Eric,

I don't think your suggestion about the infinitive absolute + finite cognate 
gives you the result you want. I think your reading can still be valid, but not 
because that syntactical construction points to it. Rather, it's just about 
interpreting the narrative.

Some other suggested interpretations:

  1.  The narrative never implies that Yahweh God makes the human pair 
immortal. Rather, the implication is that they are very much mortal, but that 
access to the tree of life staves off death. Thus, death begins when that 
access is denied. This is quite similar to your suggestion.
  2.  The narrative portrays Yahweh God as gracious by not executing the human 
pair immediately, but rather allowing them to live for hundreds more years.
  3.  The phrase 'on the day you eat' is idiomatic for 'when you eat', and is 
not meant to be taken in a strictly literal manner.

There is more than one way to read this text. And the other suggestions you 
allude to (that Yahweh God lies) are just some among the array of possibilities.


GEORGE ATHAS
Dean of Research,
Moore Theological College (moore.edu.au)
Sydney, Australia


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