The Evolution of Man 'Abdu'l-Baha says: - .. it is clear that this terrestrial globe in its present form did not come into existence all at once; but .. gradually passed through different phases until it became adorned with its present perfection... (132:1) .. man, in the beginning of his existence and in the womb of the earth, like the embryo in the womb of the mother, gradually grew and developed, and passed from one form to another .. until he appeared with this beauty and perfection, this force and this power. It is certain that in the beginning he had not this loveliness and grace and elegance, and that he only by degrees attained this shape, this form, this beauty, and this grace... (132:2) .. man's existence on this earth, from the beginning until it reaches this state, form, and condition, necessarily lasts a long time... But from the beginning of man's existence he is a distinct species... admitting that the traces of organs which have disappeared actually exist [in the human body], this is not a proof of the impermanence and the non- originality of the species. At the most it proves that the form, and fashion, and the organs of man have progressed. Man was always a distinct species, a man, not an animal. - Some Answered Questions (132:3) Of the story of Adam and Eve He says: - If we take this story in its apparent meaning, according to the interpretation of the masses, it is indeed extraordinary. The intelligence cannot accept it, affirm it, or imagine it; for such arrangements, such details, such speeches and reproaches are far from being those of an intelligent man, how must less of the Divinity - that Divinity who has organised this infinite universe in the most perfect form, and its innumerable inhabitants with absolute system, strength, and perfection... (132:4) Therefore this story of Adam and Eve who ate from the tree, and their expulsion from Paradise, must be thought of simply as a symbol. It contains divine mysteries and universal meanings, and it is capable of marvelous explanations. - Some Answered Questions
(132:5)
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