PaulThomson said:
When Adam and Eve sinned they lost access to the tree of life and began to die. This heightened their instinct for survival, and introduced a fight or flight response to danger and threats. Hence, after the fall they hid from God (flight) and blamed others (fight). The instinct for survival is not sinful, but it is not appropriate to follow that instinct in every situation. All humans are born mortal and have a survival instinct to fight against or to flee from perceived threats. But these responses are not evil in themselves. They become evil when they are the options chosen instead of doing what is morally good by staying and loving.
When the law says, "Do not murder, for there will be consequences for the one who murders," this law does not make my flesh want to murder. When the law says, "When driving keep to the right of the centre line, my flesh does not automatically want to drive on the left, because I see that law as enhancing my chances of survival.
If I see laws as enhancing my chances of survival, there is no fight or flight response to those laws. But in situations where keeping those laws could get me killed, my flesh finds it expedient to break those laws, even if to love would require compliance to them. And alternatively, I may stick to the letter of the law when I think it is to my advantage, when to love would require that I break that law. The flesh judges based on what will maximise my own survival, The spirit judges based on what is more noble, true, loving and good.
So, based on my own experience, I disagree with you. When I see a sign saying "Keep off the grass" I don't automatically want to walk on it. I want to walk on it when my instinct thinks doing so will save me some of my limited mortal time, or will fit more pleasure into my limited mortal time. Otherwise, I am quite relaxed about keeping the command. Paul"s coveting was his flesh thinking the coveted thing would inject more pleasure into his limited life-span. The commandment not to do it exposed his propensity to do it in certain cases and exposed the way he felt pressured into sinning by the fear of death and the sense of having limited time to accumulate desirable things. But it did not make him into a continuously covetous person.
I would say that I worded the intro to my final paragraph badly. I had set out my take on the origin of our motivations to sin based on scripture in paragraph one. I had described how that biblically based dynamic plays out in my experiential response to laws in paragraph two. And my thord paragraph was, in reality, based on the arguments of
both preceding paragraphs. The biblical description of the fall and my experience of my reaction to laws. So, I should have began paragraph three with -
"So,
based on the biblical description of the fall and my own experience, I disagree with you. When I see a sign saying "Keep off the grass" I don't automatically want to walk on it. I want to walk on it when my instinct thinks doing so will save me some of my limited mortal time, or will fit more pleasure into my limited mortal time. Otherwise, I am quite relaxed about keeping the command.
I disagree with your assertion that
my basic argument is that my experience dictates the meaning of scripture rather than having scripture inform my experience. In reality, I am citing my actual experience as a confirmation of my exegesis of the biblical description of the fall and its consequences. I am saying that my experience conforms to this exegesis of the biblical text.
I also disagree with your assertion that "Adam and Eve's responses after sin are indicative of a corruption of their nature." Their response to their sin
was something novel for them. They had never experienced shame and fear before. But these responses were appropriate responses to falling short of glorifying God, through denigrating Him and disobeying Him. Their responses were not a change in their nature, but an outworking of their original nature, made in the image of God, when the innate God-like will chooses lies, unbelief and disobedience. The thing that explains their responses is not a change in their nature; you don't develop a nature, a habit, by making one novel choice. The one novel change in their behaviour (disobedience) elicited from them novel emotional response (fear, shame, blame-casting).
The factor that actually worked to habituate self-reliance and God-aversion in their practice was their newly acquired mortality which limited the time they had to achieve their goals and multiply their pleasures and drove them to take moral short-cuts to achieve these.
Romans 5:12 Wherefore, as by one man sin entered into the world, and death by sin; and so death passed upon all men, upon which (eph'On) all [
who sinned] sinned.
That is "upon death passing to everyone, everyone [
who sinned] sinned.
I understand "everyone sinned" in the same way we use "everyone" when we say "Because they heard there were free cellphones being distributed, everyone converged on the Apple store at the mall." This is not meant to be taken as a claim that that everyone in the world converged on Apple store at the mall; nor that everyone in the mall at the tome converged on the Apple store.
It is supposed to be taken as a claim that "Because they heard there were free cellphones being distributed, everyone [who had converged on the Apple store at the mall at that time] had converged on the Apple store at the mall at that time."