- Jun 13, 2016
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Actually most of this, including an answer to 'why' was linked in my previous post.Thanks again for presenting EOC position in more detail. I have some questions. First, if no one is guilty for the actual sin Adam & Eve committed, then why are we held responsible for the consequences of Adam & Eve's sin?
Here is a truncated quote (words in italics from The Orthodox Way by Kallistos Ware - emphasis added in bold text by me).
For the Orthodox tradition, then, Adam's original sin affects the human race in its entirety, and it has consequences both on the physical and the moral level: it, results not only in sickness and physical death, but in moral weakness and paralysis..
..Original sin is not to be interpreted in juridical or quasi-biological terms, as if it were some physical 'taint' of guilt, transmitted through sexual intercourse. This picture, which normally passes for the Augustinian view, is unacceptable to Orthodoxy. The doctrine of original sin means rather that we are born into an environment where it is easy to do evil and hard to do good; easy to hurt others, and hard to heal their wounds; easy to arouse men's suspicions, and hard to win their trust. It means that we are each of us conditioned by the solidarity of the human race in its accumulated wrong-doing and wrong-thinking, and hence wrong-being. And to this accumulation of wrong we have ourselves added by our own deliberate acts of sin. The gulf grows wider and wider. It is here, in the solidarity of the human race, that we find an explanation for the apparent unjustness of the doctrine of original sin. Why, we ask, should the entire human race suffer because of Adam's fall? Why should all be punished because of one man's sin? The answer is that human beings, made in the image of the Trinitarian God, are interdependent and coinherent. No man is an island. We are 'members one of another', and so any action, performed by any member of the human race, inevitably affects all the other members. Even though we are not, in the strict sense, guilty of the sins of others, yet we are somehow always involved. 'When anyone falls', states Aleksei Khomiakov, 'he falls alone; but no one is saved alone.'
In lighter moments within Orthodox circles, the answer to this question is simply; they failed to keep the fast.How did Adam & Eve Fall?

God is Love. Man was/is created in His image.
Love implies sharing and freedom. God desired to share Himself with created persons in His image, who would be capable of responding to Him freely and willingly in a relationship of love. Without freedom, there would be no sin. Without freedom man would not be in God's image; without freedom man would not be capable of entering into communion with God in a relationship of love.
Created for fellowship with the Holy Trinity, called to advance in love from the divine image to the divine likeness, man chose instead a path that led not up but down..
Entrusted by God with the gift of freedom, he systematically denied freedom to his fellows.
The 'original sin' of man, his turning from God-centredness to self-centredness..
..he no longer looked upon the world and other human beings as a sacrament of communion with God. He ceased to regard them as a gift, to be offered back in thanksgiving to the Giver, and he began to treat them as his own possession
In other words; given the choice man made a self-centered decision over a loving sharing relationship/communion with God.
We share in the sin of Adam in that we are born into a world where the consequences of sin prevail. These consequences are not only the outward brokenness like disease and death, but interior disorder as well. Our nature is corrupted. We are subject to temptation, prone to sin, and share in death. It is no accident that the Gospel is full of stories involving physical healing.
"For God so loved the world that He gave His only begotten Son, that whoever believes in Him should not perish but have everlasting life" (John 3:16). Christ's voluntary sacrifice on the cross was not to satisfy God's vengeance, a desire to see sin punished; rather Christ's death on the cross enabled Christ to enter death and destroy it, as evidenced by rising from the dead once and for all.
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