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The Redemption of Eve

  • Writer: Bield at Blackruthven
    Bield at Blackruthven
  • Oct 16
  • 2 min read
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Autumn is a lovely time at the Bield, we have some beautiful trees which look magnificent in the soft sunlight as their leaves turn golden.  Our chapel too is decorated with autumn hues of our home-grown pumpkins and gourds. A celebration of harvest, of all that God provides and of the season of creation, of all that god has bought into being.  Part of that display is something I have created – a sculpture of an apple made of wire mesh, with a golden core.  It is called ‘Golden Delicious’ and was made as an outworking of my attempts to redeem Eve.


Together with other modern theologians I was seeking to challenge the traditional view of Eve as the primary cause of humanity’s downfall and instead highlight her agency, wisdom, and significance. Traditional interpretations of the temptation of Eve have, I feel, unfairly blamed women for the fall of humankind, leading to the marginalisation of women in both religious and social contexts.


‘Golden Delicious’ attempts to a more empowering view of Eve, emphasising her desire for learning and knowledge as being driven by more positive motivations, not as seeking equality with God, but as seeking a oneness with her creator, a wholeness that comes from becoming more fully the person God created her to be.


In reclaiming Eve, feminist theologians reframe her role in the redemptive narrative. Rather than seeing Eve as merely a transgressor, they highlight her importance as the “mother of all living” and her connection to the promise of redemption found in Genesis 3:15.   The first prophecy of a saviour who will ultimately defeat sin and Satan. 


The golden core reflects integrity of Eve’s desire, and the rebuilding of the green outer shape of the apple, a symbol of the wholeness and healing that is possible by the grace of God.  Eve’s story is one of agency, wisdom, and significance, and by reclaiming her role in the biblical narrative, we can move toward a more inclusive and theologically sound understanding of the role of those characteristics associated with the feminine.


As the leaves fall from the trees, I invite you to ponder the ‘fall’ of Eve and how considering it from a different perspective might lead to a deeper understanding of your own God given desires.


Liz

 
 
 

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