This puts me in mind of the beginning of creation when God looked and saw that it was good, and the sixth day God looked on all that He had made and, indeed, it was very good. But I note that what is conspicuously missing is God's explicit declaration, "It is finished' although it is written in Genesis 2 that God had finished the work that He had been doing, so on that day rested from all His work, and Hebrews 4:4 tells us that His works have been finished from the foundation of the world.
Genesis 2:
3Then God blessed the seventh day and sanctified it, because on that day He rested from all the work of creation that He had accomplished.
and at the end of that chapter says,
25And the man and his wife were both naked, and they were not ashamed.
The context there speaks to creation but "it," to me, speak of salvation.
and indeed, Job 26 says,
6Sheol is naked before God,
and Abaddon
a has no covering. (footnote a:Abaddon means Destruction)
and Hebrews 12 says,
2Let us fix our eyes on Jesus, the author and perfecter of our faith, who for the joy set before Him endured the cross, scorning its shame, and sat down at the right hand of the throne of God.
When God asked Adam, "who told you that you were naked, have you eaten from the tree that I told you not to eat?" I translate the spirit of this question as saying something like, "why would you listen to what anyone else tells you about the condition that were in, as if you had no covering that I can provide?"
If you think about it, their physical condition of nakedness did not change as much as eating of the tree changed their perspective of it, since they became ashamed.
We are still naked before him, as are all things, but we no longer need be ashamed because He covers us with His own glory.