Genesis 3:6
Commentaar op dit vers
Door Brian David
Feeling life as their own (represented by the woman), the people of the Most Ancient Church felt an overwhelming desire to think from themselves about the nature of God ("good" and "food" both relate to desire, either for good or evil), and supported that desire with twisted logic ("pleasant" and "eyes" both relate to the intellect, either for good or evil). On top of that, the idea of being "wise," of potentially knowing what God knew, filled them with pleasure (it was "to be desired"). So they "ate the fruit"; they began exploring the nature of divinity, with an eye toward having divine knowledge themselves.
But there was hesitation. They still knew what they had been commanded, and the rational parts of their minds (represented by the "man," used here in a masculine sense) had to be pulled in. But they were; the "man" ate the fruit as well.
©2024 New Christian Bible Study Corporation. All rights reserved. Printed from newchristianbiblestudy.org
De Bijbel
Lees de Bijbel
Populaire Bijbelverhalen
Betekenissen van Bijbelse woorden
Leesplannen
Verzen van de dag
Bijbelstudie gesprekken
Gereedschap
Maak een account aan
Video's
Audio bronnen
Klassen, cursussen en studiegroepen
Zoek Nieuwe Christelijke Groeperingen
Online bronnen
Geavanceerd zoeken
Meer
Project Blog
Over het project
Q & A
Vrienden en partners
Raak betrokken
Suggestie / fouten rapport
Neem contact met ons op
ResponsiveVoice used under Non-Commercial License
© 2024 New Christian Bible Study Corporation. Alle rechten voorbehouden. Gebruiksvoorwaarden | Privacy Policy.