Gary writes: I'm not sure I believe the original sin thing.
Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Thu Nov 03, 2022 2:51 pmIt would depend on what one understands by the phrase. Biblically, it just means that you have an inclination not to "love your neighbour" or do other such good things, and it's deep in one's very constitution. I don't think you and I are actually in doubt about that one. As you say, it's something we "need to work on more," but don't ever seem to do for very long.
Gary writes: I mean if creation is fictional, then I would think original sin probably is too.
No, by no means would you have to think that *all sin is fictional*. You would only need a different, and even perhaps a fuller and more believable, definition of what sin is and what it is not.Immanuel writes: You'd actually have to think ALL sin was "fictional," in that case. For if we are the accidental products of a merely-material universe, then such entities have no "sin." Whatever they do, whether we like or approve of it or not, is just what they do. It's not good, it's not bad, it's just how things are. Human nature is what it is, and no action is objectively good or evil, regardless of our feelings. It's just an action. And that's the end of it, then.
The idea of Original Sin depends on the decision of god's two Edenic pets to do what they were not supposed to do. But what they did was really structured into the world in which they found themselves. The snake who tempted them was, on one reading, an aspect of god. How could it not be so unless one supposes a dualistic world?
In the story, in fact, there was never really any other possibility for them. In order for the story to move forward it required the disobedient act. But what happened to them -- to be cast out of transcendental deathless existence and thrust into human and worldly life -- is to imply to man that man is to blame for all that man suffers here. Original Sin is thus original guiltiness.