D. B. Gooner
Please DM me if female
★★
- Joined
- Jan 13, 2025
- Posts
- 3,117
- Online time
- 5d 13h
The Bible as an anti-moralist book – Adam and Eve, Garden of Eden, Cain and Abel in-depth analysis
The Bible is history's most influential moral guide. But what if the Bible's opening chapters aren't about morality at all, but a warning against it?
Before we begin, I need to define what “God” means in this interpretation.
To me, God is not a judge. He does not have an ego. God is the very concept of being itself.
The fundamental condition that everything shares: existence. The ultimate abstraction of life. God is the blueprint every single thing in existence is built upon.
That statement is crucial. God is existence without judgment, without categorization. He is who he is, and no one questions it.
And if humans are made in God’s image, then that same principle exists within us all in the form of human nature - our instincts, our impulses, our intuitive drive to act,. To follow God, in this framework, is not to obey rules. It is to align with your own nature, and to act without constantly judging yourself.
If gravitating towards certain behavior is unavoidable, why struggle against it? This is where my core belief lies. To me, God is human nature. To be faithful to God means to follow your instinct, and filter it through reasoning. Your instinct isn’t there to tempt you, it is there to guide you.
You can think of your instinct as a reward system. For an example, when your body craves nutrients, it signals that by making you uncomfortable through hunger. Once you eat, you feel immediate satisfaction. That satisfaction is your reward for obeying human nature, for obeying God, and it simultaneously benefits your health, as your body now has the fuel it needs to function.
With that in mind, let’s look at the opening chapters of Book of Genesis, as I explain why the bible can be interpreted as an anti-moralist book. I will also talk about Cain in detail, as I believe him to be one of the most complex characters ever written, considering we only have one chapter worth of content around him.
Genesis 1 – Duality and Acceptance
Before light is created, darkness already exists. If something exists without being created, then it must be an attribute of God. Darkness also exists within God, and God is perfect. And if it exists in God, it must also exist in us.
This introduces a fundamental idea: duality is not a flaw - it is inherent.
Light cannot exist without darkness. Heaven cannot exist without earth.
In human terms, this reflects emotional duality. Every
Love and hate are not opposites in a moral sense - they are both functional and necessary states.
Love sustains life: it forms bonds, enables reproduction, ensures survival across generations. A baby can not survive without its mothers love. An elder can not survive without the love of their children.
But hate also has function. If someone threatens your family, responding with passive understanding may put them in danger, while aggression and violence might keep them protected. Is protecting yourself and your loved ones really wrong?
So the text, at least in this reading, is not establishing morality. It is establishing balance. Not good vs evil. Just unavoidable and beneficial states of being.
First man is created.
Genesis 2 – the rejection of morality
God does not introduce morality. He warns against it. Before this moment, humans act without self-judgment. They do what they do, without questioning whether it is “right” or “wrong.”
Morality is presented as a choice, not a necessary foundation.
Here, a distinction appears: God creates. Man names. Creation is natural. Naming is categorization.
This is the beginning of abstraction - of assigning meaning, labels, and structure onto reality. That process will later become a burden. Because instead of living, humans begin interpreting their own existence. Humans, while searching for meaning in their lives, end up overthinking and not living in the moment or enjoying some blessings they might have. Meaning is not something we should have to think about, we are here to act.
The creation of woman introduces something different. Her body, as well as her name is derived from man. They are not separate entities in the same way animals are. Man and woman complete each other. Their union produces life. Only in this union do we truly tap into the potential of life.
And importantly, they are naked, and unashamed. Because shame requires judgment. And judgment does not yet exist.
Genesis 3 – the fall into judgement
The serpent introduces separation. Think about it’s shape, it’s a line, a border. It separates. It represents division, distinction, categorization. Humans are told they will become “like God.” But think about the world we have today. We aren’t “like God”, we imitate God. People roleplay God. Judges, using their own, subjectively formed definitions of good and evil, sentence people to prison time, and even death.
Instead of letting the world play out the way it should based on already existing laws of nature, we enforce our own, manmade laws.
They hide. Not because God punishes them, but because they judge themselves before God ever judges them. God does not accuse. He asks them what they did.
The judgment is internal. They become ashamed of simply existing. They cover their once naked bodies. This is also where separation deepens.
After this the man becomes Adam. He too, is now categorized, he is no longer just “man” acting the way a man should, but a person who will rethink every action. Adam names his wife, he categorizes her, she is no longer just another part of him, she is now a separate entity.
Identity replaces unity. Morality enters and with it: shame, fear, self-doubt.
Genesis 4 – Cain and Abel
If God is human nature, then prayer is intuition. And sacrifice is the rejection of what society values, rejection of materialism.
Ownership, after all, is not natural, it is constructed. Nothing in nature guarantees permanence of possession. Possessions are temporary.
Abel offers his best. Cain withholds.
This reflects two orientations: Abel acts in alignment with instinct. Cain is attached to social value and material worth .
Cain kills Abel. Not out of pure instinct but because his identity depends on external validation. Abel’s rejection of material value undermines Cain’s entire worldview. Cain’s whole self-worth comes from his material possessions. If Abel doesn’t value his possessions, he also doesn’t value Cain. So Cain destroys him.
But again, God does not immediately punish.
He asks:
Cain judges himself. His punishment is not imposed, it is psychological.
Cain claims he will be hidden from Gods presence. The reason for this is if God is instinct, Cain can’t return to following him. If he returns to living instinctively, he will have to face the fact that his brother was right, and that he killed him for no reason.
He also can’t enjoy his possessions anymore. He killed Abel out of envy. Ironically, this envy and rage he used to kill his brother, are very instinctive emotions. He momentarily relied on instinct, so that he may preserve his possessions. But in doing so, he proved that instinct ultimately overwrites morality. His whole system of values is built on lies.
He cannot return to instinct, because that would force him to admit his action was meaningless. But he also cannot return to moral society, because he has violated it. He exists in no-mans land. That is his torment.
Not literal. Symbolic. His labor becomes meaningless, because he knows what he did for it. His material success is permanently stained with blood.
And this is crucial:
Not because God will punish them. But because they too will contradict themselves. If anyone judges Cain for being a murderer, and decide that they want to kill them, they too would become murderers. In order to punish someone off of judgement, you have to stoop to their level. You have to abandon the very morality you are trying to enforce. Their punishment is also internal.
History and identity
After the story of Cain, we get our first biblical genealogy. Names. Roles. Functions. I believe this is intentional. We no longer get to hear these people’s stories, they simply become their jobs, their function within society. History is the ultimate categorization, people are oversimplified to what they did for society, and then judged based off of that. We idolize, condemn and compare. And in doing so, we lose individuality. Ironic right? By trying not to act on a shared human nature, we become less and less unique.
Conclusion
In this reading, Genesis is not a story about sin. It is a story about the emergence of judgment. Humans were not cast out for disobedience. They chose to abandon instinct… in favor of categorization, morality, and self-evaluation.
And in doing so, they created: shame, conflict, identity as something separate from being.
God does not punish. Humans do. To themselves. And the further we move away from instinct,
the further we move away from simply being, the more we divide, categorize, and judge… until nothing is left but systems… and roles… and the constant question: “Am I doing the right thing?”
The Bible is history's most influential moral guide. But what if the Bible's opening chapters aren't about morality at all, but a warning against it?
Before we begin, I need to define what “God” means in this interpretation.
To me, God is not a judge. He does not have an ego. God is the very concept of being itself.
The fundamental condition that everything shares: existence. The ultimate abstraction of life. God is the blueprint every single thing in existence is built upon.
Book of Exodus 3:14: “I am who I am.”
That statement is crucial. God is existence without judgment, without categorization. He is who he is, and no one questions it.
And if humans are made in God’s image, then that same principle exists within us all in the form of human nature - our instincts, our impulses, our intuitive drive to act,. To follow God, in this framework, is not to obey rules. It is to align with your own nature, and to act without constantly judging yourself.
If gravitating towards certain behavior is unavoidable, why struggle against it? This is where my core belief lies. To me, God is human nature. To be faithful to God means to follow your instinct, and filter it through reasoning. Your instinct isn’t there to tempt you, it is there to guide you.
You can think of your instinct as a reward system. For an example, when your body craves nutrients, it signals that by making you uncomfortable through hunger. Once you eat, you feel immediate satisfaction. That satisfaction is your reward for obeying human nature, for obeying God, and it simultaneously benefits your health, as your body now has the fuel it needs to function.
With that in mind, let’s look at the opening chapters of Book of Genesis, as I explain why the bible can be interpreted as an anti-moralist book. I will also talk about Cain in detail, as I believe him to be one of the most complex characters ever written, considering we only have one chapter worth of content around him.
Genesis 1 – Duality and Acceptance
Genesis 1:1–4:
“In the beginning God created the heavens and the earth...darkness was over the surface of the deep... ‘Let there be light’... God saw that the light was good, and he separated the light from the darkness.”
Before light is created, darkness already exists. If something exists without being created, then it must be an attribute of God. Darkness also exists within God, and God is perfect. And if it exists in God, it must also exist in us.
This introduces a fundamental idea: duality is not a flaw - it is inherent.
Light cannot exist without darkness. Heaven cannot exist without earth.
In human terms, this reflects emotional duality. Every
Love and hate are not opposites in a moral sense - they are both functional and necessary states.
Love sustains life: it forms bonds, enables reproduction, ensures survival across generations. A baby can not survive without its mothers love. An elder can not survive without the love of their children.
But hate also has function. If someone threatens your family, responding with passive understanding may put them in danger, while aggression and violence might keep them protected. Is protecting yourself and your loved ones really wrong?
So the text, at least in this reading, is not establishing morality. It is establishing balance. Not good vs evil. Just unavoidable and beneficial states of being.
First man is created.
Genesis 2 – the rejection of morality
Genesis 2:16-17:
“And the LORD God commanded the man, ‘You are free to eat from any tree in the garden; but you must not eat from the tree of the knowledge of good and evil, for when you eat from it you will certainly die.’”
God does not introduce morality. He warns against it. Before this moment, humans act without self-judgment. They do what they do, without questioning whether it is “right” or “wrong.”
Morality is presented as a choice, not a necessary foundation.
Genesis 2:19–23:
“Now the LORD God had formed out of the ground all the wild animals and all the birds in the sky...whatever the man called each living creature, that was its name...”
Here, a distinction appears: God creates. Man names. Creation is natural. Naming is categorization.
This is the beginning of abstraction - of assigning meaning, labels, and structure onto reality. That process will later become a burden. Because instead of living, humans begin interpreting their own existence. Humans, while searching for meaning in their lives, end up overthinking and not living in the moment or enjoying some blessings they might have. Meaning is not something we should have to think about, we are here to act.
The creation of woman introduces something different. Her body, as well as her name is derived from man. They are not separate entities in the same way animals are. Man and woman complete each other. Their union produces life. Only in this union do we truly tap into the potential of life.
And importantly, they are naked, and unashamed. Because shame requires judgment. And judgment does not yet exist.
Genesis 3 – the fall into judgement
Genesis 3:4-5: “’You will not certainly die,’ the serpent said to the woman. ‘For God knows that when you eat from it your eyes will be opened, and you will be like God, knowing good and evil.’”
The serpent introduces separation. Think about it’s shape, it’s a line, a border. It separates. It represents division, distinction, categorization. Humans are told they will become “like God.” But think about the world we have today. We aren’t “like God”, we imitate God. People roleplay God. Judges, using their own, subjectively formed definitions of good and evil, sentence people to prison time, and even death.
Instead of letting the world play out the way it should based on already existing laws of nature, we enforce our own, manmade laws.
Genesis 3:8–12:
“Then the man and his wife heard the sound of the LORD God as he was walking in the garden in the cool of the day, and they hid from the LORD God among the trees of the garden. But the LORD God called to the man, ‘Where are you?’...’I was afraid because I was naked; so I hid...’”
They hide. Not because God punishes them, but because they judge themselves before God ever judges them. God does not accuse. He asks them what they did.
The judgment is internal. They become ashamed of simply existing. They cover their once naked bodies. This is also where separation deepens.
After this the man becomes Adam. He too, is now categorized, he is no longer just “man” acting the way a man should, but a person who will rethink every action. Adam names his wife, he categorizes her, she is no longer just another part of him, she is now a separate entity.
Identity replaces unity. Morality enters and with it: shame, fear, self-doubt.
Genesis 4 – Cain and Abel
If God is human nature, then prayer is intuition. And sacrifice is the rejection of what society values, rejection of materialism.
Ownership, after all, is not natural, it is constructed. Nothing in nature guarantees permanence of possession. Possessions are temporary.
Abel offers his best. Cain withholds.
This reflects two orientations: Abel acts in alignment with instinct. Cain is attached to social value and material worth .
Cain kills Abel. Not out of pure instinct but because his identity depends on external validation. Abel’s rejection of material value undermines Cain’s entire worldview. Cain’s whole self-worth comes from his material possessions. If Abel doesn’t value his possessions, he also doesn’t value Cain. So Cain destroys him.
But again, God does not immediately punish.
He asks:
Genesis 4:13–15:
“...What have you done?...”
“‘My punishment is more than I can bear. Today you are driving me from the land, and I will be hidden from your presence; I will be a restless wanderer on the earth, and whoever finds me will kill me.”
Cain judges himself. His punishment is not imposed, it is psychological.
Cain claims he will be hidden from Gods presence. The reason for this is if God is instinct, Cain can’t return to following him. If he returns to living instinctively, he will have to face the fact that his brother was right, and that he killed him for no reason.
He also can’t enjoy his possessions anymore. He killed Abel out of envy. Ironically, this envy and rage he used to kill his brother, are very instinctive emotions. He momentarily relied on instinct, so that he may preserve his possessions. But in doing so, he proved that instinct ultimately overwrites morality. His whole system of values is built on lies.
He cannot return to instinct, because that would force him to admit his action was meaningless. But he also cannot return to moral society, because he has violated it. He exists in no-mans land. That is his torment.
“...the ground will not yield its crops...”
Not literal. Symbolic. His labor becomes meaningless, because he knows what he did for it. His material success is permanently stained with blood.
And this is crucial:
“...anyone who kills Cain will suffer vengeance...”
Not because God will punish them. But because they too will contradict themselves. If anyone judges Cain for being a murderer, and decide that they want to kill them, they too would become murderers. In order to punish someone off of judgement, you have to stoop to their level. You have to abandon the very morality you are trying to enforce. Their punishment is also internal.
History and identity
After the story of Cain, we get our first biblical genealogy. Names. Roles. Functions. I believe this is intentional. We no longer get to hear these people’s stories, they simply become their jobs, their function within society. History is the ultimate categorization, people are oversimplified to what they did for society, and then judged based off of that. We idolize, condemn and compare. And in doing so, we lose individuality. Ironic right? By trying not to act on a shared human nature, we become less and less unique.
Conclusion
In this reading, Genesis is not a story about sin. It is a story about the emergence of judgment. Humans were not cast out for disobedience. They chose to abandon instinct… in favor of categorization, morality, and self-evaluation.
And in doing so, they created: shame, conflict, identity as something separate from being.
God does not punish. Humans do. To themselves. And the further we move away from instinct,
the further we move away from simply being, the more we divide, categorize, and judge… until nothing is left but systems… and roles… and the constant question: “Am I doing the right thing?”





