The Serpent's Scheme Against Adam and Eve

Curated by Maggid·Edited by Arthur Sabintsev·

The serpent was not a garden snake.

Legends of the Jews says it once stood upright like a human being, tall as a camel, clever enough to serve Adam and Eve, and strong enough to carry the work of the world. A pair of serpents could have gathered silver, gold, gems, and pearls for humanity.

Then intelligence became poison. The serpent looked at Adam, saw his bond with Eve, and grew jealous. It knew Adam would resist a direct attack, so it waited for Eve near the tree.

The trap began with one question: did God really forbid every tree? Eve answered that only the middle tree was forbidden, and that even touching it would bring death. But God had forbidden eating, not touching. Adam had added a fence too high to stand.

The serpent pushed Eve against the tree. Nothing happened. Then it whispered the next lie. If touching does not kill you, eating will not kill you either. God only wants to keep creation for Himself.

Eve ate. Adam followed. The cloud of glory lifted from them, their luminous skin disappeared, and mortality entered the world. Every creature accepted the fruit except the bird called malham, who refused to join the transgression and was granted life in Paradise.

The tragedy is not curiosity. It is the moment a holy boundary becomes distorted, and distortion gives the serpent room to speak.

Themes

Biblical References