Eden in Fausset's Bible Dictionary
("delight".) ("Paradise",) the Septuagint translation of
"garden," a park and pleasure ground. From the Zendic
pairidaeza, a hedging round. In N.W. Mesopotamia an Eden is
mentioned near the Tigris (2 Kings 19:12; Isaiah 37:12;
Ezekiel 27:23). Another, in Coelosyria, near Damascus (Amos
1:5). The primitive Eden was somewhere in the locality
containing the conjoined Euphrates and the Tigris (or
Hiddekel) which branch off northward into those two rivers,
and southward branch into two channels again below Bassera,
before failing into the sea, Gihon the E. channel, and Pison
the W. Havilah, near the W. channel, would thus be N.E.
Arabia; and Cush (or Ethiopia), near the E. channel, would
be Kissia, Chuzestan, or Susiana. The united rivers are
called the Shat-el-Arab. Eden, was but a temporary nursery
for the human family: from there people, if they had
remained innocent, would have spread out in every direction
until the whole earth became "the garden of the Lord."
God's purpose, though deferred, will, in His own
time, be realized by the Second Adam, the Lord Jesus from
heaven. The rivers are named as they were after the flood,
which must have altered the face of the ancient Eden. The
four took their rise in it, as their center, which is not
true of the present Tigris ("arrow") and Euphrates ("the
good and fertile".) Armenia's highlands are the traditional
cradle of the race; thence probably, from Eden as their
source, flowed the two eastern rivers, Tigris and Euphrates,
and the two western ones through the regions answering to
Arabia and Egypt. Man was to dress and keep the garden, for
without human culture, grain and other plants will
degenerate. As nature was made for man, his calling was to
ennoble it, and to make paradise, which though so lovely,
was susceptible of development, a transparent mirror of the
Creator's glory.
It was designed also as the scene of man's own
spiritual development by its two trees, of life and of
knowledge. Here also the "beasts of the field," i.e. that
live on its produce (game and tame cattle, as distinguished
from "beasts of the earth"), were brought to him to develop
that intellect which constitutes his lordship and
superiority to the brutes. His inner thought in observing
their natures found expression in names appropriate. The
Paradise regained can never be lost by those who overcome
through the Lord Jesus (Revelation 2:7; Revelation 22:14).
The traditions of almost all nations have preserved the
truth, in some form, that there was an original abode of
man's innocence; the Greek and Latin garden of the
Hesperides; the Hindu golden Mount Meru; the Chinese
enchanted gardens; the Medo-Persian Ormuzd's mountain
Albordj (compare Ezekiel 28:13; Joel 2:3).
The Hindus' tradition tells of a "first age of the
world when justice, in the form of a bull, kept herself firm
on her four feet, virtue reigned, man free from disease saw
all his wishes accomplished, and attained an age of 400
years." In the Teutonic Edda, Fab. 7, etc., corruption is
represented as suddenly produced by strange women's
blandishments who deprived men of their pristine integrity.
In the Tibetan, Mongolian, and Singhalese traditions, a
covetous temper works the sad change. The Babylonians,
Egyptians, and Chinese had the tradition of man's life once
reaching thousands of years. The Greeks and Romans made it
from 800 to 1,000 years.
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