(א) בָּרוּךְ אַתָּה יְהֹוָה אֱלֹהֵֽינוּ מֶֽלֶךְ הָעוֹלָם אֲשֶׁר קִדְּ֒שָֽׁנוּ בְּמִצְוֹתָיו וְצִוָּנוּ לַעֲסֹק בְּדִבְרֵי תוֹרָה:
(1) Blessed are You, Adonoy our God, King of the Universe, Who sanctified1The observance and fulfillment of His commandments makes a person holy. us with His commandments and commanded us to be engrossed in the words of Torah.
Hashem God planted a garden in Eden, in the east, and placed there the man whom He had formed. And from the ground Hashem God caused to grow every tree that was pleasing to the sight and good for food, with the tree of life in the middle of the garden, and the tree of knowledge of good and bad. A river issues from Eden to water the garden, and it then divides and becomes four branches. The name of the first is Pishon, the one that winds through the whole land of Havilah, where the gold is. (The gold of that land is good; bdellium is there, and lapis lazuli.) The name of the second river is Gihon, the one that winds through the whole land of Cush. The name of the third river is Tigris, the one that flows east of Asshur. And the fourth river is the Euphrates. Hashem God took the man and placed him in the garden of Eden, to till it and tend it. And Hashem God commanded the man, saying, “Of every tree of the garden you are free to eat; but as for the tree of knowledge of good and bad, you must not eat of it; for as soon as you eat of it, you shall die.”
What did God expect from Adam? Everyone knows that if a parent says to a child: You can eat all the food in the refrigerator, except for these Belgian chocolates, what’s the first thing the child will do when the parents aren’t home? He/she will eat the Belgian chocolates! This is called curiosity and the desire for independence. So is it possible that God really expected that Adam and Eve would not eat from the tree of knowledge? Especially because He hadn’t given them a reason why it was forbidden in the first place! It’s like if the child asks: Why can’t I eat the Belgian chocolates, and the parent answers: “Because I said so!”
In my opinion, the main sin wasn’t that they ate the fruit. The main sin came after the eating. “God called out to the man and said to him: ‘Where are you?’” (Genesis 3:9) The meaning of this question is not, of course, behind which tree are you hiding? But, where are you spiritually and emotionally? How do you feel about yourself? And Adam evades responsibility. “He (Adam) replied: ‘I heard the sound of You in the garden, and I was afraid because I was naked, so I hid’” (3:10). Then God asks: “Did you eat of the tree from which I had forbidden you to eat?” And what does Adam do? He blames the woman and God Himself (“the woman You put at my side”). And the woman blames the serpent. Maybe what God really wanted was that Adam and Eve should admit what they did, and take responsibility.
the Humans abandon self-restraint. They eat of the one tree they have been told to leave uneaten.
And their greed ruins the abundance. So -– says God/ Reality -- they must work with the sweat pouring down their faces just to wring from the earth enough to eat, for it will give forth thorns and thistles.
Did God, or Reality, rejoice at this reminder that actions bear consequences? Hardly! God wails, "Ayekka, Where are you?" -- which rabbinic midrash understands as the first "Eicha," the word that begins the Book of Lamentations about our exile when the Temple was destroyed. The first exile was the exile of adam, humankind, from adamah, the earth.
This ancient archetypal story is the story of today. The story of the BP oil blowout in the Gulf of Mexico. The story of rapacious Big Oil desecrating the graves and poisoning the water of the Sioux Nation in North Dakota, to drive a pipeline though Native land and release more fumes of CO2 to burn our Mother Earth. Our modern Corporate Carbon Pharaohs in their greed bring Plagues upon humanity and the Earth, rejecting self-restraint: super-droughts in California and Australia and Syria and central Africa, unheard-of floods in Pakistan and North Carolina, superstorms in the Philippines and the Jersey shore.
Yet there are ways to redress this disaster. It happens, says the story of the Wilderness, just after the Breath of Life frees ancient Israelites from the ancient power-greedy Pharaoh.The first discovery of these runaway slaves is the Shabbat that comes with manna -- a gift from the abundant earth and a taste of rest from endless toil. Shabbat comes as a new form of self-restraint -- filled with joy, rather than ascetic self-denial. The curse reversed. A taste of Eden once again.
In Jewish theology, Shabbat, a foretaste of the Messianic Age, is the redemptive gift that begins the annullment of the "original sin" of Eden -- the sin of abusing Mother Earth. Begins, but only begins. We still must yearn toward "yom sheh-kulo Shabbat, the day that will be wholly Shabbat" -- toward "Eden for a Grown-up Human Race," depicted in the Song of Songs, when love among human beings and between Humanity and Earth, adam and adamah, is freely flourishing.