Lilith – Woman

Lilith was a woman created in the image and likeness of God and was good, as written in Holy Scripture. She never plucked or ate the fruit of the forbidden trees: knowledge and life. Therefore, she was not condemned by the so-called original sin. Instead, she demonstrated a sense of her own will, agency, and equality with men.

She did not want to be a servant, humiliated, or for a man to feel superior to her, and she had no intention of obeying his orders. She considered herself his equal, with the same rights and responsibilities. She wanted conversation and compromise, not forcing his will upon her. She was undoubtedly an interesting and strong (certainly mentally) woman. For this reason, unable to communicate effectively with a man who wanted to impose his will on her (for some unknown reason, he didn’t even try to convince her of his views or reach a compromise), she decided to leave paradise/the biblical Garden of Eden. She did this out of her free will, which God has never denied us in any way and has always respected, even to the point of absurdity. As we know, something existed beyond the Garden of Eden, the earth itself (after all, God later banished Adam and Eve).

So she left the Garden of Eden, exercising her freedom. She was not anointed with original sin (a topic for another post), nor was she punished by God in any way. Unlike Eve, she was not told that she would give birth in agony or anything of the sort. She only had in mind the very first commandment to subdue the Earth. She also never broke God’s prohibition. Leaving the garden was not a violation of a prohibition; God never forbade leaving the biblical paradise. So she exercised her free will and did as she pleased, assuming that she could not live with such a boor.

The Bible doesn’t say whether she had children, and if so, how many. It doesn’t say how long she lived in the Garden of Eden. These matters are passed over in silence. Likewise, whether she left the garden alone or with someone else is left unsaid. It seems logical that more people than just her chose to leave the garden. Besides, when she had small children, she didn’t have to ask for their opinion at all; instead, she had to feed and raise them.

Consequently, it can be said that there are people on Earth who haven’t been accused of so-called original sin (even the Bible, in a way, confirms this, as does the teaching of the Church, stating that Mary, the Mother of Christ, was not tainted by original sin. This therefore creates a kind of wholeness, a continuity. If God’s intention was to give his son for those who sinned in paradise (as is known), then leaving and allowing Lilith and others to leave paradise before the prohibition given by God was broken also seems to be God’s intention, to which he agreed, and perhaps even planned? In any case, it also creates a kind of bridge that logically connects the biblical events. If some people left paradise of their own free will, without any sin, then Mary’s lack of sin is a clear consequence and confirmation that such a thing happened. She was simply conceived by parents who left Eden without the so-called original sin.

It is not known how many women and men (yes, men can also be disgusted by what other men do), nor how many children of both sexes left Paradise. Certainly enough to survive. In fact, I’d even go so far as to point out that not every woman suffers greatly during childbirth—in today’s world of painkillers, cesareans, and other procedures, not every woman endures the agony of welcoming her child into the world. Moreover, it’s not stated anywhere that such remedies weren’t known in the past. Furthermore, not every woman experiences everything, including pain, in the same way. She may be in shock because everything can happen very quickly, with oxytocin kicking in quickly and quite intensely. Both Lilith and Eve had the same anatomy, after all. Eve was only supposed to be more submissive, and we know how that ended. Submission doesn’t bring any good, but conversation, arguments, consensus do. Various speculations are possible here. Every woman is different. Her descendants likely still exist today, descendants of people who left paradise of their own free will before breaking God’s prohibition.

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