Blessed Eve, Mother of All Living

Partake so that we might live ...

Partake so that we might live ...


The opposite of life is not death, rather never knowing.

Yet knowledge has been called a forbidden fruit and a poison … the root of all evil … a bitter token of death. And Eve, she who was tempted to partake, has been made to suffer for it. The tempter? A god and a devil. And why not? For knowledge is something that many hate and all come to regret. We are fallen, and from what? From the opposite of life.

It seems to me that some of eastern philosophy is driven by an ancient will to return to that place of non-being — a striving to escape the cares of this life. What is it called? Transcendence? And western philosophy likewise. Do we not speak longingly of that realm where there is no death, only eternal cycles of … what? The answer is in our gods. We call our gods everlasting and unchanging, omnipotent and all-knowing. These are beings beyond our kin and the embodiment of our wildest contradictions. We want to live but not pay the price of death. We want knowledge without consequence. We want to believe in impossible things because we are still children.

Oh God, the Eternal Father, hallowed be thy name … You. Complete. Me.

No. I’ll take my bite of fruit with Eve, to live and die. I accept my lot among the transient living as the cost of leaving the never-born. Oh yes, to live is to fail to see the whole for all the pieces. And what should we expect? We are ourselves just pieces … pieces who think about what we see and thereby come to know something of ourselves and our place among so many other pieces. So long as we live, may we never be be healed. Only death take us back to that eternal unity where there is no pain, no caring, because there is no knowing.

Blessed Eve, mother of all living. Partake so that we might live …

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NOTES:

  • The Image – Charismatic, mystic, arcane. Feminism illustrated with the imprint of an ancient knowledge. This is what I see. Attribution unknown.
  • Resources – Special thanks to all those who tell our children stories about Eve and, more importantly, manage to do so in a truthful way. Also to ff42 and DKL whose comments in a discussion following last week’s post are reflected here.
  • About Cipher on a Wall is a weekly column and forum here on Doves & Serpents which explores the realm of mind, memories, and dreams. You can find an introductory post for Cipher on a Wall here and a full archive of posts here. My name is Matt, and I’ll be your host for the duration.