The Limits of Salvation Fr. Paul D. Scalia
If God didn’t want them to eat of the tree, why did He put it there? That question is not as adolescent and petulant as it might sound. God is not haphazard in His Creation. He must have had a reason to place that one forbidden tree in the garden. The Catechism explains it nicely: that the tree of the knowledge of good and evil “evokes the insurmountable limits that man, being a creature, must freely recognize and respect with trust.” (CCC 396)
Now, to “freely recognize and respect with trust” is one thing the Devil just cannot do. He wants his created gifts on his own, without a Creator or Giver. He refuses to recognize or respect his creaturely limits. Non serviam, he boasts. I will not serve. . . .I will not observe limits.
Misery loves company, so the Devil wants to reproduce his mindset in others. His first victims are Adam and Eve. (Genesis 3:1-7) He asks, “Did God really tell you not to eat from any of the trees in the garden?” He’s not asking to get an answer. He’s suggesting that limits are absurd and anyone who
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