if we are not fallen then are we perfect? If we are not fallen then what are we?
"That, my boy, is the right question." (I, Robot)
Perfection is a Platonic ideal. It doesn't exist in the real world. Perfection implies that there is a model of human beings somewhere in cyberspace that we must conform to or else there is something wrong with us.
In the real world, we are self-defining. Our only ideal is what we ourselves make.
Now I know that many of you will be throwing fits to hear this, but it is the truth. It is why we are self-determined, not predestinated. Some people call it 'having free will'. I think self-determination is much the better term. It does not mean that God didn't create us. It means that God created us to be free. Freedom of course doesn't mean being independent, as Totty will readily agree but that is why I use the term self-determining. It means that our goals and aspirations are our own, not anyone else's. The human condition is not about falling from an ideal. Such an ideal does not exist and has never existed.
And it is because we are self-determined, that we have such high hopes for humanity and simultaneously such great disappointment in ourselves. And it is because we are self-determined that makes us moral beings, responsible for what we do, whether we do it deliberately, accidentally or indifferently. It is this exact same reason why we also need to be forgiven and why forgiveness is meaningful for us. Forgiveness enables us to change direction.
The point is that
this is how God has made us. And this is why he so regretted having made us. I mean, why would he wait for the flood, to be disappointed in us? Why wasn't he disappointed in us right at the start when he made us? The point is that that is what we as self-determining beings
became. Now that is a historical fact. It has nothing to do with a fall. It has nothing to do with inheriting 'sinfulness' from Adam (original sin) or being corporately responsible. It has to do with what we became as self-determining beings. Adam was the first and because he was the first to sin, sin entered the world through him. This is what Romans 5 means. It doesn't mean there was something called sin, in the way that there is something called tuberculosis or swine flu, that spread physically around the world. It just means that we each chose to live independently from God and his love. It doesn't even mean that everyone did, just that it was characteristic of humanity. There were people who occasionally chose to serve God and some of these are recorded.
And whilst it is still possible for a person to be essentially righteous, the Gospel brings spiritual power with it. It is more than just an ethic to follow, it is the power to follow that ethic and it is a promise of physical resurrection, the fulfilment of that power and the justification of the choice to be righteous. And this Gospel is exactly what mankind, who in his self-determination has wandered very far from God, needs to bring him close. It is part of God's plan and not just some accident.
I know of course that some people are going to throw a load of scriptures at me seemingly contradicting this, but I just ask that before you do, please consider the logic, the reasoning behind this idea and consider if it is sane instead of jumping on words.