My questions to emptybill are: what does Cyril of Alexandria mean by the sin of 
one? Also, if all sin is illness, does that mean that the orthodox fathers 
believe that all illness is indicative of sin?





On Friday, October 18, 2013 9:23 AM, Richard J. Williams <[email protected]> 
wrote:
 
  
We do not know exactly what plant, of all the plants available to them, that 
Adam and Eve ate of, while in the Biblical "Garden of Eden" (Genesis 3:6).

It has been suggested that it was a fruit that Eve partook of,
      perhaps an apple, which certainly shows a certain amount of
      Euoro-centrism. However that may be, if it was a tree, it may have
      been a fig tree, similar to the "Bodhi Tree" of Indian Buddhist
      legend - the sacred ficus religiosus. 

The sacred tree in Micronesian mythology is the banana tree, whose
      origin is tied up in the idea of "manna" and the myth of the "Tree
      of Plenty" and the mythology of the the dying and rising tree
      spirit.

Why Adam and Eve were forbidden to eat of this one particular tree
      is somewhat of a metaphysical mystery, not fully explained. The
      question is, why would God enslave Adam and Eve to work on a fruit
      farm in the first place? 

Go figure.

On 10/17/2013 10:20 PM, [email protected] wrote:

  
>Thanks, this is great. For the moment, one question: "The expulsion from the 
>Garden and from the Tree of Life was an act of love and not vengeance so that 
>humanity would not 'become immortal in sin.'" What does "immortal in sin" 
>mean, and how would that happen?
>
>
>emptybill wrote:
>
>Read this and then see if you have questions.
>
>
>http://www.stmaryorthodoxchurch.org/orthodoxy/articles/ancestral_versus_original_sin
>
>
>

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