Then Adam was not strong enough to resist the woman. Then, the woman had power to overcome Adam's will. As the Christian would express it, "Eve had the stronger will."
Who made Adam? God made him. Who made Eve? God made her. Who made the Serpent? God made the Serpent.
Then, if God made Adam weak, and Eve seductive, and the Serpent subtle, was that Adam's fault or God's?
Did Adam choose that Eve should have a stronger will than he, or that the Serpent should have a stronger will than Eve? No. God fixed all those things.
God is all-powerful. He could have made Adam strong enough to resist Eve. He could have made Eve strong enough to resist the Serpent. He need not have made the Serpent at all.
God is all-knowing. Therefore, when He made Adam and Eve and the Serpent He knew that Adam and Eve must fall. And if God knew they must fall, how could Adam help falling, and how could he justly be blamed for doing what he must do?
God made a bridge—built it Himself, of His own materials, to His own design, and knew what the bearing strain of the bridge was.
If, then, God put upon the bridge a weight equal to double the bearing strain, how could God justly blame the bridge for falling?
The doctrine of Free Will implies that God knowingly made the Serpent subtle, Eve seductive, and Adam weak, and then damned the whole human race because a bridge He had built to fall did not succeed in standing.
Such a theory is ridiculous; but upon it depends the entire fabric of Christian theology.