Re: No poetry just inquiry
Posted by: Marian-NYC (12.166.104.---)
Date: July 08, 2021 02:10PM
"If God is omnipotent, and knows what will happen, why allow the snake to delve in the garden?"
If you come at this question with the assumption that God exists and is omnipotent, then you have to get into questions of Free Will and Choice and how can there be salvation unless there's something to be saved FROM. To borrow a line from Albee's ZOO STORY, "Sometimes you have to go a long way out of your way in order to come back a short distance correctly." Scripture says that God rejoices more in a sinner who repents than in someone who never sinned to begin with, and if that's true, then the serpent was very important. (Which begs a related question: If the serpent done good, why was he punished?)
On the other hand, if you approach Genesis as a myth generated by humans to address some deep need, then you can infer that humans (Judeo-Christian ones, anyway) NEED (1) to believe that God is omnipotent, but at the same time (2) to explain why we, God's creations, are so utterly messed up, while (3) blaming someone other than ourselves.
On a third hand (mine), my take on the story is: It's an allegory about the point in human evolution when our intelligence underwent a growth spurt and we were suddenly able to comprehend things that did us no good, and do things as individuals that were contrary to our own interests AS A SPECIES. We gave evolution the slip, as it were. When we were essentially animals, our needs and our wants were identical: OUR survival, OUR propogation. US meant humans; THEM meant other species. When we became people, we became capable of considering options, adopting other priorities. Everything became a matter of CHOICE, which meant that for the first time in earth history, WRONG CHOICES could exist.
Viewed (by me) this way, the serpent story is nostalgia for an evolutionary time when there were absoluted and no choices to make, or make wrong.
It is ALSO analagous to the corresponding point in an INDIVIDUAL'S life. It's said that "a baby's wants are a baby's needs." Then there comes a point where a baby is capable of wanting things that are not NEEDS... of having preferences (that is, preferences more sophisitated than "I'd rather not be in pain"). And then we become capable of knowingly doing things we know -- or have been told -- are wrong. A person's expulsion from "the garden" is the point where it's no longer possible to be forgiven for ANYTHING because you're "just a baby."
So what is the serpent? He's the OTHER VOICE we can think with. When we have two thoughts at the same time ("I want the cookie" and "Mommy said not to eat it"), we want to attribute the "bad" one to some OTHER entity. A Freudian might (MIGHT!) say that the serpent is the ID at the developmental point where we become able to separate ID from integrated SELF.