Aha, so you do allow for some metaphor in your understanding. Thought you might be from the more strict school for some reason.

Good point, and good question. I'm not religious, as I think you know, but I think about what truth that story might be getting across. Fundamentally disagree that desire for knowledge is flawed.

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I don't think the message is that the desire for knowledge is flawed. I think the message is that not trusting God to share knowledge with us is flawed.

He specifically made us to be like himself. But we were all, "we'll figure it out ourselves thanks" but due to the limitations on epistemology we can't (or Kant). So God, knowing that life apart from Him was going to be a literal hell, cut us off from the tree of life, giving us a chance, through death to trust him again. The invitation to Godhood still exists.

Hmm, not a bad answer. I got nothin'. You win this round Wigton.

Oh and cool that y'all get to believe evolution. Rejecting that has always seemed wild to me.

The Catholic Church is very open to metaphor. I get to believe in evolution and stuff!