The importance of opposites!!
In the garden, Adam and Eve were created innocent - which means they had no knowledge - NONE at all - about good and evil (one wonders if Adam fully understood what God meant when He cautioned him about "eating of the tree of the knowledge of good and evil," and what would happen if he did - "...in dying he would die." What was death? What was good and what was evil? All they know was the care of God in that garden - they never praised God, nor thanked Him, or expressed appreciation for anything that they had. And so...there was a "learning process" provided, and planned!, for them...These words that follow do help us understand what was necessary...and know that it was God who had them make their choice (yes, God takes full responsibility - read Rom. 8:20):
The philosopher and scholar Jacob Boehme wrote that in order for Yes to be Yes, there had to be a No otherwise Yes would have no meaning. He called this Dialecticism. Norman Grubb, who studied Boehme extensively, called this the Law of Opposites. Simply stated, the Law of Opposites says that in order for growth and maturity to take place, there must be an opposing force that resists or contradicts its opposite. For example, a muscle in the human body cannot grow unless there is a resistance or force applied to that muscle. This resistance first weakens the muscle actually breaking it down; however, with rest and proper nutrition, the muscle grows bigger and stronger. A child cannot understand what cold is until they touch something that is hot--they learn and become wiser by experiencing the opposite. Applying this to the spiritual, good cannot truly be understood until the effects of evil are seen and experienced. Obedience means nothing to us, until we see the results of disobedience. We cannot understand the holiness of God until we see the ravages and effects of hatred and selfishness in our lives and in the world around us. This is the Law of Opposites and it is the learning process that God has ordained for us. All we need to do is look at our own experiences to see if this is true. Does not a sunrise give us a great sense of peace and security only because we have experienced the loneliness and fear of the night? Can anyone really appreciate the joys of life until we have tasted the sorrows of death? Do we not appreciate the sweetness of His grace only because the law first condemned us? Is not the Cross of Christ embraced by us because we were first separated from God by our own sin? We must experience the evil in order to appreciate the good! I quote Don Godfroy:
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