Fall of Manreligion

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Aspects of this topic are discussed in the following places at Britannica.

Assorted References

  • Adam and Eve ( in Adam and Eve )

    ...alone, God created other animals but, finding these insufficient, put Adam to sleep, took from him a rib, and created a new companion, Eve. The two were persons of innocence until Eve yielded to the temptations of the evil serpent and Adam joined her in eating the forbidden fruit, whereupon they both recognized their nakedness and donned fig leaves as garments. Immediately, God recognized their...

  • Garden of Eden ( in Eden, Garden of )

    According to the Genesis story of the creation and fall of man, out of Eden, east of Israel rivers flowed to the four corners of the world. Similar stories in Sumerian records indicate that an earthly paradise theme belonged to the mythology of the ancient Middle East.

  • Mesopotamian myth ( in Adapa )

    ...city of Eridu, the ruins of which are in southern Iraq. Endowed with vast intelligence by Ea (Sumerian: Enki), the god of wisdom, Adapa became the hero of the Sumerian version of the myth of the fall of man. The myth relates that Adapa, in spite of his possession of all wisdom, was not given immortality. One day, while he was fishing, the south wind blew so violently that he was thrown into...

  • Milton ( in Milton, John: Paradise Lost )

    ...Father, in his celestial dialogue with the Son, foresees the sinfulness of Adam and Eve, and the Son chooses to become incarnate and to suffer humbly to redeem them. Though his role as saviour of fallen humankind is not enacted in the epic, Adam and Eve before their expulsion from Eden learn of the future redemptive ministry of Jesus, the exemplary gesture of self-sacrificing love. The Son’s...

  • Ophite myth ( in Christianity: Messianic secrets and the mysteries of salvation )

    The Ophites (from the Greek word ophis, “serpent”) offered a new interpretation of the Fall of Genesis. According to the Ophite view, the serpent of the Garden of Eden wanted Adam and Eve, the first man and woman, to eat from the tree of knowledge (gnosis) so that they would know their true identities and...

  • original sin ( in original sin )

    The doctrine has its basis in the Bible. Although the human condition (suffering, death, and a universal tendency toward sin) is accounted for by the story of the Fall of Adam in the early chapters of the book of Genesis, the Hebrew Scriptures say nothing about the transmission of hereditary sin to the entire human race. In the Gospels also there are no more than allusions to the notion of the...

  • theodicy ( in theodicy: Types of theodicy )

    The Augustinian tradition emphasizes the importance of the Fall (Adam and Eve’s sin and expulsion from the Garden of Eden, whether understood as a historical event or as a mythical representation of the human condition) and sees all evil as a consequence of this, whether the evil in question is moral (i.e., human wrongful actions and their results) or natural (e.g., diseases and natural...

Citations

MLA Style:

"Fall of Man." Encyclopædia Britannica. 2009. Encyclopædia Britannica Online. 07 Jan. 2009 <http://www.britannica.com/EBchecked/topic/200813/Fall-of-Man>.

APA Style:

Fall of Man. (2009). In Encyclopædia Britannica. Retrieved January 07, 2009, from Encyclopædia Britannica Online: http://www.britannica.com/EBchecked/topic/200813/Fall-of-Man

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