Genesis 3
Peace be with you, listening
friends. We greet you in the name of God, the Lord of peace, who wants everyone
to understand and submit to the way of righteousness that He has established,
and have true peace with Him forever. We are happy to be able to return today
to present your program The Way of Righteousness.
In the past two studies, we learned how God created
the first two people. The Scripture says, "God created
man in his own image, in the image of God he created him; male
and female he created them." (Gen. 1:27) Within the soul of the man and
the woman, God placed a spirit capable of knowing God, and a heart capable of
loving Him. God also entrusted them with a free will, so that they could choose
for themselves whether to obey Him or not. We also saw that God placed man in
the Garden of Paradise, a delightful garden He had prepared on the earth in a
place called Eden. God gave the first
man, Adam, and the first woman, Eve, everything they needed
to live in peace and true prosperity. God wanted
people to know Him, love Him, and worship Him forever.
Thus, we saw that God, in keeping with His perfect
plan, placed a simple test before the man whom He
had created. In the middle of the garden, God planted the
tree of the knowledge of good and evil, and then commanded the man, saying, "You
are free to eat from any tree in the garden; but you must not eat from
the tree of the knowledge of good and evil, for [in the day that] you eat of it
you will surely die." (Gen. 2:16)
Why did God test Adam in this way? God wanted to show
the condition of Adam's heart. God did not test Adam to cause him to sin, but
to bless and strengthen him. The man whom God created had no faults and was
without sin, but that does not mean he possessed a perfect love or a mature
character. God placed a test before Adam, to test his
love.
If Adam stood the test and obeyed God, he would prove that he loved God in his
heart. Also, if Adam stood the test and refused to sin, that test would
strengthen him, because the Scriptures say that "patience
in times of trial produces character." (Rom. 5:4)
Today then, we have come to the third chapter in the
book of Genesis. This is the chapter which shows us how
sin entered the world.
If we are familiar with the teaching of this chapter, then we know why the
heart of man is crooked and evil, and why the world is full of suffering and
pain.
We have already seen that, in the beginning, Adam and
Eve were in the Garden of Paradise where they were perfectly satisfied and had
everything for their enjoyment. The best thing of all, was that the
Lord God visited the garden each day, in the cool of the evening, so that He
might talk with Adam and Eve. God visited them because He wanted to have a
meaningful and wonderful relationship with them.
However, the Scriptures tell us that someone
else was also in the garden. Do you know who it was? It was Satan, God's
adversary, the devil. When God created the
world and all that it contains, Satan was watching. When God gave Adam the
commandment not to eat of the tree of the knowledge of good and evil, Satan was
listening. And he did not stop at simply watching and listening, but he was
also weaving a plan to spoil God's wonderful
works. Satan planned to tempt man whom God had created so that he would disobey
God, commit sin, be separated from God and perish! As for God, He knew all that
Satan planned to do, but Adam and Eve knew nothing about it.
One day, when Adam and Eve were standing near the
forbidden tree, Satan came as a serpent, and began to speak
with them. Thus, the Scripture says: "Now the
serpent was more crafty than any of the wild animals the Lord God had made. He
said to the woman, 'Did God really say: You must not eat from any tree in the
garden'?" (Gen.
3:1)
Let us pause here briefly. Why did Satan appear as a
serpent? The Scripture gives us the answer when it says: "the
serpent was more crafty than any of the wild animals the Lord
God had made." Satan is the tempter, and therefore presented himself
as one who is very wise. Satan did not come to Adam and Eve in the form of a
huge red dragon saying, "Peace be on you, Adam and Eve. I am the devil,
the enemy of God! I have come today to tempt you to turn your back on God, the
Lord of life, so that you might perish forever!" Satan did not operate
like that! How did he appear to them then? As a beautiful and wise creature. He
chose to speak to them through a serpent, because at that time, before sin
entered the world, the serpent was the craftiest of all the animals.
Satan is still like that. He is crafty. He habitually
presents what he has to offer as a good thing. The Scriptures say: "Satan
himself masquerades as an angel of light." (2 Cor. 11:14)
Consequently, God warns us in His Word, saying, "Watch
out for false prophets. They come to you in sheep's clothing, but inwardly they
are ferocious wolves." (Matt. 7:15) Satan
is a deceiver. That
is why he appeared to Adam and Eve as a wise serpent. That is also why he
preferred to talk with Eve, instead of with Adam himself, because he hoped that
it would be easier to tempt Eve than Adam. Satan knew that God had given the
commandment about the tree to Adam, before He created Eve. However, Eve also
knew about God's commandment. The devil is highly intelligent and he knew
exactly what he wanted to achieve. Satan thought if he could convince the woman
to eat of the tree of the knowledge of good and evil, perhaps Adam would follow
her in disobeying God.
Thus, the Scriptures say: "The
serpent said to the woman, "Did God really say, 'You must not eat from any
tree in the garden?'" (Gen. 3:1) Did you hear what Satan said to
Eve? He said, "Did God really say, 'You must
not eat from any tree in the garden?'" Do you see what Satan
was trying to do? He was attempting to plant doubt in the mind of Eve
concerning the sure Word of God. That is why he said, "Did God…say?"
Did God really say …?" Satan still uses this
method. He fights against the Word of Truth, because he knows that
the Word of God has the power to disarm him and discredit his lies. Satan knows
that the truth dispels lies, as light dispels darkness.
Now let us listen to the rest of the conversation
between the woman and the devil. The Scripture says:
"The woman said to
the serpent, 'We may eat fruit from the trees in the garden, but God has said,
'You must not eat fruit from the tree that is in the middle of the garden, and
you must not touch it, or you will die.' 'You will not surely die,' the
serpent said to the woman. 'For God knows that when you eat of it your eyes
will be opened, and you will be like God, knowing good and evil.'" (Gen. 3:2-5)
This is amazing! What did God say would happen to Adam
and Eve if they ate of the forbidden tree? He said, "You will die!" What did Satan say? He
said: "You will not die!" Thus, Satan did not stop
at merely casting doubt upon God's Word, but he came right out and denied
it!
What do you think about this? Who was speaking the truth, God or Satan? The
Holy Scriptures say that God is the True One and cannot lie. As for Satan, he
does not hold to the truth, "for there is no truth in
him. When he lies, he speaks his native language, for he is a
liar and the father of lies." (John 8:44)
However, we must also remember that Satan is not only a
liar.
He is also a deceiver. He is crafty; he takes
what is not true and mixes
it with
what is true. We can see that in
what Satan said to Eve and Adam, "When you
eat of [this tree] your eyes will be opened, and you will be like God, knowing
good and evil." When Satan said, "You will
be like God!" that was a lie, because the one who
sins is not like God, but like Satan. But when Satan said, "You
will know good and evil" he was speaking the
truth,
because after Adam and Eve sinned they came to know what evil is. However,
Satan did not tell them of the bitterness that such knowledge would bring into
their lives. God said, "If you eat of the tree you
will surely die!" But Satan said, "If
you eat of the tree you will not die!" Satan is a liar. That is
why when God said, "You will die!" Satan denied it, saying, "You
will not die!"
Now the moment had come for Adam and Eve to choose
between the Word of God and the word of Satan. The choice before them was this: Would
they believe the words of God or the words of Satan? Would they accept the
truth or the lie? Would they follow the Lord of Light or the Lord of darkness?
Let us read on to see the choice they made. The
Scriptures say: "When the woman saw that the
fruit of the tree was good for food and pleasing to the eye, and also desirable
for gaining wisdom, she took some and ate it. She also gave some to
her husband, who was with her, and he ate it." (Gen. 3:6)
Amazing! God created man in His own image so that he
could know Him, love Him and obey Him forever. But what did man do? Did he love
God enough to obey His command? No! He chose to
disobey the God of love, and to follow Satan, the enemy of God and man!
What a sad day this was! Our ancestors, Adam and Eve,
turned their backs on the Lord God by eating the fruit of the tree that He had
forbidden. The Wolofs say: "An epidemic is not confined to the one from
whom it originates!" In the same way, the Word of God says: "Sin
entered the world through one man, and death through sin, and in
this way death came to all men, because all sinned!" (Rom. 5:12) Whether we
like it or not, that is the way it is!
"The leaping gazelle doesn't produce burrowing
offspring." {Wolof proverb; English equiv. "Like father, like
son."} You and I, and all people, take after Adam. We are born sinners and
must die, because we come from Adam. The first man who
disobeyed God's commandment is our forefather and we
are just like him.
Who among us can say that we have never disobeyed the commandments of God? Not
a single one of us! So where did we inherit this nature in us that disobeys
God's commandments? From Adam. Like a horrible contagious disease, the
sin that was in Adam has spread to us all. Truly, "an epidemic is not confined
to the one from whom it originates!"
However, all hope is not lost, because the Word of God
also declares: "Just as the result of one
trespass was condemnation for all men, so also the
result of one act of righteousness was justification that
brings life for all men." (Rom. 5:18) We cannot look into it today,
but in future lessons we will study the righteous way of salvation that God has
established by which sinners might come back to God.
Friends, this has been your program The
Way of Righteousness.
Next time, we plan to continue in this important chapter to see what happened
after Adam and Eve strayed from the way of righteousness, and followed the way
of unrighteousness….God bless you as you remember this foundational truth:
"Sin entered the
world through one man, and death through sin, and in this way death came to all
men, because all sinned!" (Rom. 5:12)
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