The thing in the bag wrote:
Originally, humanity was intrinsically perfect
Then why did we eat the apple? And being that the apple was merely knowledge, how could it have done anything other then make us aware of the evil that was already inside of us?
The eating of the apple was also the disobedience of God. Which was available because we have free will. So I don't know that we've ever been perfect. We have always been capable of doing evil since we have free will, but as time goes on, humanity gains more power, via technology, or knowledge (such as that gained by the apple) thus making us able to be either more evil or more good. An archangel can be extremely good or extremely evil, and a cow can't be very much of either, because of the difference in power. Over time, as well, our nature and society have been corrupted by Satan's wiles.
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The point is that if he weren't good and perfect then there would be no reason to heed him at all.
I would call dodging an eternity of suffering a reason, but to each his own.
By the way, he could probably perform mind control on you, so you might not even get a choice.
About the mind control, that's what I meant when I said 'as long as I retained my free will.' But what I'm saying that is if God isn't purely good, then we're pretty much screwed either way. Making our existence entirely pointless. And, personally, I would rather be driven mad by an eternity of suffering than falsely cater to an ignoble god. Not that he wouldn't be able see through it.
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it's not so much a desire to be bad as it is an unhealthy desire for what would normally be good things.
Selfishness is inherent, evil, and often concious.
Really, perhaps the only difference between good and evil is the definition of good. Looked at that way however, neither good nor evil exist, as they are both subjective. If god made us in his image, then he shares our definitions, which are at times selfish.
But, you see, that's what selfishness
is– the incorrect pursuit of good. Nobody does evil for evil's sake, though there are those who do good for goodness' sake. Which proves good's inherent superiority and disproves Dualism. But that's a topic for another day.
Not sure what you mean by the definition of good. Or why you say good and evil are subjective. That infers that there is no actual good or evil, no real right and wrong. Which is incorrect. You can see that by examining humanity's behavior. That would make Nazis no more to blame for their views than for their hair color. And it's not just that things are inconvenient that makes us oppose them – I, and everyone else, would be angrier at someone who purposely tries to trip me and fails than someone who accidentally did so and succeeded.
You might say that people have different morals – and it certainly might seem so at first glance. But this 'difference' is only because humans often subdue (or have subdued by their environment) their moral impulses until they've convinced themselves that it isn't wrong.
Examining this discussion overall, I think I would say that we are indeed partly evil in nature. But I would say this is due to our free will and to Satan's perversion. Merely 'being made in God's image' does not mean humans and God are exactly alike – it refers to our ability to choose, think, and feel. To say that since we are evil, God must be, is not very far from saying that since we are weak, God must be. Which he certainly isn't if he could create this universe.