Natman
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- Aug 17, 2004
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Magisterium,Magisterium said:Well, that's an interesting theological development. However, in Gn 2:25 we see that scripture says that:
25 The man and his wife were both naked, and yet they felt no shame".
Now don't get me wrong, I'm not advocating nudism or even playing devil's advocate. I"m merely indicating the flaw in a weak argument (which I"m sure a nudism proponent would just as likely done if I hadn't)
That said, the problem with nudism (speaking from a Christian perspective) does in fact stem from the fall of man in the garden. This episode in the garden speaks more figuratively to the dignity of mankind while speaking literally to the nakedness of mankind. First we'll develop the former.
When we take into consideration Gn 2:25 we see that there is certainly an outward change which is external to Adam and Eve (not just an internal mental change) in that scripture says that "their eyes were opened". What happens here, is that man becomes aware of sin. Before this point, mankind only knows and does God's will. As a result, he enjoys a certain dignity through his relation to God. St. Thomas Aquinas states in his Shorter Suma, that it is not to be believed that there existed some magical fruit (in the literal sense) which posessed the ability to impart some special knowledge. This fruit is an allusion to the knowledge gained from experience. In this case, the experience was acting contrary to God's will. In the natural order, once somethingis learned, it can never be "unlearned". It may be forgotten for a time, but some remnant remains and it leaves an indellible mark so to speak on the mind of the knower. In like manner, the first act committed by man contrary to God's will resulted in experiencing a certain new knowledge. That new knowledge is called evil. Mankind from that point now would have within him, something which altered physical creation itself. This new knowledge served also to corrupt man's view of himself as well.
As for the whole nakedness thing, in the literal sense the shame is related to the new human condition. The human condition which is aware of its sin, seeks to conseal itself. Before the experience and gained knowledge of sin, mankind had nothing to be ashamed of. Sin changes all of that. As a result, human beings have a "natural" desire to cover themselves and feel a sense of violation when that cover is removed without their concent.
This desire to conceal all goes back to the fact that mankind was created for love. This purpose drives a desire for love within mankind and s sense of unhappiness when he does not receive it. Before the fall, mankind was flawless so to speak. In this way, man's intellectual, spiritual, and physical natures were completely loveable to one another and to God. When they sinned in act against God, suddenly their natures were tarnished by something contrary to God's god's will which was therefore unloveable. Aware of this new undesireable aspect of their being, they now seek to conceal (or clothe) their physical selves. Unfortunately, the knowledge which resided in their minds also changed them. This alteration gave birth to the mental feeling of fear. That fear stems from not wanting that unloveable part to be discovered. This is why Adam and Eve didn't simply clothe themselves and go marching right up to God like nothing happened. The change was not only outward, it was inward.
Finally we come to the modern idea of nudism. Again, from a Christian perspective, nudism is effectively a lie. By willfully ignoring the inherent shame in our sinful human nature, we close ourselves off to salvation and redemption. Nudism denies that shame and in turn effectively feigns the state of sinlessness which was posessed only before the fall.
In fact, God Himself clothed mankind after the fall, ironically in the skin of a reptile ("leather" Gn 3:21). This indicates that God Himself affirmed mankind's need for concealment.
I concur with your logic right up to the last two paragraphs.
Adam and Eve's eyes were opend to the fact that they "knew" they had sinned against God, and so, tried to hide themselves. God tempered His justice with grace by "providing" coverings for protection from the now fallen world, a world that would now be hostile to man. It wasn't a need for "concealment", but a need for "protection".
Also, as a Christian naturist, I am acknowledging a renewed relationship with God the Father through God the Son; that, although my physical body is not "perfect" as Adams was before the fall, my relationship IS.
I do not see this "inherent" shamefulness in our "nature" other than that which has been put upon us by other "men". This is evidenced in the fact that children do not display a sense of shame about their bodies until their parents teach it to them. Also, natives that live their lives naked are not ashamed until they encounter "civilized" people who foist their own standards upon them.
I am not ashamed of my "imperfect" body (or anyone else's) because I recognize that it is God's creation and that it is only a temporary vessel until the time it is also made new and imperishable. It is sad that because of our fallen state and the fallen state of the world that we must age, experience pain and suffering, and eventually endure a physical death. But I am not ashamed of any of this because it is all part of God's plan of redemption. Instead, I rejoice when I encounter people that have lived a long life and have the wisdom, the wrinkles, the gray hair and the battle scars to show it.
No. I have not "closed myself off to salvation and redemption". I have embrassed it completely by acknowledging that Jesus' blood is sufficient to cover ALL my sins and to renew my relationship with God, as promised, so that, even when I am fully clothed, I am "naked and unashamed".
Son-cerely,
Nate
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