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Nudity in religion : ウィキペディア英語版 | Nudity in religion Nudity in religion deals with the differing attitudes to nudity and modesty among world religions. == Abrahamic religions ==
The Abrahamic religions of Judaism, Christianity, and Islam all recount the legend of the Garden of Eden, found in the Hebrew Bible, in which Adam and Eve are unaware of their nakedness until they eat the fruit of the Tree of Knowledge of Good and Evil. After this, they feel ashamed and try to cover themselves with fig leaves. This suggests that Judaism recognised that nudity in and of itself was not sinful, being a natural part of God's divine creation, but this attitude was only ever an idealised or literary notion, and lack of clothing in the Bible has to be understood according to context, denoting poverty or innocence or other characteristics. Judaism does not share the Christian association of nakedness with original sin, an aspect integral to the doctrine of redemption and salvation. In Islam the garden is in Paradise, not on Earth This is to show that women and men should be covered in clothing, for nudity has the stigma of shame attached to it. Each of these religions has its own unique understanding of what is meant to be taught with the recounting of the story of Adam and Eve and the use of nudity in the Hebrew Bible.
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