B.W., good, glad to hear others want to still poke around at the origin of sin. So torment discussion is in stasis temporarily, that's good and fine by me.
Your post earlier about having Bible verses but not wanting to lay them out reminded me of when Jesus was once asked a question, but he didn't immediately quote this or that, instead he replied, "How do you read scripture?" Gave people pause to use their own brains for a second, which is always a good exercise in my book! And I'm glad people here are likewise of that open mindset for offering hypotheses and testing these sorts of questions.
Not to take away from the newer requests just posted by Locker, but I still have a few outstanding items I'm curious about on the origin of sin. As I asked Fortigum, what are the opinions about the origin of Satan's evil? What I am getting at with it is that some people are inclined to the viewpoint that all creation was perfect until humanity, Adam and Eve, introduced sin. If so, then the ink blot we see in non-human creatures -- various devils that possess people in the New Testament, and Satan himself -- would have its pedigree in the human failure of the Garden. The alternative, as I see it, is that the capacity of sinfulness -- having the gift of free will, but choosing to use it in unGodly wrong ways -- is more widespread and not the unique wreckage of humans screwing up. And as I've said regarding the serpent in the Garden, I even see Genesis 3 as indicating a note of sinful rebellion prior to humanity's embrace in eating the fruit of the tree of knowledge.
My own viewpoint is similar to what I am reading from your posts, B.W.. That God gives free will as a gift to his creatures. I may not agree with Fortigum in saying all angels are perfect, but I see that they are closer to God and closer to perfection. I hypothesize that they are less likely to choose error. Going back to earlier terminology, they are more mature. But not *perfectly* mature. We know the Father is perfectly mature and his Son Jesus is perfectly mature -- infallible. For those with Trinity beliefs, the third person of Trinity, the Holy Spirit, is also perfectly and eternally mature. Below these personalities is a range from what I can tell (others certainly have different viewpoints on this count). And humans seem far far down the rungs. As far as I know, the lowest rung (animals not having the power of choice and survivability).
At this point, may I return to a post I posed to you B.W. a few pages back that got lost, ask again for your opinions. This is the post where I listed out different types of immaturity. My attempt here is to get at what Locker is asking, "could original sin be defined." We know for a fact that people when they are born are immature in dimensions of physicality and character. When we talk about original sin, "The Fall", we talk about a quality of sinfulness in my opinion which is
beyond immaturity, which is only correctible by redemption. We talk in terms of a
debt that must be repaid and cannot be forgiven or repaid by our own efforts. God being a Father and having infinite parental insight into immaturity would be able to see what his children are growing toward, and I don't see Hell -- eternal debt punishment -- as the answer for that aspect of wrong choices. Yes, Hell as ultimate judgment for those fully identified with sin, but I see punishment for
correction purposes as every likelihood for immaturity (which would not be from Hell but everyday you-reap-what-you-sow wisdom growth in the school of hard knocks). And so what part of children's behavior, or even adult behavior, is beyond the bounds of immaturity. Does that point the way toward grasping what is the debt of unforgiveable original sin. I hypothesize that fathers and mothers are able to have better insights into this since they have kids of their own that they are able to see as immature or evil.
A long post, hopefully ir retains some sense.