There are various famous "falls": Edgar Allan Poe's "The Fall of the House of Usher," The Fall of Rome, the fall season, etc. Theology has discussed a different kind of fall, one that affects not only the Usher family, a single civilization, or trees, but one that leaves a permanent scar on humanity. What does it look like to read the story of "The Fall" in context? What about reading it through a lens of grace rather than condemnation? Jonathan and Seth attempt to do just that as they wrestle with how the world was created as good and still groans for redemption.