Genesis 3
Saturday March 01, 2008 | Filed in: Genesis
Hi Syd,
Last week we discussed Genesis 1, chapter 2 and different creation stories. I ended with what I hoped was an enticement to keep going, that chapter 3 would introduce conflict, the earmark of all good stories. In the Bible that conflict continues all the way to the end. Jesus’ death on the cross assures the winner, but the battlefield has desperate enemy holdouts that need mopping up until Revelation, chapter 21. That's when all conflict is finished. There is a new heaven and earth; there is no more death, suffering and pain. The narrative that began in the garden has come full circle and all is new again.
Second, the Hebrew word for serpent is nachash. It means literally “the shiny one.” I know you have a fear of snakes, but the serpent that appeared to Eve didn’t look like the most beautiful and glistening reptile that ever was. If he did, Eve probably would have run away. Step into the scene. She was the "crown jewel" of God’s creation, so the serpent must have appeared superior to her in order for her to be in awe of him. The serpent was the most handsome, considerate, and charming thing she had ever seen!
As we’ll see later in Revelation 20:2, the serpent is Satin, or the Devil, the one St. John identifies as coming down from Heaven after the final apocalyptic battle. Eve doesn't have that revelation back in Genesis. Even so, you are probably wondering how Satin gets to the garden in the first place? Why would God allow it?
Once the Angel of Light, Satan can take whatever form he chooses. He often uses this trick to deceive humanity. He’s not the guy we see on Halloween dressed in a red suit with a pitchfork. He never appears as a slithering reptile, rather as something exceptionally beautiful and charming.
Verses 1b to 5 form the three-pronged anatomy of temptation. The tactics Satin used in the garden are the same ones he uses today against us! First, the Serpent questions God's Word: "Did God actually say...?" He does this to create doubt about what was really said.
Second, he is subtle. Look at verse 1a: “The Lord God” in Hebrew is Yehovah 'elohiym. Yehovah (also written as Jehovah) is the proper name for the one true God. God with a capital “G.” Now note how the Serpent questions Eve in verse 1b: “Did God actually say...?” Satan drops the Yehovah and uses just the word 'elohiym. Elohiym is god with a small “g,” a distinction that is not made in the English translations, but properly would be translated as “god-like.” The Serpent subtly downgrades God’s status. Eve, perhaps unconsciously, picks up on this and drops Yehovah too.
We don’t know what the fruit was, but we’re pretty certain it wasn’t an apple as often depicted in paintings and folklore. Whatever it was, Eve takes some of it and eats. Then, according to folklore, she runs to find her husband Adam and tempts him, right? Not! In the Bible Adam has been there the whole time. Adam could have stopped her, but he didn’t. He eats the fruit of his own free will!
And while their bodies don’t die right away, something inside of them shrivels up at that moment. The peace and joy they once experienced is immediately gone. In verse 7 Adam and Eve suddenly know that they are naked. Breaking from God means He is no longer their covering. They are now in a state of rebellion or sin. Because they are the parents of humanity, their fall from grace affects us all. Sin is our inheritance.
As babies, our parentage and its defects are not our fault. But there does come a time for each of us when we’re pretty sure what’s the right thing to do. Then we go ahead and don't do it. If we have a conscious that hasn’t been hardened, we feel exposed and vulnerable.
Adam and Eve try to cover their sense of exposure and shame, to find a substitute for God’s protective love. But they do a lousy job of it! They put leaves over their private parts when it is what is inside of them that needs to be cleaned and covered. Before this chapter is over, God shows them that by the shedding of innocent blood, He is able to cover their naked rebellion. This is a foreshadowing of what Christ does for humanity on the cross.
We also see two bloodlines developing here. The seed of the women is a Messianic title for the one to come who will right the wrong. This is Jesus Christ, about whom we’ll study later. The seed of the serpent is the leader yet to surface in world history. He is called the antichrist, and we'll also study more about him.
In verses 3:14 and 15, the fall of humanity introduces the law of entropy into the world. All that was perfect in the created universe begins to disintegrate, lose energy, and become chaotic. To reflect back on our creation discussion from last week, everything we know about the universe is post "Fall." We really can’t comprehend what the world was like before this time period.
Sydney, I want you to now underline verse 15 in your hardcopy Bible. Yes, I know Mrs. Kanipplemeyer wouldn’t approve, but that doesn’t mean she’s right. Her job is to protect books. She sometimes doesn't see that a book can be like an everyday object that nurtures us like food. Besides, why upset her by letting her know? It is your book, not the library's. What you are underlining is the first foreshadowing of the resolution of the conflict. It comes as a killing blow to Satan when Christ volunteers to be the blood sacrifice to die upon on the cross. Now make a note in the margin of your Bible why you underlined this passage. Really, it is ok to write in your Bible!
In verse 16 God says that He will increase women's pains in childbearing. The word “increase” tells us there must have been birthing pains before the Fall. What is meant here is that tiny helpless children will come into the world. On the one hand, they will impart great joy and be a blessing from God. On the other they will also enter a great big disintegrating world. This is not the garden that Adam and Eve knew but a world of grief and sorrow. And they will surely die in this world!
But that’s all wrong! God is not prescribing what will happen, but describing what will happen because of sin entering in the world. It's like your doctor telling you what is going to happen to your body if you smoke, drink, don’t exercise and eat a bad diet. Doing so significantly increases the risks of heart disease, diabetes, stroke, and cancer, any one of which may cause a slow, painful and expensive death. Like God talking to Eve, your doctor is not cursing you, just describing what will happen to because of your actions.
In verses 17 to 19 God tells Adam that because he listened to his wife, he will be cursed. His existence will include the hard labor of wresting food from the earth and eventual death. Again, God is not cursing Adam, just describing to him the consequences of his actions.
If chapter 3 had not happened, Adam and Eve would live forever. God created humanity to be immortal. But God has to cut off eternal life because sin has entered the world. If He did not, life itself would become a literal Hell.
In verse 21 God is once again described by His covenant name of Yehovah 'elohiym. If you step into the scene once more, you can see God as a saddened father thinking to Himself, “My kids, Adam and Eve, are leaving the garden, and it is going to be cold out there.” In response God makes garments of animal skins for them to wear. But you can’t have garments of skin without death. And cold is just one problem. The bigger one is sin. It leads to death, and innocent death is the only thing that can cover or make up for sin. We’ll discuss this point in more detail again in Leviticus and in the second half of Exodus.
Finally in verse 24, Adam and Eve hang their heads in shame as they leave the garden. If we step into the scene one last time, we can see behind them the two carcasses of the animals that God killed to make Adam’s and Eve's covering. Just ahead of them there are Cherubim with swords drawn guarding the entrance to the garden, that perfectly inviting Eden that humanity will not enter again until the end of history.
Second, sin gets bigger. It doesn’t stop; it snowballs. Mrs. Kanipplemeyer used to say: "Once you've told somebody a lie, you're going to have to tell another one pretty soon to cover up that one. And then you'll have to tell yet another one to cover up that one, and so on and so forth. It will never stop!"
Third, sin cascades down through generations. Sin doesn’t stop with you. The consequences of sin manifest its action on your children, grandchildren, neighbors, community, and sometimes the world.
Syd, this week we've looked at the beginning of the story and saw the conflict that developed that will drive the rest of the Bible narrative. We've covered lots of material these last three weeks, but if you understand the first three chapters of Genesis, then you'll find the rest of the Bible much easier to comprehend! Without those chapters reading the Bible is like starting a movie 15 minutes into it. Without knowing the beginning, you'll never quite get the rest of the story.
Next week we'll look at Cain murdering his brother and start in on Noah and the flood. It should be exciting! Say "hi" to your folks and remind me to tell you the story sometime of how your father and I locked Mrs. Kanipplemeyer in the bathroom of the Book Mobile.
Have a great week...
All the best,
TA