They disobeyed God, and sinned.
for mankind to live
The garden of eden
In the Garden of Eden, Adam and Eve were not immortal. They were created to live forever, but they lost their immortality when they disobeyed God and ate from the forbidden tree.
God's covenant with Adam and Eve before they left the Garden of Eden was that they would no longer be able to live in perfect bliss, as they would be subject to suffering and toil. They would also be subject to death, and would no longer be able to partake in the Tree of Life. Additionally, God cursed the serpent for deceiving them, and promised that there would be enmity between it and the woman, and that Eve's offspring would crush the serpent's head. Adam and Eve would no longer be able to live in perfect bliss, as they would be subject to suffering and toil. They would also be subject to death, and would no longer be able to partake in the Tree of Life. God cursed the serpent for deceiving them. God promised that there would be enmity between the woman and the serpent. God promised that Eve's offspring would crush the serpent's head.These were the terms of God's covenant with Adam and Eve before they left the Garden of Eden.
The biblical Garden of Eden is almost universally pictured as an idealised paradise where everything was provided, man could live in comfort and no one had to work or suffer..Leon R. Kass (The Beginning of Wisdom: Reading Genesis) says the Garden of Eden was not intended to be regarded in this way, as a historical yet idealised portrait of a blissful existence we once enjoyed but lost, but as a mythical yet realistic portrait of permanent truths about our humanity. The the story of the Garden of Eden was originally intended to tell us something about ourselves, not to describe a non-existent paradise. The desire for simple explanations has led us to take the story at face value.
According to Gen 1 & 2, The first people lived in the Garden of Eden
A:The question assumes that the story of the Garden of Eden is literally true and that, had Adam and Eve not sinned, we would all live in this earthly paradise. The story is not really true and the Garden of Eden is a mythic place that could never have existed. Yair Zakovitch, Dean of Humanities at Hebrew University, in discussing this passage says, "The thing to remember about the Bible is that the events and characters are just vehicles to convey messages. The biblical narrative was written to educate our young nation, not so much to tell us what really happened."
Live at Eden was created in 2002-07.
AnswerAccording to the Book of Genesis, Adam and Eve were exiled from the Garden of Eden because they ate the fruit of the tree of the knowledge of good and evil.Answer:"And the Lord God said, Behold, the man is become as one of us, to know good and evil: and now, LEST HE PUT FORTH HIS HAND, AND TAKE ALSO OF THE TREE OF LIFE, AND EAT, AND LIVE FOR EVER: THEREFORE THE LORD GOD SENT HIM FORTH FROM THE GARDEN OF EDEN..." (Gen.3:22-23).
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Yes, faeries make homes in your garden. You could even make a garden for them that they can live in and enjoy.
No. Leon R. Kass (The Beginning of Wisdom: Reading Genesis) says we can learn most from the story of the Garden of Eden by regarding it as a mythical yet realistic portrait of permanent truths about our humanity, rather than as a historical yet idealised portrait of a blissful existence once enjoyed but now lost. What he is telling us is that Adam and Eve did not really live, there was no Tree of the Knowledge of Good and Evil, no Tree of Life that would have granted Adam and Eve immortality, and no cherubim.