674da32071 The fact is that the man and woman were free to even take fruit from the Tree of Life. This means that God original intention was for man to live forever. Thus Eve was not only tempted to eat the seductive fruit from the tree of the knowldege of good and evil but was also disobediant, not trusting of God, and then according to some, was wholly seduced by satan. OCLC16947184. Pomegranate[edit]. wood) of knowledge of good and evil" (mali here is the genitive of malum). v t e People and things in the Quran Characters God in Islam (Allah) Names of God found in the Quran Angels Israfil Izra'il/Azrael (Malak al-Mawt) Jibra'il/Gabriel (Al-Ruh al-Amin) and Holy Spirit (Al-Ruh al-Qudus) and Al-Ruh (The Spirit) Maalik Mika'il/Michael Harut and Marut Jinns Ibls/Devil or Shaitan/Satan Ifrit In Heaven (Jannah) Ghilman and Wildan Houri Prophets and apostles (messengers) of God Mentioned dam/Adam Alyasa'/Elisha Ayyub/Job Dawud/David Dhul-Kifl/Ezekiel? Harun/Aaron Hud/Eber? Ibrahim/Abraham (Khalilullah) Idris/Enoch? Ilyas/Elijah Imran/Joachim (father of Maryam) Isa/Jesus Isaq/Isaac Isma'il/Ishmael Dhabih Ullah Isma'il the Truthful (Sadiq-al-Wa'd) Lut/Lot Muhammad or Ahmad/Paraclete Musa/Moses (Kalimullah) Nuh/Noah Saleh/Shelah? Shu'aib/Jethro (Reuel, Hobab)? Sulayman/Solomon Uzair/Ezra? Yahya/John the Baptist Yaqub/Jacob (Israel) Yunus/Jonah (Dhul-Nun, Sahib al-Hut) Ysuf/Joseph Zakariya/Zechariah Implied Ermia/Jeremiah Samuel Yusha' ibn Nn/Joshua Good people (before Islam) Mentioned Dhul-Qarnayn Luqman Maryam/Mary (mother of Isa) Talut/Saul Implicitly mentioned Asiyah bint Muzahim/Bithiah? (wife of Fir'aun) Asif ibn Barkhiya Bilquis (Queen of Saba/Sheba) Believer of Fir'aun Family (Hizbil/Hizqil ibn Sabura) Beniamin/Benjamin Habib the Carpenter (believer of Ya-Sin) Kaleb/Caleb Khidr Magicians of Fir'aun Simon Cephas/Simon Peter Other people (before Islam) Mentioned zar (uncle of Ibrahim) Fir'aun/Pharaoh Haman Jalut/Goliath Qarun/Korah Smiri/Zimri? Implicitly mentioned Abraha Bal'am/Balaam Bar Nebuchadnezzar II Nimrod Potiphar (Al-Aziz) Shaddad Simeon (son of Ya'qub) Slayers of Saleh's she-camel (Qaddar ibn Salif and Musda' ibn Dahr) Valid ibn Rayyan (king of Egypt in the account of Ysuf) Zuleika (wife of al-Aziz) Mentioned people (after Islam) Ab Lahab Zayd ibn Harithah Relatives of prophets Specified good relatives Daughters of Lut/Lot (Ritha, Za'ura, et al.) Elizabeth or 'Ish' (wife of Zakariya) Habil/Abel (son of Adam) Hawwa'/Eve (wife of Adam) Kulthum/Miriam (sister of Musa) Saffurah/Zipporah (wife of Musa) and Layya (Saffura's sister) Sarah (wife of Ibrahim, mother of Isaq) Yukabed/Jochebed (mother of Musa) Non-specified good relatives Abiona/Amtelai daughter of Karnebo (mother of Ibrahim) Bathsheba (wife of Dawud) Muhammad's wives Daughters of Muhammad Hjar/Hagar (wife of Ibrahim, mother of Isma'il) Hannah/Anne daughter of Faquz (mother of Maryam) Imran/Amram (father of Musa) Lamech (father of Nuh) Rhil/Rachel (wife of Ya'qub) Rahma/Dinah (wife of Ayyub) Shamkha bint Anush/Betenos (mother of Nuh) Son of Luqman Other relatives Brothers of Ysuf Children of Ayyub Dead son of Sulaiman Qabil/Cain? (son of Adam) Trah/Terah (father of Ibrahim) Umm Jamil (wife of Abu Lahab) Wali'ah or Wa'ilah/Waala? (wife of Nuh) Walihah or Wahilah (wife of Lut) Yam or Kan'an (son of Nuh) Groups and tribes Tribes and ethnicities Mentioned 'd (people of Hud) s and Ajam Children of Israel/Israelites Companions of the Rass People of Saba'/Sheba People of Shu'aib (people of Madyan and people of Aykah/Wood) People of Tubba' Quraysh Romans Thamud (people of Saleh, companions of Hijr) Ya'juj and Ma'juj/Gog and Magog Implicitly mentioned Ahl al-Bayt Amalek Banu Hashim Banu Nadir Banu Qaynuqa Banu Qurayza Iranian people Umayyad Dynasty Groups Mentioned Christian apostles Disciples of Jesus Companions of Noah's Ark Companions of Sabbath (Ab al-Sabt) Companions of the Cave/Seven Sleepers and Companions of al-Raqaim Companions of the Elephant People of al-Ukhdd People of the City (People of Ya-Sin) People of the Burned Garden (Ab al-Jannah) Ulu'l azm prophets Implicitly mentioned Ahl al-Suffa (People of the Verandah) Aus and Khazraj Copts Hezbollah Muhajirun (The emigrants) and Ansar (The helpers) Ummah of Islam (Ummah of Muhammad) Religious groups Ahl al-dhimmah (Dhimmi) Christians (People of Injil) Jews Kafir (Infidels) Majus Zoroastrians Munafiq Hypocrites Mushrik Polytheists Muslims People of the Book (Ahl al-Kitb) Sabians Ahbr (Jewish scholars) Qissis (Christian priest) Rabbani/Rabbi Ruhban (Christian monks) Locations, entities and events Locations Mentioned Ahqf Al-Aqsa Mosque Arafat and Mash'ar al-Harm Bbil/Babylon Badr Door of Hittah Hijr/Hegra Holy Land (Palestine and Levant) Hunayn Iram Ka'bah/Kaaba (Bayt al-Harm/Sacred House, Bayt al-'Atq/Ancient House) Madyan/Midian Madinah/Medina (formerly Yathrib) Majma' al-Bahrain Makkah/Mecca (Umm al-Qura, Balad al-Amin, Bakkah) Maqm Ibrahim Masjid al-Dirar Masjid al-Haram Mount Judi Mu'tafikat (Sodom) Rass Saba'/Sheba Al-Safa and Al-Marwah Tur Sin'/Mount Sinai and Jabal al-Tur Egypt Valley of Tuwa Implicitly mentioned Antioch Antakya Ayla Barrier of Dhul-Qarnayn Bayt al-Muqaddas and 'Ariha Black Stone (Al-ajar al-Aswad) and Al-Hijr of Isma'il Canaan Cave of Hira and Cave of Thawr Cave of Seven Sleepers Dr al-Nadwa Hudaybiyyah Jordan River Ma'rib Dam Masjid al-Nabawi (Prophet's Mosque) Mesopotamia Nile River Nineveh Palestine River Paradise of Shaddad Quba Mosque Sinai Desert and Th Desert Ta'if Religious locations Bay'a (Church) Mihrab Monastery Mosque Salat (Synagogue) Non-human physical entities Religious texts Injil/Gospel Quran Suhuf-i Ibrahim (Scrolls of Abraham) Tawrat/Torah, Suhuf-i-Musa (Scrolls of Moses) and Tablets of Stone Zabur Related animals Cow of Israelites and Golden calf Dog of Seven Sleepers Fish of Yunis Hoopoe of Sulayman She-Camel of Saleh Related objects Forbidden fruit of Adam Heavenly Food of Christian Apostles Noah's Ark Staff of Musa Tabut al-Sakina (Casket of Shekhinah) Throne of Bilqis Trumpet of Israfil Mentioned idols (cult images) Baal Lt, 'Uzza and Mant Wadd, Suwa', Yaghuth, Ya'uq and Nasr (Jibt and Taghut Ansb) Events Battle of Badr Battle of Hunayn Battle of Khaybar Battle of Tabouk Battle of the Trench (Battle of the Confederates) Battle of Uhud Conquest of Mecca Hadith of the pond of Khumm Incident of Ifk Layla al-Mabit Mubahala The Farewell Pilgrimage (Hujja al-Wada') Treaty of Hudaybiyyah Umrah al-Qaza Yawm al-Dr Note: The names are sorted alphabetically. And from his hand they have proceeded against those who dwell on the earth from that day and for evermore." Therefore, the fruit of the tree of knowledge of good and evil was flesh and the methods to acquire it.
In the Amharic version the forbidden fruit of which Eve ate was a fig. Elizabeth on 11 August, 2008 at 2:08 pm said: Thank you, Yaw Addaem, for your comprehensive overview of the life and death, good and evil, the connection between physical actions and spiritual implications, etc&.all of which I have considered based on past reading and prayer. Melzora October 1, 2014 The sin was not in the fruit but the disobedience and wanting to be "like G-d". ^ a b c d The Straight Dope: Was the forbidden fruit in the Garden of Eden an apple? ^ The Fig: its History, Culture, and Curing, Gustavus A. Durham, Kristin A. If Eve had a choice to eat it or not, then so too Adam had the choice. "Reassembling Truth: Twenty-first-century Milton". If anybody says he is spiritually gifted, he should understand the words of the Spirit. This is the forbidden fruit that transated man from a spiritual world to a physical one. Wheat[edit].
Lateyaba replied
465 weeks ago