus, the most reasonable thing is to believe that the lie, if it is a lie, started with Eve, since we only see her propagating it.
i say that is impossible because Jesus said that the devil told the first lie (Jn 8:44)
If that tactic works for you, then it can work for me too: Your theory is impossible because Jesus said that the devil told the first lie. Of course, you'll just say "Yeah and Adam is the Devil" but then I can just play your same tactic: Eve is the Devil.
Furthermore, I already explained that even if "do not touch" is a lie and even if Eve told *that* lie *first* then it is still possible that the Devil is the first liar by saying "God has said you shall not eat of any of the trees of the garden." So it is not "impossible" as you claim.
The second flaw is one you have induced on yourself because you do not seem to believe that you can believe in what is written quite simply on the page. With this type of skepticism, i doubt you could ever come to a knowldge of the Truth, seriously. You must make a stand to believe what is written even though while yet reading between the lines.
This makes no sense to me. What is written "simply on the page" that I do not believe? How am I holding onto a type of skepticism that would prevent me from coming to a knowledge of the truth?
If Gen 2:16-17 is the Truth in its entirety, then Eve's statement contains a falsehood, yes?
You've phrased this oddly. Do you mean to say this: "If Gen. 2:16-17 is not a summary of God's command, but the command in exhaustive detail..."?? If that is what you are saying, then I would say this is exactly what you don't get to assume. You want to assume it's an exhaustive and verbatim record of the command. I've already demonstrated why you can't make this assumption. If you want to jump the hurdle, you have to deal with the arguments.
Then, since I believe the Word of God as it is written, i can clearly see that Eve spoke untruth. You cannot see this because you doubt what you are reading, or are uncertain of its correctness.
Then by your method of reasoning Elijah was a liar. But the Scripture tells us that what he said came true, so he wasn't a liar. If Elijah wasn't a liar and your method of reasoning leads us to believe that he was a liar, then your method of reasoning is fallacious.
The reason I cannot see it is because I'm not buying into your presumptions upon the text. One of the reasons I'm not buying your presumption is because your entire method is fallacious.
For now, let me say this about his question. He posed it as either a true or false type question; but, in reality, it is true in one aspect, and false in another. Because one tree was excluded, it was true that they coudl not eat from every tree in the Garden; however, because all the trees were not excluded, it is false.
This doesn't answer what I said. You just assume that it was a question, when it is possible that it is a statement. Now if you want to argue that it was a question, go ahead. But it should be clear by now that I'm not going to go along with your assumptions.
The point of his question was merely to get her to regurigate what he had already told her, becasue he wanted tp prove her wrong, to help convince her to eat the fruit first.
Why did he even tell her not to eat it in the first place? Why not just say "Hey Eve, you know the fruit on that tree is great and God told us to have at it so dig in."
Eve did not 'cut him off', she answered the question in the simplest and most accurate manner: verbatim (but not from GOD, only accredited to GOD).
There are three assumptions built into this. The first assumption is that my suggested reading of the text is wrong. Now if you want to say it is wrong because the KJV came straight from God, then your KJV-onlyism isn't irrelevant like you claim. The second assumption is that she was repeating "do not touch" from what she had heard. The third assumption is that the "do not touch" did not come from God.
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Do you think GOD wanted to keep us ingorant, even of how 'we' first fell from paradise? So why even tell us a story if not to get some moral lesson from it?
If I were to believe your theory then it seems like maybe God did want us to be ignorant, because not only is it prima facie obvious that Adam and the Devil are two different persons, but God made it so confusing that no one until you has been able to figure out the truth.
The serpents comment is certainly a question, and, because that is all that it is, it had no power to deceive Eve or convince her of any lie.
It isn't necessary to see the "question" of Satan or the response of Eve as a lie. It's possible that Satan's second statement, "You shall not surely die" is the first lie.
Eve cannot be the liar as shown above; and, because the devil is also the serpent, and the serpent's seed and the woman's seed are distinct, it is impossible for Eve to be the devil. I am not sure where it is you get all these ideas, but it seems to me they might be the fiery darts of the devil
Nothing you said above disproves my theory that Eve is the devil. But as for your remark that the woman's seed and the serpent's seed are distinct I would say you're right. This is a very strong argument against my Eve theory. However, I'm sure I could find ways to make it fit. For example, I said Eve had Multiple Personality Disorder. The language about the two different seeds really just means that there will be two different kinds of people coming from Eve. Some evil, following her evil persona and some normal, following her normal persona. So you see I can still find ways to make it possible, even though it is absurd and have tons of evidence against. Likewise, you can make your theory possible by twisting language and making lots of assumptions. But it's still absurd.
In addition, your appeal to the apparent distinctness between Eve and the Serpent in the narrative works against your theory since the narrative structure actually assumes there are three distinct entities: "The LORD God said to the serpent... To the woman he said... And to Adam he said,"
what you call assumptions because you doubt what you read, i call facts because i do read them.
Fine, let me reissue the former challenge which you never answered: where does Scripture say that Adam lied to Eve? Where does Scripture say that the command "do not touch" is not original? Where does Scripture say that Adam is the Serpent? Please don't just blindly assert that you are believing these "facts" because you read them. Show me *where* you read them.
Since death could only come by eating the fruit from that tree, in a sense had had the control over that death.
Again, this only makes sense (and even then it doesn't make much sense) if you assume that the tree itself has some magical ability to cause death. What caused death was sin, breaking the command of God. Consider this: what if God had only commanded Adam "do not hop on one foot." Would it make sense to say that Adam had control over death because he could break the command? Clearly that's absurd and any sense in which it is true is trite. For example, Eve also had power or "control" over death since she could also eat the fruit (and did).
Accusing someone of something does not necessarily kill them or give you power of death.
The problem is your odd concept of "power of death." I think my interpretation fits the context of Hebrews and what the rest of the Scriptures teach concerning the Devil, I don't see how your sense gives him the "power of death" at all, at least not in any significant sense and definitely not in an enduring sense. Keep in mind that the name or title "Satan" simply means "adversary" or "slanderer." Kistemaker and Hendriksen agree with this analysis of the passage: "The result of Christ’s death is twofold: he conquered Satan and set his people free from the fear of death. Satan desired the destruction of God’s creation in general and man in particular. After the fall Satan had the power of death over Adam and his descendants and used death as a weapon against us. He had the privilege of coming before God in heaven to accuse the believers (see Zech. 3:1–2), and stood ready to execute the verdict pronounced upon the guilty and to destroy man, who was condemned to death. He, the murderer from the beginning (John 8:44), desired man’s death in the fullest sense of the word: physical death and spiritual death (separation from God). He wanted to serve as the angel of death by wielding the power of death" (Exposition of Hebrews). However, the Bible Knowledge Commentary takes a different interpretation of the passage: "In speaking of the devil as wielding the power of death, the writer meant that Satan uses people’s fear of death to enslave them to his will. Often people make wrong moral choices out of their intense desire for self-preservation. The readers were reminded that they were no longer subject to such slavery and that they could face death with the same confidence in God their Captain had." Either interpretation makes more sense than the one you've offered.
Comparing Gen 1:26-28 to Ez 1:26-28 to Ez 28:12-18 we see the same basic image and likeness
I see absolutely no way that anyone could reasonably arrive at the conclusion that Ezekiel saw Adam in Ezekiel 1:26-28. Just because men are made in the image and likeness of God does not mean that everytime we see the word "likeness" relating to God that it must be referring to man, especially to the particular man Adam. (After all, you would have to concede that the description could equally apply to every man since all men are made in the image of God.) We might as well conclude that if Adam is "the appearance of the likeness of the glory of the Lord" then when Ezekiel says that “The glory of the LORD dwelt on Mount Sinai, and the cloud covered it six days. And on the seventh day he called to Moses out of the midst of the cloud” (Exodus 24:16) that this is speaking about Adam! When Moses asked to see the Lord's glory he was asking to see Adam. When we read that the glory of the Lord filled the tabernacle this means Adam filled the tabernacle. Ezekiel's language is explained by the fact that he was having a vision and didn't actually see God. I already dealt with the Tyre passage.