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Eve's Disobedience

Decent Essays

In the beginning of John Milton’s Paradise Lost, the first words of the poem state that the main theme would evidently be “man’s first disobedience.” Throughout the story, Milton goes into specific detail of Adam and Eve’s disobedience, Satan’s rebellion and why each event within the text occurs. It is exhibited to be that Milton positions the story within the greater framework of Satan’s defiance. Satan and humankind’s insubordination towards God pose a major threat; Raphael tells Adam about it in order to provide him with a precise comprehension of the situation. Milton introduces two moral paths within Paradise Lost. First, the path represented by Satan, an unfavorable pathway of expanding depravity, shame and sin. The other path represented by Adam and Eve could easily be considered the road to redemption. Although Adam and Eve were the first human beings who refused to conform with God, we can agree that Satan is first amongst all of God’s creation to rebel against him. …show more content…

In addition, we know that God would not forgive Satan because he continues to rebel against him, even after his fall into Hell. Adam and Eve on the other hand are in an entirely different state of mind than Satan. They decide to seek mercy and ask forgiveness for their sins. They also understood that their defiance towards God will soon be amended. The way in which this would occur is through generations of exertion on Earth. Evidently, the road to redemption would be the ideal path to take. Milton states in Books XI and XII that even after continuous “falls”, repentance towards God is the gateway to human

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