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Genesis Chapter
Three
Genesis 3
Chapter Contents
The serpent deceives Eve. (1-5) Adam and Eve transgress
the Divine command, and fall into sin and misery. (6-8) God calls upon Adam and
Eve to answer. (9-13) The serpent cursed, The promised Seed. (14,15) The
punishment of mankind. (16-19) The first clothing of mankind. (20,21) Adam and
Eve are driven out from paradise. (22-24)
Commentary on Genesis 3:1-5
Satan assaulted our first parents, to draw them to sin,
and the temptation proved fatal to them. The tempter was the devil, in the
shape and likeness of a serpent. Satan's plan was to draw our first parents to
sin, and so to separate between them and their God. Thus the devil was from the
beginning a murderer, and the great mischief maker. The person tempted was the
woman: it was Satan's policy to enter into talk with her when she was alone.
There are many temptations to which being alone gives great advantage; but the
communion of saints tends very much to their strength and safety. Satan took
advantage by finding her near the forbidden tree. They that would not eat the
forbidden fruit, must not come near the forbidden tree. Satan tempted Eve, that
by her he might tempt Adam. It is his policy to send temptations by hands we do
not suspect, and by those that have most influence upon us. Satan questioned
whether it were a sin or not, to eat of this tree. He did not disclose his
design at first, but he put a question which seemed innocent. Those who would
be safe, need to be shy of talking with the tempter. He quoted the command
wrong. He spoke in a taunting way. The devil, as he is a liar, so he is a
scoffer from the beginning; and scoffers are his children. It is the craft of
Satan to speak of the Divine law as uncertain or unreasonable, and so to draw
people to sin; it is our wisdom to keep up a firm belief of God's command, and
a high respect for it. Has God said, Ye shall not lie, nor take his name in vain,
nor be drunk, &c.? Yes, I am sure he has, and it is well said; and by his
grace I will abide by it. It was Eve's weakness to enter into this talk with
the serpent: she might have perceived by his question, that he had no good
design, and should therefore have started back. Satan teaches men first to
doubt, and then to deny. He promises advantage from their eating this fruit. He
aims to make them discontented with their present state, as if it were not so
good as it might be, and should be. No condition will of itself bring content,
unless the mind be brought to it. He tempts them to seek preferment, as if they
were fit to be gods. Satan ruined himself by desiring to be like the Most High,
therefore he sought to infect our first parents with the same desire, that he
might ruin them too. And still the devil draws people into his interest, by
suggesting to them hard thoughts of God, and false hopes of advantage by sin.
Let us, therefore, always think well of God as the best good, and think ill of
sin as the worst evil: thus let us resist the devil, and he will flee from us.
Commentary on Genesis 3:6-8
Observe the steps of the transgression: not steps upward,
but downward toward the pit. 1. She saw. A great deal of sin comes in at the
eye. Let us not look on that which we are in danger of lusting after, Matthew 5:28. 2. She took. It was her own act
and deed. Satan may tempt, but he cannot force; may persuade us to cast
ourselves down, but he cannot cast us down, Matthew 4:6. 3. She did eat. When she looked
perhaps she did not intend to take; or when she took, not to eat: but it ended
in that. It is wisdom to stop the first motions of sin, and to leave it off
before it be meddled with. 4. She gave it also to her husband with her. Those
that have done ill, are willing to draw in others to do the same. 5. He did
eat. In neglecting the tree of life, of which he was allowed to eat, and eating
of the tree of knowledge, which was forbidden, Adam plainly showed a contempt
of what God had bestowed on him, and a desire for what God did not see fit to
give him. He would have what he pleased, and do what he pleased. His sin was,
in one word, disobedience, Romans 5:19; disobedience to a plain, easy, and
express command. He had no corrupt nature within, to betray him; but had a
freedom of will, in full strength, not weakened or impaired. He turned aside
quickly. He drew all his posterity into sin and ruin. Who then can say that
Adam's sin had but little harm in it? When too late, Adam and Eve saw the folly
of eating forbidden fruit. They saw the happiness they fell from, and the
misery they were fallen into. They saw a loving God provoked, his grace and
favour forfeited. See her what dishonour and trouble sin is; it makes mischief
wherever it gets in, and destroys all comfort. Sooner or later it will bring
shame; either the shame of true repentance, which ends in glory, or that shame
and everlasting contempt, to which the wicked shall rise at the great day. See
here what is commonly the folly of those that have sinned. They have more care
to save their credit before men, than to obtain their pardon from God. The
excuses men make to cover and lessen their sins, are vain and frivolous; like
the aprons of fig-leaves, they make the matter never the better: yet we are all
apt to cover our transgressions as Adam. Before they sinned, they would have
welcomed God's gracious visits with humble joy; but now he was become a terror
to them. No marvel that they became a terror to themselves, and full of
confusion. This shows the falsehood of the tempter, and the frauds of his
temptations. Satan promised they should be safe, but they cannot so much as
think themselves so! Adam and Eve were now miserable comforters to each other!
Commentary on Genesis 3:9-13
Observe the startling question, Adam, where art thou?
Those who by sin go astray from God, should seriously consider where they are;
they are afar off from all good, in the midst of their enemies, in bondage to
Satan, and in the high road to utter ruin. This lost sheep had wandered without
end, if the good Shepherd had not sought after him, and told him, that where he
was straying he could not be either happy or easy. If sinners will but consider
where they are, they will not rest till they return to God. It is the common
fault and folly of those that have done ill, when questioned about it, to
acknowledge only that which is so manifest that they cannot deny it. Like Adam,
we have reason to be afraid of approaching to God, if we are not covered and
clothed with the righteousness of Christ. Sin appears most plainly in the glass
of the commandment, therefore God set it before Adam; and in it we should see
our faces. But instead of acknowledging the sin in its full extent, and taking
shame to themselves, Adam and Eve excuse the sin, and lay the shame and blame
on others. There is a strange proneness in those that are tempted, to say, they
are tempted of God; as if our abuse of God's gifts would excuse our breaking
God's laws. Those who are willing to take the pleasure and profit of sin, are
backward to take the blame and shame of it. Learn hence, that Satan's
temptations are all beguilings; his arguments are all deceits; his allurements
are all cheats; when he speaks fair, believe him not. It is by the
deceitfulness of sin the heart is hardened. See Romans 7:11; Hebrews 3:13. But though Satan's
subtlety may draw us into sin, yet it will not justify us in sin. Though he is
the tempter, we are the sinners. Let it not lessen our sorrow for sin, that we
were beguiled into it; but let it increase our self-indignation, that we should
suffer ourselves to be deceived by a known cheat, and a sworn enemy, who would
destroy our souls.
Commentary on Genesis 3:14,15
God passes sentence; and he begins where the sin began,
with the serpent. The devil's instruments must share in the devil's
punishments. Under the cover of the serpent, the devil is sentenced to be
degraded and accursed of God; detested and abhorred of all mankind: also to be
destroyed and ruined at last by the great Redeemer, signified by the breaking
of his head. War is proclaimed between the Seed of the woman and the seed of
the serpent. It is the fruit of this enmity, that there is a continual warfare
between grace and corruption, in the hearts of God's people. Satan, by their
corruptions, buffets them, sifts them, and seeks to devour them. Heaven and
hell can never be reconciled, nor light and darkness; no more can Satan and a
sanctified soul. Also, there is a continual struggle between the wicked and the
godly in this world. A gracious promise is here made of Christ, as the
Deliverer of fallen man from the power of Satan. Here was the drawn of the
gospel day: no sooner was the wound given, than the remedy was provided and
revealed. This gracious revelation of a Saviour came unasked, and unlooked for.
Without a revelation of mercy, giving some hope of forgiveness, the convinced
sinner would sink into despair, and be hardened. By faith in this promise, our
first parents, and the patriarchs before the flood, were justified and saved.
Notice is given concerning Christ. 1. His incarnation, or coming in the flesh.
It speaks great encouragement to sinners, that their Saviour is the Seed of the
woman, bone of our bone, Hebrews 2:11,14. 2. His sufferings and death;
pointed at in Satan's bruising his heel, that is, his human nature. And
Christ's sufferings are continued in the sufferings of the saints for his name.
The devil tempts them, persecutes and slays them; and so bruises the heel of
Christ, who is afflicted in their afflictions. But while the heel is bruised on
earth, the Head is in heaven. 3. His victory over Satan thereby. Christ baffled
Satan's temptations, rescued souls out of his hands. By his death he gave a
fatal blow to the devil's kingdom, a wound to the head of this serpent that
cannot be healed. As the gospel gains ground, Satan falls.
Commentary on Genesis 3:16-19
The woman, for her sin, is condemned to a state of
sorrow, and of subjection; proper punishments of that sin, in which she had
sought to gratify the desire of her eye, and of the flesh, and her pride. Sin
brought sorrow into the world; that made the world a vale of tears. No wonder
our sorrows are multiplied, when our sins are so. He shall rule over thee, is
but God's command, Wives, be subject to your own husbands. If man had not
sinned, he would always have ruled with wisdom and love; if the woman had not
sinned, she would always have obeyed with humility and meekness. Adam laid the
blame on his wife; but though it was her fault to persuade him to eat the
forbidden fruit, it was his fault to hearken to her. Thus men's frivolous pleas
will, in the day of God's judgment, be turned against them. God put marks of
displeasure on Adam. 1. His habitation is cursed. God gave the earth to the
children of men, to be a comfortable dwelling; but it is now cursed for man's
sin. Yet Adam is not himself cursed, as the serpent was, but only the ground
for his sake. 2. His employments and enjoyments are imbittered to him. Labour
is our duty, which we must faithfully perform; it is part of man's sentence,
which idleness daringly defies. Uneasiness and weariness with labour are our
just punishment, which we must patiently submit to, since they are less than
our iniquity deserves. Man's food shall become unpleasant to him. Yet man is
not sentenced to eat dust as the serpent, only to eat the herb of the field. 3.
His life also is but short; considering how full of trouble his days are, it is
in favour to him that they are few. Yet death being dreadful to nature, even
when life is unpleasant, that concludes the punishment. Sin brought death into
the world: if Adam had not sinned, he had not died. He gave way to temptation,
but the Saviour withstood it. And how admirably the satisfaction of our Lord
Jesus, by his death and sufferings, answered the sentence passed on our first
parents! Did travailing pains come with sin? We read of the travail of Christ's
soul, Isaiah 53:11; and the pains of death he was held
by, are so called, Acts 2:24. Did subjection came in with sin?
Christ was made under the law, Galatians 4:4. Did the curse come in with sin?
Christ was made a curse for us, he died a cursed death, Galatians 3:13. Did thorns come in with sin? He
was crowned with thorns for us. Did sweat come in with sin? He sweat for us, as
it had been great drops of blood. Did sorrow come in with sin? He was a man of
sorrows; his soul was, in his agony, exceeding sorrowful. Did death come in
with sin? He became obedient unto death. Thus is the plaster as wide as the
wound. Blessed be God for his Son our Lord Jesus Christ.
Commentary on Genesis 3:20,21
God named the man, and called him Adam, which signifies
red earth; Adam named the woman, and called her Eve, that is, life. Adam bears
the name of the dying body, Eve of the living soul. Adam probably had regard to
the blessing of a Redeemer, the promised Seed, in calling his wife Eve, or
life; for He should be the life of all believers, and in Him all the families
of the earth should be blessed. See also God's care for our first parents,
notwithstanding their sin. Clothes came in with sin. Little reason have we to
be proud of our clothes, which are but the badges of our shame. When God made
clothes for our first parents, he made them warm and strong, but coarse and
very plain; not robes of scarlet, but coats of skin. Let those that are meanly
clad, learn from hence not to complain. Having food and a covering, let them be
content; they are as well off as Adam and Eve. And let those that are finely
clad, learn not to make the putting on of apparel their adorning. The beasts,
from whose skins they were clothed, it is supposed were slain, not for man's
food, but for sacrifice, to typify Christ, the great Sacrifice. Adam and Eve
made for themselves aprons of fig-leaves, a covering too narrow for them to
wrap themselves in, Isaiah 28:20. Such are all the rags of our own
righteousness. But God made them coats of skin, large, strong, durable, and fit
for them: such is the righteousness of Christ; therefore put ye on the Lord
Jesus Christ.
Commentary on Genesis 3:22-24
God bid man go out; told him he should no longer occupy
and enjoy that garden: but man liked the place, and was unwilling to leave it,
therefore God made him go out. This signified the shutting out of him, and all
his guilty race, from that communion with God, which was the bliss and glory of
paradise. But man was only sent to till the ground out of which he was taken.
He was sent to a place of toil, not to a place of torment. Our first parents
were shut out from the privileges of their state of innocency, yet they were
not left to despair. The way to the tree of life was shut. It was henceforward
in vain for him and his to expect righteousness, life, and happiness, by the
covenant of works; for the command of that covenant being broken, the curse of
it is in full force: we are all undone, if we are judged by that covenant. God
revealed this to Adam, not to drive him to despair, but to quicken him to look
for life and happiness in the promised Seed, by whom a new and living way into
the holiest is laid open for us.
¢w¢w Matthew Henry¡mConcise Commentary on Genesis¡n
Genesis 3
Verses 1-5
[1] Now
the serpent was more subtil than any beast of the field which the LORD God had
made. And he said unto the woman, Yea, hath God said, Ye shall not eat of every
tree of the garden? [2] And the woman said unto the serpent, We may
eat of the fruit of the trees of the garden: [3] But of the fruit of the tree which is in the
midst of the garden, God hath said, Ye shall not eat of it, neither shall ye
touch it, lest ye die. [4] And the serpent said unto the woman, Ye
shall not surely die: [5] For God doth know that in the day ye eat
thereof, then your eyes shall be opened, and ye shall be as gods, knowing good
and evil.
We have here an account of the temptation
wherewith Satan assaulted our first parents, and which proved fatal to them.
And here observe, (1.) The tempter, the devil in the shape of a serpent.
Multitudes of them fell; but this that attacked our first parents, was surely
the prince of the devils. Whether it was only the appearance of a serpent, or a
real serpent, acted and possessed by the devil, is not certain. The devil chose
to act his part in a serpent, because it is a subtle creature. It is not
improbable, that reason and speech were then the known properties of the
serpent. And therefore Eve was not surprised at his reasoning and speaking, which
otherwise she must have been. (2.) That which the devil aimed at, was to
persuade Eve to eat forbidden fruit; and to do this, he took the same method
that he doth still. 1. He questions whether it were a sin or no, Genesis 3:1,2. He denies that there was any
danger in it, Genesis 3:4. 3. He suggests much advantage by
it, Genesis 3:5. And these are his common topics. As
to the advantage, he suits the temptation to the pure state they were now in,
proposing to them not any carnal pleasure, but intellectual delights. 1.
Your eyes shall be opened ¡X You shall have much more of the power and pleasure of contemplation than
now you have; you shall fetch a larger compass in your intellectual views, and
see farther into things than now you do. 2.
You shall be as gods ¡X As Elohim, mighty gods, not only omniscient but omnipotent too: 3. You
shall know good and evil - That is, everything that is desirable to be known.
To support this part of the temptation, he abuseth the name given to this tree.
'Twas intended to teach the practical knowledge of good and evil, that is, of
duty and disobedience, and it would prove the experimental knowledge of good
and evil, that is, of happiness and misery. But he perverts the sense of it,
and wrests it to their destruction, as if this tree would give them a
speculative notional knowledge of the natures, kinds, and originals of good and
evil. And, 4. All this presently, In the day you eat thereof - You will find a
sudden and immediate change for the better.
Verses 6-8
[6] And when the woman saw that the tree was good for food, and that it was
pleasant to the eyes, and a tree to be desired to make one wise, she took of
the fruit thereof, and did eat, and gave also unto her husband with her; and he
did eat. [7] And the eyes of them both were opened, and they knew that they were naked;
and they sewed fig leaves together, and made themselves aprons. [8] And
they heard the voice of the LORD God walking in the garden in the cool of the
day: and Adam and his wife hid themselves from the presence of the LORD God
amongst the trees of the garden.
Here we see what Eve's parley with the
tempter ended in: Satan at length gains his point. God tried the obedience of
our first parents by forbidding them the tree of knowledge, and Satan doth as
it were join issue with God, and in that very thing undertakes to seduce them
into a transgression; and here we find how he prevailed, God permitting it for
wise and holy ends. (1.) We have here the inducements that moved them to
transgress. The woman being deceived, was ring-leader in the transgression, 1 Timothy 2:14 1. She saw that the tree was - It
was said of all the rest of the fruit trees wherewith the garden of Eden was
planted, that they were pleasant to the sight, and good for food. 2. She
imagined a greater benefit by this tree than by any of the rest, that it was a
tree not only not to be dreaded, but to be desired to make one wise, and
therein excelling all the rest of the trees. This she saw, that is, she
perceived and understood it by what the devil had said to her.
She gave also to her husband with her ¡X 'Tis likely he was not with her when she was tempted; surely if he had,
he would have interposed to prevent the sin; but he came to her when she had
eaten, and was prevailed with by her to eat likewise. She gave it to him;
persuading him with the same arguements that the serpent had used with her;
adding this to the rest, that she herself had eaten of it, and found it so far
from being deadly that it was extremely pleasant and grateful.
And he did eat ¡X
This implied the unbelief of God's word, and confidence in the devil's;
discontent with his present state, and an ambition of the honour which comes
not from God. He would be both his own carver, and his own master, would have
what he pleased, and do what he pleased; his sin was in one word disobedience, Romans 5:19, disobedience to a plain, easy and
express command, which he knew to be a command of trial. He sins against light
and love, the clearest light and the dearest love that ever sinner sinned
against. But the greatest aggravation of his sin was, that he involved all his
posterity in sin and ruin by it. He could not but know that he stood as a
public person, and that his disobedience would be fatal to all his seed; and if
so, it was certainly both the greatest treachery and the greatest cruelty that
ever was. Shame and fear seized the criminals, these came into the world along
with sin, and still attend it.
The Eyes of them both were opened ¡X The eyes of their consciences; their hearts smote them for what they had
done Now, when it was too late, they saw the happiness they were fallen from,
and the misery they were fallen into. They saw God provoked, his favour
forfeited, his image lost; they felt a disorder in their own spirits, which
they had never before been conscious of; they saw a law in their members
warring against the law of their minds, and captivating them both to sin and
wrath; they saw that they were naked, that is, that they were stripped,
deprived of all the honours and joys of their paradise state, and exposed to
all the miseries that might justly be expected from an angry God; laid open to
the contempt and reproach of heaven and earth, and their own consciences. And
they sewed or platted fig leaves together, and, to cover, at least, part of
their shame one from another, made themselves aprons. See here what is commonly
the folly of those that have sinned: they are more solicitous to save their
credit before men, than to obtain their pardon from God. And they heard the
voice of the Lord God walking in the garden in the cool of the day - Tis
supposed he came in a human shape; in no other similitude than that wherein
they had seen him when he put them into paradise; for he came to convince and
humble them, not to amaze and terrify them. He came not immediately from heaven
in their view as afterwards on mount Sinai, but he came in the garden, as one
that was still willing to be familiar with them. He came walking, not riding
upon the wings of the wind, but walking deliberately, as one slow to anger. He
came in the cool of the day, not in the night, when all fears are doubly
fearful; nor did he come suddenly upon them, but they heard his voice at some
distance, giving them notice of his coming; and probably it was a still small
voice, like that in which he came to enquire after Elijah. And they hid
themselves from the presence of the Lord God - A sad change! Before they had
sinned, if they heard the voice of the Lord God coming towards them, they would
have run to meet him, but now God was become a terror to them, and then no
marvel they were become a terror to themselves.
Verse 9
[9] And
the LORD God called unto Adam, and said unto him, Where art thou?
Where art thou? ¡X
This enquiry after Adam may be looked upon as a gracious pursuit in order to
his recovery. If God had not called to him to reduce him, his condition had
been as desperate as that of fallen angels.
Verse 10
[10] And
he said, I heard thy voice in the garden, and I was afraid, because I was
naked; and I hid myself.
I heard thy voice in the garden: and I was
afraid ¡X Adam was afraid because he was naked; not
only unarmed, and therefore afraid to contend with God, but unclothed and
therefore afraid so much as to appear before him.
Verse 11
[11] And he said, Who told thee that thou wast naked? Hast thou eaten of the
tree, whereof I commanded thee that thou shouldest not eat?
Who told thee that thou wast naked? ¡X That is, how camest thou to be sensible of thy nakedness as thy shame?
Hast thou eaten of the tree? - Tho' God knows all our sins, yet he will know
them from us, and requires from us an ingenuous confession of them, not that he
may be informed, but that we may be humbled. Whereof I commanded thee not to
eat of it, I thy maker, I thy master, I thy benefactor, I commanded thee to the
contrary. Sin appears most plain and most sinful in the glass of the
commandment.
Verse 13
[13] And
the LORD God said unto the woman, What is this that thou hast done? And the
woman said, The serpent beguiled me, and I did eat.
What is this that thou hast done? ¡X Wilt thou own thy fault? Neither of them does this fully. Adam lays all
the blame upon his wife: She gave me of the tree - Nay, he not only lays the blame
upon his wife, but tacitly on God himself. The woman thou gavest me, and gavest
to be with me as my companion, she gave me of the tree. Eve lays all the blame
upon the serpent; the serpent beguiled me. The prisoners being found guilty by
their own confession, besides the infallible knowledge of the Judge, and
nothing material being offered in arrest of judgment, God immediately proceeds
to pass sentence, and in these verses he begins (where the sin began) with the
serpent. God did not examine the serpent, nor ask him what he had done, but
immediately sentenced him, (1.) Because he was already convicted of rebellion
against God. (2.) Because he was to be for ever excluded from pardon; and why
should any thing be said to convince and humble him, who was to find no place
for repentance?
Verse 14
[14] And
the LORD God said unto the serpent, Because thou hast done this, thou art
cursed above all cattle, and above every beast of the field; upon thy belly
shalt thou go, and dust shalt thou eat all the days of thy life:
To testify a displeasure against sin, God
fastens a curse upon the serpent, Thou art cursed above all cattle - Even the
creeping things, when God made them, were blessed of him, Genesis 1:22, but sin turned the blessing into a
curse.
Upon thy belly shalt thou go ¡X No longer upon feet, or half erect, but thou shalt crawl along, thy
belly cleaving to the earth.
Dust thou shalt eat ¡X
Which signifies a base and despicable condition.
Verse 15
[15] And
I will put enmity between thee and the woman, and between thy seed and her
seed; it shall bruise thy head, and thou shalt bruise his heel.
And I will put enmity between thee and the
woman ¡X The inferior creatures being made for man,
it was a curse upon any of them to be turned against man, and man against them.
And this is part of the serpent's curse. 1. A perpetual reproach is fastened
upon him. Under the cover of the serpent he is here sentenced to be, (1.)
Degraded and accursed of God. It is supposed, pride was the sin that turned
angels into devils, which is here justly punished by a great variety of
mortifications couched under the mean circumstances of a serpent, crawling on
his belly, and licking the dust. (2.) Detested and abhorred of all mankind:
even those that are really seduced into his interest, yet profess a hatred of
him. (3.) Destroyed and ruined at last by the great Redeemer, signified by the
bruising of his head; his subtle politics shall be all baffled, his usurped
power entirely crushed. 2. A perpetual quarrel is here commenced between the
kingdom of God, and the kingdom of the devil among men; war proclaimed between
the seed of the woman, and the seed of the serpent, Revelation 12:7. It is the fruit of this enmity,
(1.) That there is a continual conflict between God's people and him. Heaven
and hell can never be reconciled, no more can Satan and a sanctified soul. (2.)
That there is likewise a continual struggle between the wicked and the good.
And all the malice of persecutors against the people of God is the fruit of
this enmity, which will continue while there is a godly man on this side
heaven, and a wicked man on this side hell. 3. A gracious promise is here made
of Christ as the deliverer of fallen man from the power of Satan. By faith in
this promise, our first parents, and the patriarchs before the flood, were
justified and saved; and to this promise, and the benefit of it, instantly
serving God day and night they hoped to come. Notice is here given them of
three things concerning Christ. (1.) His incarnation, that he should be the
seed of the woman. (2.) His sufferings and death, pointed at in Satan's
bruising his heel, that is, his human nature. (3.) His victory over Satan
thereby. Satan had now trampled upon the woman, and insulted over her; but the
seed of the woman should be raised up in the fulness of time to avenge her
quarrel, and to trample upon him, to spoil him, to lead him captive, and to
triumph over him, Colossians 2:15.
Verse 16
[16] Unto
the woman he said, I will greatly multiply thy sorrow and thy conception; in
sorrow thou shalt bring forth children; and thy desire shall be to thy husband,
and he shall rule over thee.
We have here the sentence past upon the
woman; she is condemned to a state of sorrow and a state of subjection: proper
punishments of a sin in which she had gratified her pleasure and her pride.
(1.) She is here put into a state of sorrow; one particular of which only is
instanced in, that in bringing forth children, but it includes all those
impressions of grief and fear which the mind of that tender sex is most apt to
receive, and all the common calamities which they are liable to. It is God that
multiplies our sorrows, I will do it: God, as a righteous Judge, doth it, which
ought to silence us under all our sorrows; as many as they are we have deserved
them all, and more: nay, God as a tender Father doth it for our necessary
correction, that we may be humbled for sin, and weaned from it. (2.) She is
here put into a state of subjection: the whole sex, which by creation was equal
with man, is for sin made inferior.
Verse 17
[17] And
unto Adam he said, Because thou hast hearkened unto the voice of thy wife, and
hast eaten of the tree, of which I commanded thee, saying, Thou shalt not eat
of it: cursed is the ground for thy sake; in sorrow shalt thou eat of it all
the days of thy life;
Because thou hast hearkened to the voice of
thy wife ¡X He excused the fault, by laying it on his
wife, but God doth not admit the excuse; tho' it was her fault to persuade him
to eat it, it was his fault to hearken to her.
Cursed is the ground for thy sake ¡X And the effect of that curse is, Thorns and thistles shall it bring
forth unto thee - The ground or earth, by the sin of man, is made subject to
vanity, the several parts of it being not so serviceable to man's comfort and
happiness, as they were when they were made. Fruitfulness was its blessing for
man's service, Genesis 1:11-29, and now barrenness was its
curse for man's punishment.
Verse 19
[19] In
the sweat of thy face shalt thou eat bread, till thou return unto the ground;
for out of it wast thou taken: for dust thou art, and unto dust shalt thou
return.
In the sweat of thy face shalt thou eat bread ¡X His business before he sinned was a constant pleasure to him; but now
his labour shall be a weariness.
Unto dust shalt thou return ¡X Thy body shall be forsaken by thy soul, and become itself a lump of
dust, and then it shall be lodged in the grave, and mingle with the dust of the
earth.
Verse 20
[20] And
Adam called his wife's name Eve; because she was the mother of all living.
God having named the man, and called him
Adam, which signifies red earth, he in farther token of dominion named the
woman, and called her Eve - That is, life. Adam bears the name of the dying
body, Eve of the living soul. The reason of the name is here given, some think
by Moses the historian, others by Adam himself, because she was - That is, was
to be the mother of all living. He had called her Isha, woman, before, as a
wife; here he calls her Evah, life, as a mother. Now, 1. If this was done by
divine direction, it was an instance of God's favour, and, like the new naming
of Abraham and Sarah, it was a seal of the covenant, and an assurance to them,
that notwithstanding their sin, he had not reversed that blessing wherewith he
had blessed them, Be fruitful and multiply: it was likewise a confirmation of
the promise now made, that the seed of the woman, of this woman, should break
the serpent's head. 2. If Adam did of himself, it was an instance of his faith
in the word of God.
Verse 21
[21] Unto
Adam also and to his wife did the LORD God make coats of skins, and clothed
them.
These coats of skin had a significancy. The
beasts whose skins they were, must be slain; slain before their eyes to shew
them what death is. And probably 'tis supposed they were slain for sacrifice,
to typify the great sacrifice which in the latter end of the world should be
offered once for all. Thus the first thing that died was a sacrifice, or Christ
in a figure.
Verse 22
[22] And
the LORD God said, Behold, the man is become as one of us, to know good and
evil: and now, lest he put forth his hand, and take also of the tree of life,
and eat, and live for ever:
Behold, the man is become as one of us, to
know good and evil ¡X See what he has got, what advantages, by
eating forbidden fruit! This is said to humble them, and to bring them to a
sense of their sin and folly, that seeing themselves thus wretchedly deceived
by following the devil's counsel, they might henceforth pursue the happiness
God offers, in the way he prescribes.
Verse 23
[23]
Therefore the LORD God sent him forth from the garden of Eden, to till the
ground from whence he was taken.
He sent him forth - Bid him go out, told him
he should no longer occupy and enjoy that garden; but he was not willing to
part with it.
Verse 24
[24] So
he drove out the man; and he placed at the east of the garden of Eden
Cherubims, and a flaming sword which turned every way, to keep the way of the
tree of life.
God drove him out - This signified the
exclusion of him and his guilty race from that communion with God which was the
bliss and glory of paradise. But whether did he send him when he turned him out
of Eden? He might justly have chased him out of the world, Job 18:18, but he only chased him out of the
garden: he might justly have cast him down to hell, as the angels that sinned
were, when they were shut out from the heavenly paradise, 2 Peter 2:4, but man was only sent to till the
ground out of which he was taken. He was only sent to a place of toil, not to a
place of torment. He was sent to the ground, not to the grave; to the
work-house, not to the dungeon, not to the prison-house; to hold the plough,
not to drag the chain: his tilling the ground would be recompensed by his
eating its fruits; and his converse with the earth, whence he was taken, was
improveable to good purposes, to keep him humble, and to mind him of his latter
end. Observe then, That though our first parents were excluded from the
privileges of their state of innocency, yet they were not abandoned to despair;
God's thoughts of love designing them for a second state of probation upon new
terms. And he placed at the east of the garden of Eden, a detachment of
cherubim, armed with a dreadful and irresistible power, represented by flaming
swords which turned every way, on that side the garden which lay next to the
place whither Adam was sent, to keep the way that led to the tree of life.
¢w¢w John Wesley¡mExplanatory Notes on
Genesis¡n
03 Chapter 3
Verses 1-6
Now the serpent was more subtle than any beast of the field
The first great temptation
I.
THAT
THE HUMAN SOUL IS FREQUENTLY TEMPTED BY A DIRE FOE OF UNUSUAL SUBTLETY.
1. The tempter of human souls is subtle.
2. Malignant.
3. Courageous.
II. THAT THE
TEMPTER SEERS TO ENGAGE THE HUMAN SOUL IN CONVERSATION AND CONTROVERSY.
1. He seeks to hold controversy with human souls, that he may render
them impatient of the moral restrictions of life.
2. That he may insidiously awaken within them thoughts derogatory to
the character of God.
3. That he may lead them to yield to the lust of the eye.
III. THAT THE
TEMPTER SEEKS TO MAKE ONE SOUL HIS ALLY IN THE SEDUCTION OF ANOTHER.
IV. THAT THE HUMAN
SOUL SOON AWAKENS FROM THE SUBTLE VISION OF TEMPTATION TO FIND THAT IT HAS BEEN
DELUDED AND RUINED (see Genesis 3:7).
1. That the human soul soon awakes from the charming vision of
temptation. Temptation is a charming vision to the soul. The tree looks
gigantic. The fruit looks rich and ripe, and its colour begins to glow more and
yet more, then it is plucked and eaten. Then comes the bitter taste. The sad
recollection. The moment of despair. To Adam and Eve sin was a new experience.
No man is the better for the woeful experience of evil.
2. That the human soul, awakening from the vision of temptation, is
conscious of moral nakedness. Sin always brings shame, a shame it deeply feels
but cannot hide. How sad the destitution of a soul that has fallen from God.
3. That the human soul awakening from the vision of temptation,
conscious of its moral nakedness, seeks to provide a clothing of its own
device. Adam and Eve sewed fig leaves together to make them aprons. Sin must
have a covering. It is often ingenious in making and sewing it together. But
its covering is always unworthy and futile. Man cannot of himself clothe his
soul. Only the righteousness of Christ can effectually hide his moral
nakedness. (J. S. Exell, M. A.)
How could God justly permit satanic temptation?
We see in this permission not injustice but benevolence.
1. Since Satan fell without external temptation, it is probable that
man¡¦s trial would have been substantially the same, even though there had been
no Satan to tempt him.
2. In this case, however, man¡¦s fall would perhaps have been without
what now constitutes its single mitigating circumstance. Self-originated sin
would have made man himself a Satan.
3. As, in the conflict with temptation, it is an advantage to
objectify evil under the image of corruptible flesh, so it is an advantage to
meet it as embodied in a personal and seducing spirit.
4. Such temptation has in itself no tendency to lead the soul
astray. If the soul be holy, temptation may only confirm it in virtue. Only the
evil will, self determined against God, can turn temptation into an occasion of
ruin. As the sun¡¦s heat has no tendency to wither the plant rooted in deep and
moist soil, but only causes it to send down its roots the deeper and to fasten
itself the more strongly, so temptation has in itself no tendency to pervert
the soul. The same temptation which occasions the ruin of the false disciple
stimulates to sturdy growth the virtue of the true Christian. Contrast with the
temptation of Adam the temptation of Christ. Adam had everything to plead for God,
the garden and its delights, while Christ had everything to plead against Him,
the wilderness and its privations. But Adam had confidence in Satan, while
Christ had confidence in God; and the result was in the former case defeat, in
the latter victory. How could a penalty so great be justly connected with
disobedience to so slight a command.
To this question we may reply:
1. So slight a command presented the best test of the spirit of
obedience.
2. The external command was not arbitrary or insignificant in its
substance. It was a concrete presentation to the human will of God¡¦s claim to
eminent domain or absolute ownership.
3. The sanction attached to the command shows that man was not left
ignorant of its meaning or importance.
4. The act of disobedience was therefore the revelation of a will
thoroughly corrupted and alienated from God--a will given over to ingratitude,
unbelief, ambition, and rebellion. The motive to disobedience was not appetite,
but the ambition to be as God. The outward act of eating the forbidden fruit
was only the thin edge of the wedge, behind which lay the whole mass--the
fundamental determination to isolate self and to seek personal pleasure
regardless of God and His law. So the man under conviction for sin commonly
clings to some single passion or plan, only half-conscious of the fact that
opposition to God in one thing is opposition in all.
Consequences of the fall, so far as respects Adam
1. Death. This death was two fold. It was partly--
(a) Negatively, the loss of man¡¦s moral likeness to God, or that
underlying tendency of his whole nature toward God which constituted his
original righteousness.
(b) Positively, the depraving of all those powers which, in their
united action with reference to moral and religious truth, we call man¡¦s moral
and religious nature; or, in other words, the blinding of his intellect, the
corruption of his affections, and the enslavement of his will. Seeking to be a
god, man became a slave; seeking independence, he ceased to be master of
himself. In fine, man no longer made God the end of his life, but chose self
instead. While he retained the power of self-determination in subordinate
things, he lost that freedom which consisted in the power of choosing God as
his ultimate aim, and became fettered by a fundamental inclination of his will
toward evil. The intuitions of the reason were abnormally obscured, since these
intuitions, so far as they are concerned with moral and religious truth, are
conditioned upon a right state of the affections; and--as a necessary result of
this obscuring of reason--conscience, which, as the moral judiciary of the
soul, decides upon the basis of the law given to it by reason, became perverse
in its deliverances. Yet this inability to judge or act aright, since it was a moral
inability springing ultimately from will, was itself hateful and condemnable.
2. Positive and formal exclusion from God¡¦s presence. This
included--
The temptation
Observe, in general, its nature and subtlety
1. He concealed his true character as the enemy of God. He appears
to pay a deference to the Creator, not presuming to insinuate any question
about His right to give laws, such laws as seemed good in His sight, to His
intelligent creatures. He does not begin to tell of his own fall, and to speak boastfully
of his own rebellion. He pretends great regard and friendly wishes for them,
and at the same time carefully conceals his enmity against God.
2. He assails Eve, as would appear, when alone; in the absence of
Adam. He thus took her at the greatest disadvantage, knowing well that in such
a case ¡§two are better than one¡¨; that what was yielded by one might have been
resisted by them both.
3. There is a probability, amounting as nearly as possible to
certainty, that he assaulted her at a moment when she was near the tree, so
that there might be no length of time allowed her for reflection and
deliberation.
4. Mark the ingredients included in the temptation itself. There is,
first, an insinuation of unkindness of an unnecessary and capricious restriction,
put in the form of a question of surprise, as if it were a thing be found
difficult to believe, and for which he could imagine no reason. There was,
secondly, a direct contradiction of the assurance she gave him of the
consequence of eating, as having been intimated to them by Jehovah. (R.
Wardlaw, D. D.)
The nature of the test to which Adam¡¦s allegiance was put
1. So far as we are capable of judging, it was a thing in itself
indifferent, having nothing in it of an intrinsically moral character. Now, in
this view of it, it was peculiarly appropriate. It was a test of subjection to
the Divine will; a test, simply considered, of obedience to God.
2. It has been remarked that the circumstances in which Adam was, at
his creation, were such as to remove him from all temptations to, and, in some
instances, from all possibility of, committing those sins which now most
frequently abound amongst his posterity; ¡§which is one thought of considerable
importance to vindicate the Divine wisdom in that constitution under which he
was placed.¡¨
3. We further observe that it was specially appropriate in this,
that, from the comparatively little and trivial character of the action
prohibited, it taught the important lesson that the real guilt of sin lay in
its principle, the principle of rebellion against God¡¦s will; not in the extent
of the mischief done, or of the consequences arising out of it.
4. I might notice also its precision. The language of Dr. Dwight on
another part of this subject may be fairly applied here. ¡§It brought the duty
which he (Adam) was called to perform up to his view in the most distinct
manner possible, and rendered it too intelligible to be mistaken. No room was
left for doubt or debate. The object in question was a sensible object,
perfectly defined, and perfectly understood.¡¨ No metaphysical or philosophical
discussion was demanded or admitted.
5. A test of this particular kind being once admitted to be
suitable, the one actually selected was one which, from its obvious connection
with the condition in which our first parents were placed, was, in the highest
degree, natural. ¡§Considering they were placed in a garden, what so natural,
what so suitable to their situation, as forbidding them to eat of the fruit of
a certain tree in that garden?¡¨ ¡§The liberal grant of food was the extent of
their liberty; this single limitation the test of their obedience.¡¨
6. It was, besides, an easy test. It was neither any mighty thing
they were to do, nor any mighty indulgence they were to deny themselves, that
was made the criterion of their subjection to God. (R. Wardlaw, D. D.)
Observations
I. IT IS THE
USUAL CUSTOM OF SATAN TO ATTEMPT MEN BEFORE THEY BE CONFIRMED, AND SETTLED IN A
COURSE OF GODLINESS.
II. SATAN
CONTRIVES MISCHIEF, EVEN AGAINST SUCH AS NEVER PROVOKED HIM. Hope not for peace
with wicked men, who being Satan¡¦s seed, must needs resemble his nature, as our
Saviour testifies they do John 8:44), seeing a good man¡¦s peace
with them is--
1. Impossible, because of the contrariety between good and evil men
every way. As,--
III. NO PLACE NOR
EMPLOYMENT CAN FREE US FROM SATAN¡¦S ASSAULTS.
IV. THOUGH SATAN
BE THE AUTHOR AND PERSUADER TO EVERY SINFUL MOTION, YET HE LOVES NOT TO BE SEEN
IN IT. In casting of evil thoughts into the heart, he makes use of inward and
indiscernible suggestions; that though we find the motion in our hearts, yet we
cannot discover how they entered into our minds. Thus he stirred up David to
number the people 1 Chronicles 21:1), entered into
Judas (Luke 22:3), was a lying spirit in the
mouth of Zedekiah, though he knew not which way he entered into him (1 Kings 22:23-24). But oftentimes he
makes use of some outward instruments by which he conveys his counsels,
sometimes taking on him the shape of unreasonable creatures, as he always doth
in dealing with witches and conjurers, and as we see he dealt with Eve in this
place, although more usually he makes use of men to beguile men by, as he did
in tempting Ahab by Jezebel his wife (1 Kings 21:25), and by his false
prophet.
V. SATAN USUALLY
MAKES CHOICE OF THOSE INSTRUMENTS WHICH HE FINDS FITTEST FOR THE COMPASSING OF
HIS OWN WICKED ENDS. Thus he makes use of the wise and learned to persuade, of
men of power and authority to command, and to compel men to evil practices, of
beautiful women to allure to lust, of great men to countenance, and of men of
strength and power to exercise violence and oppression. And this he doth upon a
double reason.
1. That whereas God hath therefore given great abilities to some
above others, to enable them the better for His service, that He might have the
more honour thereby, Satan, as it were, to despite God the more, turns his own
weapons against himself to dishonour him all he can in that wherein he seeks,
and out of which he ought to receive his greatest glory.
2. Necessity enforceth him to make the best choice he can of able
instruments, because carrying men in sinful courses, he must needs have the
help of strong means, the work being difficult in itself, as crossing all God¡¦s
ways.
VI. CUNNING AND
SUBTLE PERSONS ARE DANGEROUS INSTRUMENTS TO DECEIVE AND THEREBY TO DO MISCHIEF.
Such a one was Jonadab, to show Amnon the way to defile his own sister (2 Samuel 13:1-39). Ahitophel to
further Absalom¡¦s treason against his own father (2 Samuel 15:1-37; 2 Samuel 16:23). Such were the
scribes and Pharisees, our Saviour¡¦s enemies, and murderers at last, whom He
everywhere taxeth for their pride, covetousness, and subtle dissimulation: with
whom we may join Elymas the sorcerer, fall of all subtilty, whom the devil made
use of, to turn away the people¡¦s hearts from receiving Paul¡¦s ministry. But
what are those to Satan himself, that sets them all on work, called the old
serpent, more subtle, and consequently more dangerously mischievous than all
his agents?
VII. NO ADVANTAGE
CAN ASSURE A CHILD OF GOD FROM THE ASSAULTS AND TEMPTATIONS OF SATAN.
VIII. OUR WEAKNESS
IS SATAN¡¦S ADVANTAGE.
IX. SOLITARINESS
IS OFTEN A SNARE.
1. It yields advantage to temptations (as appears in David¡¦s
entangling himself with lust after Bath-sheba when he was alone); whence it
was, that our Saviour, to give Satan all the advantage that might be, that
thereby He might make His victory over him the more glorious, went out to
encounter with him in the solitary wilderness.
2. Solitariness gives the greater opportunity to commit sin unespied
of men; an advantage upon which Joseph¡¦s mistress attempts him to commit
adultery with her (Genesis 39:11-12).
3. It deprives men of help, by advice and counsel to withstand the
temptation. So, Ecclesiastes 4:10; Ecclesiastes 4:12.
4. Man was ordained for society, and fitted with abilities for that
purpose, and as he is most serviceable that way, so he is most safe, as being
secured by God¡¦s protection in that way and employment, to which the Lord hath
assigned him.
X. SATAN¡¦S MAIN
END IS MAN¡¦S DESTRUCTION, BY TURNING AWAY HIS HEART FROM GOD.
XI. IT IS USUAL
WITH SATAN AND HIS INSTRUMENTS TO PRETEND THE GOOD OF THOSE WHOM THEY INTEND
WHOLLY TO DESTROY.
XII. SATAN AND HIS
AGENTS IN TEMPTING MEN TO SIN, ARE VERY WARY IN DISCOVERING THEIR FULL
INTENTIONS AT FIRST, TILL THEY SEE HOW THEY WILL BE ENTERTAINED.
XIII. DISCRETION AND
WARINESS IN MEN¡¦S ACTIONS OUGHT NOT TO HINDER THE EFFECTUAL PROSECUTION OF THAT
WHICH THEY INTEND.
XIV. THE FORGETTING
OF GOD¡¦S MERCIES IS A GREAT MEANS TO TAKE OFF A MAN¡¦S HEART FROM CLEAVING TO
HIM.
XV. IT IS A
DANGEROUS SNARE TO A MAN TO HAVE HIS EYES TOO MUCH FIXED UPON HIS WANTS.
XVI. THE NATURE OF
MAN, BY THE ART AND POLICY OF SATAN, IS APT TO BE CARRIED AGAINST ALL RESTRAINT
AND SUBJECTION.
XVII. AMBIGUOUS AND
DOUBTFUL EXPRESSIONS MAY BE AND MANY TIMES ARE DANGEROUS SNARES. If they be
purposely used. As--
1. Betraying an ill mind and affection in him that proposeth them,
seeing men that think well and sincerely have no cause to cover their
intentions with the darkness of doubtful terms.
2. And being dangerous means to lead men into error, if they be not
wisely and heedfully observed. (J. White, M. A.)
But why did God give Adam this law, seeing God did foresee that
Adam would transgress it?
I. It was Adam¡¦s
fault that he did not keep the law; God gave him a stock of grace to trade
with, but he of himself broke.
II. Though God
foresaw Adam would transgress, yet that was not a sufficient reason that Adam
should have no law given him; for, by the same reason, God should not have
given His written word to men, to be a rule of faith and manners, because He
foresaw that some would not believe, and others would be profane. Shall not laws
be made in the land, because some break them?
III. God, though He
foresaw Adam would break the law, He knew how to turn it to a greater good, in
sending Christ. The first covenant being broken, He knew how to establish a
second, and a better. (T. Watson.)
The woman and the serpent
I. THE WISDOM OF
THE WORLD. Among the maxims of this wisdom are these--
1. That happiness is the end of human existence.
2. That nature is a sufficient source of happiness.
3. That man¡¦s chief happiness lies in forbidden objects.
4. That God is what we fancy or desire Him to be.
II. THE QUALITIES
OF SIN.
1. The elements of all sin are here--sensuality, covetousness,
ambition.
2. Sin originates in unbelief.
3. It wears a specious appearance of goodness.
III. THE RESULTS OF
SIN. It--
1. Transforms its victims into Satanic incarnations.
2. Reveals its own deceptiveness.
3. Covers its victims with confusion. (J. A. Macdonald.)
Little sins, if not prevented, bring on greater, to the ruin of
the soul
Thieves, when they go to rob a house, if they cannot force the
doors, or that the wall is so strong that they cannot break through, then they
bring little boys along with them, and these they put in at the windows, who
are no sooner in, but they unbolt the doors and let in the whole company of
thieves. And thus Satan, when by greater sins he cannot tell how to enter the
soul, then he puts on and makes way by lesser, which, insensibly having got
entrance, set open the doors of the eyes and the doors of the ears, and then
comes in the whole rabble: there they take up their quarters, there, like
unruly soldiers, they rule, domineer, and do what they list, to the ruin of the
soul so possessed. (J. Spencer.)
The great danger of not keeping close to God¡¦s Word
It is a thing very well known in the great and populous city of
London, that when children, or some of bigger growth newly come out of the
country, and so not well acquainted with the streets, are either lost or found
straying from their home, there is a sort of lewd, wicked people (commonly
called ¡§spirits¡¨) that presently fasten upon them, and, by falsehood and fair
language, draw them further out of their way, then sell them to foreign
plantations, to the great grief of their parents and friends, who, in all
likelihood, never afterwards hear what is become of them. Thus it is that, when
men and women are found straggling from God their Father, the Church their
mother, and refuse to be led by the good guidance of the blessed Spirit--when
they keep not to the Law and to the Testimony, nor stick close to the Word of
God, which is in itself a lantern to their feet and a light unto their
paths--then no marvel if they meet with wicked spirits, seducers and false
teachers, that lead them captive at their will, and that, not receiving the truth
in the love of the truth, God gives them over to strong delusions, to believe a
lie. (J. Spencer.)
The serpent
Here is the devil--that apostate spirit--that accursed being--that
arch rebel--that daring adversary of God--that merciless foe of man. Eden¡¦s serpent
truly is the devil. His work declares him. God¡¦s Word denounces him.
1. The devil is a real person. This relation is no myth--no
dream--no vision--no fable--no allegory. It narrates the real conduct of a real
person. Works prove a workman. Acts show an agent. So real performances stamp a
real devil. Watch then, and pray. He is always personally near; for he ¡§walketh
about seeking whom he may devour¡¨ 1 Peter 5:8). Bar the portals of
your heart. He seeks to make that heart his personal home. He is the ¡§spirit
that now worketh in the children of disobedience¡¨ (Ephesians 2:2).
2. The devil is a hater of God. Who hates God most? Surely he who
most contravenes His will. Of the devil¡¦s antecedent rebellion nothing should
be said, for nothing can be proved. But here a patent fact evidences his
enmity. He aims directly to upset God¡¦s plans. He arms himself in the panoply
of bold opposition. Thus he schemes; thus he uplifts his arm boldly to fight
against God. See, then, how he hates God. Reader, you profess to love God.
Where is your evidence? Do you abhor the fiend, who from the beginning has
strained his every power to subvert God¡¦s kingdom?
3. The devil is a hater of man. Who hates man most? Surely he who
most contrives his misery. In Eden there was sweet bliss. Every faculty was the
inlet of God. Every thought--full of Him--was only joy. Satan beholds and
writhes. What I shall man share the peace which he has lost: and joy in joys,
which never can be his again? Such bliss is torture to him. He will not rest
till he uproot it. Sad that the sons of men should ]end their ears so gladly to
their deadliest foe, and drink so readily this viper¡¦s poison! What madness to
court the embrace of such an enemy--to admit the sure murderer to our abode--to
open the door to the known robber!
4. The devil is most daring. Truly nothing daunts him. His case is
hopeless, therefore he is reckless.
5. The devil is consummate in skill. He watches for the fit
opportunity; and then applies the fit snare.
6. The devil shrinks not from the blackest sin. His first appearance
shows that there is no iniquity so foul, but he will handle it; no depth of
evil so profound, but he will fathom it. He commences with trampling down all
truth. ¡§Ye shall not surely die.¡¨ He rises upon earth the meridian orb of
crime. He blushes not--nor trembles--nor pauses--nor scruples. His earliest
words are the lie of lies. So now he allures each victim to the extremest
extremity of evil.
7. The devil has awful power. Weak agents fail. Difficulties baffle
them. But he is not baffled. His first victory was hard to win. But he quickly
won it. Reader, beware. All his mighty arts plot your destruction. (Dean
Law.)
Original state of man
Now, in respect of this I cannot but believe that we often impose
upon ourselves, and cherish a picture which is not consonant with the reality,
and foster an illusion which is not a little heightened and strengthened by the
strong language commonly used in speaking or writing of man¡¦s condition
paradise as one of absolute perfection. From such language we are apt to carry
away the notion that Adam was a being not only physically complete and perfect,
but also a being whose intellectual and moral nature was in its highest degree
developed,--a being, in short, to whom nothing needed to be added to render him
perfect in all his parts. Along with this, we are apt to fancy that his
condition in paradise was one of the most perfect felicity which the human
nature is capable of enjoying. Now, that this is an illusive view of man¡¦s
primitive condition, will, I think, appear from the following considerations:
1. On a mere general survey, and looking at man simply in his
physical and intellectual aspect, it must strike one that the highest state of
man is not and cannot be that of a naked animal, with nothing to do but to keep
a garden, already richly furnished with all that is ¡§pleasant to the eye and good
for food.¡¨ It is inconceivable that with capacities for thought and work, such
as man even in the lowest state of civilization is seen to possess, the
perfection of his nature and his supreme felicity can have been realized in a
state of such simplicity and in a sphere so limited as that which paradise
afforded to our first parents.
2. It must also, I think, strike one that if Adam was the perfect
being intellectually and morally he is often represented as having been, it is
inconceivable that he should have fallen before so slight a temptation, or
yielded to so trifling an impulse as that by which he was led to transgress the
Divine prohibition.
3. The law of man¡¦s nature is that he reaches perfection only by a
slow process of growth and gradual development, secured through the due
exercise of his faculties. This is inseparable from his constitution as a free
intelligent agent. That God could create an intelligent being from the first
absolutely perfect, so that he neither needed to become nor could become more
complete either intellectually or morally than he was at the moment of his
creation, is not to be denied, for with God all things are possible. But such a
being would not be like any of those whom God has formed. It was not so that
God made man. Man, as he came from the hand of his Maker, was a free,
intelligent, self-governing agent, capable of development, and needing
experience, trial, and use in order to attain both the proper growth of his
physical and mental faculties, and the strengthening, maturing, and perfecting
of his moral nature. Of every such being it is in a very important sense true
that he is his own maker. From God he receives the faculties and capacities by
which he is to be enabled to fulfil the functions of his position; but he must
himself use these, and use them wisely and well, if he is really to advance in
culture and rise towards the perfection of his being. Now, we have no reason to
believe that it was otherwise with our first parents. Their nature was the same
as ours, and it is to be presumed that the same law applied to them in this
respect as to us. They could reach perfection only by the continuous use of the
faculties they possessed. It would seem even that their moral perceptions
needed the discipline of evil before it could be fully developed; for it was
after they had sinned that God said, ¡§Behold, the man is become as one of us,
to know good and evil,¡¨ i.e., to make moral distinctions, to discern
between good and evil Genesis 3:22). Not that they needed
personally to sin in order to attain to this, but that it was only by
experience that they could arrive at an apprehension of the distinction between
good and evil. And as it was only by experience that their moral nature could
be fully matured, so we may safely affirm of their whole nature that it could
reach perfection only by the free and intelligent use of those faculties,
physical, intellectual, and moral, with which God had endowed them. ¡§Mere
animal natures are finished from the first; God took everything that concerned
them upon Himself, and left them nothing to do. But it was His will that man
should be His fellow worker in the great feat of his own creation, and thereby
in the completion of all creation; the Father left the mighty work unfinished,
so to speak, until the child should set his seal on it.¡¨ We must think of man,
then, in his first estate, as he came from the hand of his Creator, not as a
perfect, fully matured being, but rather as a man-child,--a man with noble
capacities, but these as yet undeveloped, and with everything to learn--an
innocent, pure, guileless being, with no bias to evil, without any knowledge of
evil, with affections tending naturally to good, and with a soul capable of
rising to a freedom like that of God, who is of purer eyes than to behold sin,
and who cannot be tempted of evil. Adam was placed in paradise as in a school,
a training place suited to a beginner, and where the lessons and the discipline
were such as his almost infantile condition required. (W. L. Alexander, D.
D.)
Probation, temptation, and fall of man
1. The probation.
1. And, first, there are some who seem to stumble at the littleness
of the trial to which man was thus exposed, and on which such mighty results
were made to depend. If so, they must be prepared to object to one of the most
manifest of those laws under which this world is administered; for nothing can
be more obvious and certain than that the mightiest and most permanent effects
are constantly resulting from the most apparently trivial and transient causes.
Or do they object to so feeble a test of man¡¦s obedience being imposed? If this
be their meaning, it is obvious to reply that so much the more was the
arrangement favourable to man, and therefore beneficent and gracious. The more
insignificant the self-denial required in order to obedience, the easier the
obedience and the more probable the success of the probationer. Never, we may
say, was a moral experiment conducted under circumstances more favourable to
the subject of it.
2. As others advance this objection, it assumes the shape of a
protest against the dishonour which it is alleged is done to God by the
representation of Him as a being who would make a condition of spiritual
advantage dependent on an external act. A mere physical act as such has no
moral character at all; and though it may be the index of a man¡¦s moral state
or tendencies, it is not, nor ever can be, an adequate test of them. The test
to which Adam and Eve were subjected was not so much whether they would eat or
not eat this particular fruit, but whether they would respect and obey or
neglect and transgress God¡¦s prohibition. It was not, therefore, on any mere
external act that man¡¦s fate depended; it was on such an act as connected with,
flowing from, and giving evidence of a particular state of mind. The hinge in
Adam¡¦s testing turned really not so much on his eating or abstaining from this
fruit or that, but on his obeying or transgressing
God¡¦s commandment. Was such a test unfair to man? Was it unworthy
of God?
3. Another form in which the objection to the Mosaic account of the
trial of our first parents is presented is that in which stress is laid on the
purely positive and apparently arbitrary character of the test by which their
obedience was to be tried. This was the only arrangement possible; for how is
the virtue of a sinless being to be tested but by means of some positive
precept? In such a being moral truth is so perfectly a part of the inner life,
that it is only when a positive duty is enjoined that the mind comes to a
consciousness of objective law and extrinsic government so as to render
obedience. But even supposing a moral test could have been proposed, was it not
much more in Adam¡¦s favour that his obedience should have been tested by a
positive enactment? What God required of him was thus clearly and unmistakably
brought before him.
4. Some profound thinkers have started the doubt whether it be
possible for a limited intelligence, left to the freedom of its own will, to
avoid transgressing the boundaries of duty, and so falling into sin. Without
entering at present into so difficult a speculation, we may admit that a
limited intelligence is, from the very fact of its limitation, very likely to
be exposed to a strong inducement from mere curiosity, not to speak of other
motives, to pass beyond the limits within which it may be confined. What lies
on the other side of this barrier which I am forbidden to pass? Why am I
forbidden to pass it? What will be the result to me if I do pass it? These and
such like questionings, working in the mind, are very likely to result in a
daring attempt to remove the barrier, or to overleap it, and thereby, if it be
a moral barrier, to plunge into sin. Obviously, therefore, the kindest and best
arrangement for man in his state of primeval probation was one which should
reduce the action of such provocative curiosity to the lowest possible form,
which should hem him in by no vague, mystic, uncertain prohibition, but by one
perfectly single and intelligible, and which should leave him in no doubt as to
the certain misery into which he would bring himself if he suffered any motive
to carry him beyond the limits which that prohibition prescribed. Such an
arrangement the wisdom and the goodness of God instituted for our first parents
in their probationary state; their continuance in happiness was made to depend
on their submission to one simple and most intelligible restriction; they had
but to refrain from the fruit of one tree, while of all the others they might
freely eat; and they knew beforehand what the consequences would be of their
violating this restriction. (W. L. Alexander, D. D.)
Eastern ideas regarding the serpent
1. Almost throughout the
East, the serpent was used as an emblem of the evil principle, of the spirit of
disobedience and contumacy. A few exceptions only can be discovered. The
Phoenicians adored that animal as a beneficent genius; and the Chinese consider
it as a symbol of superior wisdom and power, and ascribe to the kings of heaven
(tien-hoangs)
bodies of serpents. Some other nations fluctuated in their conceptions
regarding the serpent. The Egyptians represented the eternal spirit Kneph, the
author of all good, under the mythic form of that reptile; they understood the
art of taming it, and embalmed it after death; but they applied the same symbol
for the god of revenge and punishment (Tithrambo), and for Typhon, the author
of all moral and physical evil; and in the Egyptian symbolical alphabet the
serpent represents subtlety and cunning, lust and sensual pleasure. In Greek
mythology, it is certainly, on the one hand, the attribute of Ceres, of
Mercury, and of AEsculapius, in their most beneficent qualities; but it forms,
on the other hand, a part of the terrible Furies or Eumenides: it appears, in
the form of Python, as a fearful monster, which the arrows of a god only were
able to destroy; and it is the most hideous and most formidable part of the
impious giants who despise and blaspheme the power of heaven. The Indians, like
the savage tribes of Africa and America, suffer and nourish, indeed, serpents
in their temples, and even in their houses; they believe that they bring
happiness to the places which they inhabit; they worship them as the symbols of
eternity; but they regard them also as evil genii, or as the inimical powers of
nature which is gradually depraved by them, as the enemies of the gods, who
either tear them to pieces, or tread their venomous head under their
all-conquering feet. So contradictory is all animal worship. Its principle is,
in some instances, gratitude, and in others fear; but if a noxious animal is
very dangerous, the fear may manifest itself in two ways, either by the
resolute desire of extirpating the beast, or by the wish of averting the
conflict with its superior power: thus the same fear may, on the one hand,
cause fierce enmity, and, on the other, submission and worship. Further, the
animals may be considered either as the creatures of the powers of nature, or
as a production of the Divine will; and those religious systems, therefore,
which acknowledge a dualism, either in nature or in the Deity, or which admit
the antagonism between God and nature, must almost unavoidably regard the same
animals now as objects of horror, and now of veneration. From all these
aberrations, Mosaism was preserved by its fundamental principle of the one and
indivisible God, in whose hands is nature with all its hosts, and to whose wise
and good purposes all creatures are subservient. (M. M.Kalisch, Ph. D.)
Yea, hath God said
The devil¡¦s questions
I. IT IS
DANGEROUS TO LAY OPEN OURSELVES FREELY TO PERSONS UNKNOWN, OR SUCH OF WHOM WE
HAVE NO ASSURANCE.
II. IT IS A
DANGEROUS THING TO QUESTION OR DEBATE EVIDENT AND KNOWN TRUTHS. Principles in all
sciences are exempted from dispute, much more should they be in divinity.
Amongst which we may account--
1. The dictates of nature, written by the finger of God in all men¡¦s
hearts, as, that there is a God (Romans 1:19-20); that He judgeth the
world Psalms 58:11), and that in righteousness,
which is a principle that Jeremy will not dispute (Jeremiah 12:1); and that consequently it
shall be well with the good, and ill with the wicked at last (Ecclesiastes 12:13), as being truths,
which every man¡¦s conscience within his own breast gives testimony unto.
2. Such truths as are delivered by God Himself, either recorded in
His Word (as the creation of the world and that great mystery of man¡¦s
redemption by Jesus Christ, etc.), or made known unto us by any special
message from God. And by this assenting unto the truths of God, without
questioning or admitting them into debate,
III. BLASPHEMOUS
AND FOUL SUGGESTIONS OUGHT NOT TO BE HEARD WITHOUT INDIGNATION AND DETESTATION.
1. To manifest our zeal for God¡¦s honour and for His truth.
2. By it we secure ourselves from a farther assault, which we easily
invite when we bear such blasphemies with too much softness of spirit and
patience.
3. And harden our own hearts against such wicked suggestions by
abhorring the very mention of them.
4. And oftentimes terrify the suggesters themselves, or at least put
them to shame.
IV. WHEN GOD¡¦S
MERCIES ARE MENTIONED WE MUST WITHAL BE CAREFUL TO REMEMBER HIS NAME THAT
BESTOWS THEM.
1. That by entitling God unto, and prefixing His own name before His
works of mercy, wherewith men¡¦s hearts are most affected, He may be highly
advanced above all things, and held out and proclaimed to the world as the
fountain of all goodness, when all the good things which we enjoy, and in which
we rejoice, are still laid down at His foot.
2. There is an evil disposition in men¡¦s hearts to forget God in His
mercies Deuteronomy 32:18; Psalms 106:21), and to ascribe them to
themselves (Daniel 4:25).
V. GOD¡¦S MERCIES
OUGHT NOT, WHEN THEY ARE SPOKEN OF, TO BE REPRESENTED IN COLD AND WEAK
EXPRESSIONS.
1. Because they, having their hearts enlarged in the apprehension of
them inwardly, cannot but speak as they think of them.
2. It is our duty to advance the Lord by all the means we can, that
His name alone may be excellent (Psalms 148:13), and great (Malachi 1:11). Now, nothing advanceth His
name more than His mercies, which therefore must be set out as the mercies of
God, high, and without comparison.
3. When all is done, and we have made use of all our art and
abilities, to set out God¡¦s mercies in the largest manner that we can devise,
all our words come infinitely short of the full extent of those things which we
desire to represent.
4. In the meantime, while we strive to set out things in the fullest
measure, we warm our own hearts, and quicken our affections the more, and fill
our hearts with the greater admiration of those things which exceed all our
expressions. (J. White, M. A.)
Satan¡¦s question
I. SATAN¡¦S
TEMPTATIONS BEGIN BY LAYING A DOUBT AT THE ROOT. He does not assert error; he
does not contradict truth; but he confounds both. He makes his first entries,
not by violent attack, but by secret sapping; he endeavours to confuse and
cloud the mind which he is afterwards going to kill.
II. THE PARTICULAR
CHARACTER OF THESE TROUBLESOME AND WICKED QUESTIONINGS OF THE MIND VARIES
ACCORDING TO THE STATE AND TEMPERAMENT AND CHARACTER OF EACH INDIVIDUAL.
1. In order to combat them, everyone should have his mind stored and
fortified with some of the evidences of the Christian religion. To these he
should recur whenever he feels disquieted; he should be able to give ¡§a reason
for the hope that is in him,¡¨ and an answer to that miserable shadow that flits
across his mind, ¡§Yea, hath God said?¡¨
2. A man must be careful that his course of life is not one giving
advantage to the tempter. He must not be dallying under the shadow of the
forbidden tree, lest the tempter meet him and he die.
III. THE FAR END OF
SATAN IS TO DIMINISH FROM THE GLORY OF GOD. To mar God¡¦s designs he insinuated
his wily coil into the garden of Eden; to mar God¡¦s designs he met Jesus Christ
in the wilderness, on the mountain top, and on the pinnacle of the temple; to
mar God¡¦s design he is always leading us to take unworthy views of God¡¦s nature
and God¡¦s work. (J. Vaughan, M. A.)
The temptation, the fall, and the promise
I. THE PARTIES TO
BE TESTED.
II. THE TEMPTER.
1. The instrument was a serpent.
2. The real agent was Satan.
III. THE
TEMPTATION. Literally the tempter says, ¡§Then it is so that God hath said, ¡¥Ye
shall not eat of every tree of the garden.¡¦¡¨ As if so incredible a report could
be believed only on the positive assertion of Eve herself. He then insinuates
that God had issued this prohibition from other motives than love. He hints at
something strange, if not unjust or unkind, on the part of God. Like other
trees, Eve perceives that the forbidden one is ¡§good for food and pleasant to
the sight.¡¨ Unlike other trees, she is now informed that it is capable of
affording wisdom; that eating from it gives knowledge of good and evil; that
while other trees minister to the sense, this ministers also to the reason.
Thus all parts of Eve¡¦s sensitive nature are wrought upon; her fancy is
aroused, curiosity awakened, desire for knowledge excited.
IV. THE SIN. Eve
sought knowledge in a way foreign to God¡¦s will. He would have her know good by
adopting it, and evil by resisting it. By disobedience she came to know good as
a forfeited possession, and evil as a purchased bane. She found that unlawful
knowledge was dearly bought, and that a stolen likeness to God brought sorrow.
V. THE NATURAL CONSEQUENCES
OF SIN. Conscious of their sin, they fancy that their guilty bosoms are open to
every eye. But the accuser is in their own breasts. They have opened the door,
and the sweet-songed bird of innocence has flown.
VI. THE SENTENCE.
In God¡¦s dealings with the human pair there was a mingling of justice and
mercy. By their sin they had become spiritually dead--had died in the sense in
which God declared they should. Their true life--that of holiness--was gone.
Existence now was but partial andabnormal. For this altered moral state God
made for them a change externally. The world which they and their sinful seed
were to inhabit, must be adapted to a race of sinners. Hence God made it, not a
place of punishment, but of discipline; the end being to restore to the race
their lost holiness. Bodily fatigue, the thorn-infested ground, and the dread
of dying (an event which, but for the Fall, would have had no terror), all
these were designed as chastisements for man¡¦s sins, and at the same time as
agencies to reclaim him from it.
VII. THE PROMISE OF
A DELIVERER. (P. B. Davis.)
Man¡¦s enemy makes his appearance
The passage takes for granted that there was already an enemy in
existence. There had been sin before, somewhere, though where is not said.
There had been an enemy somewhere; but how he had become so, or where he had
hitherto dwelt, or how he had found his way to this world, is not recorded.
That he knew about our world, and that he had some connection with it, is
evident; though whether as its original possessor, or a stranger coming from
far in search of spoil, we cannot discover. All that is implied in the
narrative is, that there did exist an enemy--one who hated God, and who now
sought to get vent to that hatred by undoing His handiwork. This enemy now makes
his appearance. He has not been bound; he has not been prohibited entrance: he
gets free scope to work. He shall be bound hereafter, when the times of
restitution of all things commence, but not yet. He shall not be permitted to
enter the ¡§new earth,¡¨ but he is allowed to enter and do his work of evil in
the first earth. (H. Bonar, D. D.)
God not the author of sin
Thus we learn, even at the outset, that God is not the author of
sin. It is the creature that introduces it. God, no doubt, could have hindered
it, but for wise ends He allows it. We know also how sin spreads itself. It is
always active. It multiplies and propagates itself. Every fallen being becomes
a tempter, seeking to ruin others--to drag them down to the same death into
which he has himself been driven. (H. Bonar, D. D.)
The process of temptation
1. We may consider that the
fact is established that man was created with a nature capable of temptation,
and placed in the highest possible probation for the discipline of that nature.
Our first parents stood as a stately oak upon a plain, beat upon by an
impetuous storm, but meeting it with all the vigour and power of original
uprightness. The hurricane beneath which they sunk may have been more severe
than ours, but the bias of their nature made their probation less difficult.
What, then, is that nature in us to which temptation addresses itself?
2. Who is the being that applies that temptation? And what are the
instruments and modes of his attacks, and of our self-defence? These are
questions of no small moment. Temptation implies the existence of two natures
to which adverse powers and influences appeal, and in Holy Scripture these two
natures in us are called the ¡§flesh and spirit¡¨; that they exist in more or
less activity in every one of us an examination of ourselves will prove. We all
know it; but more than this, they are contrary one to the other. It is this
very perverseness in our nature which shows more than anything the
contradictoriness of sin, and the warfare between the flesh and the spirit.
3. The personality and individuality of the tempter are points which
it is most important to establish. That tempter is our constant companion, he
has gauged his word to bring his one victim a bound captive to the gate of
hell. The only solace, if we may use such a term, to his miserable eternity
will be the consciousness that by his side is one who shares forever the
intensity of his agony, though not one throb of anguish will be alleviated in
himself. It will be something that every throe is but a reflex of the torture
of his companion; his delight is in suffering, his sympathy is in woe; he
rejoices, if joy can be felt in hell, in iniquity and pain. That tempter, if he
loses his one victim, has no other which he can effect, unless he can regain
his entrance into the home from which he has been expelled.
4. But I pass on to the next point, the medium through which the
tempter acts. That he has power to affect every portion of our being, and to
cast the deepest shadow over it, as an evening cloud can obscure the radiance
of the setting sun on the marble columns of some eastern temple, there is no
doubt. The lustful thought, the disrelish for heaven, the positive dislike for
goodness, the deep despondency, are, with a thousand other infirmities and
sins, traceable to the connection of the spirit with the body; and in
proportion as that body is subjugated by discipline, the power of those sins
will be weakened, and when the spirit will be freed from the present
corruptible body, it will be wholly liberated. But all this is widely different
from the doctrine which would teach that the bodies of men or matter generally
are materially and actually wicked. They are instruments, and that is all. We
have the same kind of power over them as we have over the staff we lean on, or
the glass we use to aid the eyesight. Let us conceive the case of some
instrument which has the greatest possible degree of connection with ourselves,
and the greatest possible power to influence us, yet over which we have perfect
control: such a case will be a very fair analogy for our relation with the
body. Our bodies are temples; we may neither worship them nor despise them.
They are instruments, as we use them, for good or evil. They are given for the
discipline of the soul; for its aid, or for its hindrance. They are its school
house, in which it is taught to spell the syllables of heaven. But more, it is
manifest that Satan affects the spirit independently of the body. There are
dreams when the soul realizes that awful state of separation from its physical
condition, and ranges unfettered up and down the universe. Then sometimes Satan
pursues it in its flight, and suggests awful thoughts. There are sudden
unaccountable bursts of passion; injuries long since forgotten; exciting feelings
for vengeance; dislikes for holiness, for good men; unaccountable desires to
swear; without a cause to curse; for its own sake to steal, though the next
instant the object for which honesty was bartered is thrown unvalued aside to
rot and decay; there are strange wanderings when we would pray, in the church,
in the chancel, at the altar, the spirit yet wings her flight to every region
of the imagined universe, the corners furthest removed from God: all these are
influences of Satan. Satan does tempt the spirit independently of the body; for
these temptations, many of them, show no trace of physical cause. But that
spirit, too, is in our power to bear us heavenward, or to the gate of hell, as
we would have it. It may be the wing of the archangel soaring to the gate of
paradise, or, it may be as the waxen wing of Icarus bringing us down to
destruction. It is as we would have it. Has Satan ever power to tempt body or
spirit in such a manner as we have no power to resist? It seems that he has.
There are faint foreshadowings of that power in the cases of Pharaoh and Judas.
There are cases in the experience of most of us, where the drunkard, after
years of resisted conscience, has so entirely become the victim of the tempter,
that the resolution formed daily with the bitter weeping of remorse, pales off
each evening before the fire of the tempter, until at last, he passes from the
hell on earth to the hell of eternity.
5. Satan binds us first with cords of silk; ere long they have
become coils of rope; a little while and they are cables, scarcely to be bent;
another interval, and the rope has become a chain, and the chain a bar of iron
which no human power can resist. He creeps upon us.
6. Another favourite mode of his attack will be, as Jeremy Taylor
quaintly illustrates, through the outward circumstances of a man. Adam, says
he, so fascinated by the beauty and meekness of his new wife, was easily
ensnared by her solicitations, and Satan consequently made use of her as the
instrument of the fall of man. Over the stumbling stones of their partial
affection for their younger born, even Rebecca and Jacob successively fell; and
the same overweening love which the mother bore to her child was inherited and
transmitted to its cost to Joseph and Benjamin. To us a favourite scheme, an
idolized child, a friend on whom we lean, an honest calling, a noble aim, a
brilliant yet well-directed talent, may, each one of them, from at first being
planets clear and radiant in our sky, turn into baseless meteors and falling
stars. They may be the fire damps of our ruin when they were the guiding stars
of our salvation.
7. But I must mention a third mode through which the tempter will
affect our spiritual nature independently alike of disposition or circumstance.
He often acts, as was suggested above, in a sudden and unaccountable manner,
and, as the Arab who kneels at the muezzin on the sand of the desert, over
whose crimson sea the setting sun is shedding its ray without a cloud in the
sky or an object on the earth, would be startled at the sight of a shadow
fleeting over the bosom of the wilderness; so we are often startled by the
sudden suggestion of lust, of doubt, of anger, of intense pride, of ruthless
bitterness against another, of dislike to God, when within five minutes of the
passing shade we thought we were kneeling in the cloudless sunshine of prayer,
meditation, or communion. Nothing so shows the actual existence of the tempter
as this. Against these unexpected attacks the habit of holiness and prayer can
alone be a protection. We cannot tell where the weed will grow in the most
highly cultivated garden; at any point may spring couch grass and the nettle;
it is only by a state of general cultivation and purity that we can depend on
the produce of our soil. The fever, the pestilence, may fall on the best
ordered house and the most abstemious body, yet we know cleanliness and
temperance are the best preservers. Apply the same rule to your spiritual life.
One word of high encouragement and I have done. The eyes that watch us like
lamps around our path; the watching eyes of the holy and the just, like
starlight gleaming above us; the quiet gaze of the blessed in paradise, beaming
like the moon that shines in softness with its borrowed lustre; the hosts of
unfallen angels, like the sun that shines in its strength; the eye of Jesus and
the Father from the great white throne, watch us daily. The page of man¡¦s brief
annals teems with instances of suffering, borne to its last throb without a
sigh, and all because the world around or the generations to come would smile
on or admire the deed. The eyes that gaze on us are more radiant and more holy;
they are the eyes of eternity; let us not disappoint them, they watch us.
Perhaps but another day and our strife may be ended! (E. Monro, M. A.)
Temptation of the first and of the second man
I invite you to notice how exactly parallel the temptation of the
second Adam was to the temptation of the first. This cannot fail to concern us
very greatly: for it is a clear intimation, afforded us by the person best
qualified to make it, viz., by the devil, of our special liability, through
certain avenues of choice, to fall away from God.
1. We are to note that the rebellion of the lower appetites against
the powers of reason and the dictates of conscience, must be the prevailing
form of human sin: for it was the seductiveness of the fruit of one particular
tree which originally moved our first mother to disobey. And this is what the
beloved disciple calls ¡§the lust of the flesh.¡¨
2. There is the illusion produced in our higher nature when outward
things are seen otherwise than in the light of God. Eve was seduced by the
prospect of enlarged views, and the promise that her eyes should be opened. And
this is that ¡§lust of the eyes¡¨ of which the same apostle speaks.
3. There is the spiritual snare of becoming to oneself the highest
object, the standard to which all other things are to be referred. Man thus
becomes a god to himself, and straightway directs his proceedings by reference
to himself instead of to God. And to this, Eve¡¦s desires tended when her pride
(that special work of the devil) was called forth by the representation ¡§ye
shall be as gods.¡¨ St. John calls this the ¡§pride of life.¡¨. . .¡¨God doth know¡¨
(said the tempter) ¡§that in the day ye eat thereof¡¨--here was the first
seduction: ¡§your eyes shall be opened¡¨--there was the second: ¡§and ye shall be
as gods¡¨--there was the third. Accordingly, it was ¡§when the woman saw that the
tree was good for food, and that it was pleasant to the eyes, and a tree to be
desired to make one wise,¡¨ that ¡§she took of the fruit thereof, and did eat.¡¨
How exactly in our Lord¡¦s case Satan addressed himself to the same three
instincts, seeking first to inspire sensual distrust; next spiritual
presumption; lastly worldly ambition; needs hardly to be pointed out. The order
of the last two temptations was however inverted in the case of the second
Adam. And why? I presume because the first of the three temptations had been
resisted. Accordingly, from the seduction of sensuality the transition is made
at once to the seduction of pride, these being the two extremes between which
the fallen nature of man oscillates continually. Let us further note, in both
cases (in paradise, I mean, and in the wilderness), that the instrument with
which the reason is plied is still the same, namely, calumnious insinuation. A
misrepresentation of the truth, and that couched in the modest form of an
inquiry, was the tempter¡¦s device. He at first asserted nothing. He asked, as
if for information. He might have known, he did know, the truth . . . I am much
mistaken if something very similar to this is not Satan¡¦s method still. ¡§It is
most important to observe this first origin of evil. It is in the form of a
question. It is not a direct denial of God¡¦s truth or faithfulness, but a
questioning of it. Because faith in God is the foundation of all good, it is to
unsettle the foundation that this attempt is made. The poison is inserted in
the way the question is stated. Thus also in dealing with our Divine Lord,
Satan begins with a like questioning of what God had just declared. ¡¥If Thou
be,¡¦ which implies, ¡¥Art Thou then indeed the Son of God?¡¦¡¨ And next, he
insinuated what he dared not openly to proclaim: for by calumniously imputing
to God a base motive for withholding the fruit of the one forbidden tree, he
misrepresented God¡¦s whole nature. But he did it by insinuation. And here,
again, I recognize a favourite device of the enemy of souls in these last days.
And then, the point to which his seductive speech tended, was, to make the
creature desire to be as God: to be himself the standard, himself supreme,
himself as God unto himself. It was a suggestion that the bondage of external
law should be thrown aside, and that the conscience should henceforth become a
law unto itself. Further--You are invited to note how the mischief began with
an attempt to tamper with God¡¦s Word. ¡§Yea, hath God said?¡¨ But God had not
said it! And then you will note that Satan beguiled Eve¡¦s understanding by the
seductive avenue of an increase of knowledge in prospect . . . Knowledge--that
first appetite of man--and his last!. . .And is not ¡§knowledge¡¨ good then? Yea,
surely, most good: for indeed what were life without it? But like every other
creature of God, it is good only when it subordinates to God¡¦s revealed mind
and will. Yet once more, and for the last time, death was the penalty of all;
and yet, ¡§Ye shall not surely die,¡¨ was the promise wherewith Satan sought to
silence the fears of our first mother What but that, what but the assurance ¡§Ye
shall not surely die,¡¨ is Satan¡¦s cry at this very hour to a willing world? (Dean
Burgon.)
The temptation
There are in this question two things equally dangerous to the
soul of Eve, a fatal doubt of the truth of the Word of God, and a perfidious
exaggeration, calculated to insinuate distrust. I say, first, a doubt of the
truth of the Word of God. ¡§Hath God said?¡¨ Here is an insinuation calculated to
sap the foundation of all faith, all obedience, all morality, all established
order. Here is the most powerful weapon of the devil and of our own wicked
heart; the weapon by which thousands and thousands are smitten and plunged into
ruin. Hath God said that the ¡§friendship of the world is enmity against God;
and that whosoever will be the friend of the world is the enemy of God¡¨? Hath
God said that we must forsake all and follow Him, bearing our cross; that ¡§if
we love father or mother, or sister or brother, or house, or lands, more than
Him, we are not worthy of Him¡¨? Hath God said that ¡§the whole world lieth in
wickedness,¡¨ that we have within us an evil and corrupt heart, that ¡§the carnal
mind in us is not subject to the law of God,¡¨ that our life is polluted with
sin? Hath God said that ¡§He doth not hold the sinner guiltless, that He hateth
sin, that the broad road leadeth to destruction¡¨? No, no, God is not so severe;
He is too good a Father to punish the weaknesses of His children; beware of
taking in the letter, the figurative language of the threatenings of the Bible,
or at least, reserve them for the wicked or great criminals. God well knows
that we are weak; be honest, repent of your faults, and all will go well. When
doubt has thus despoiled the Word of God of its immutable sanctity, weakened
the obligation and responsibility of the creature towards the Creator, opened a
wide door to passion, which hurries us along and paves the way for temptation;
these same truths, which the deadly breath of doubt has not yet been able to
destroy, because they contain aid immortal force, are presented to the already
wavering soul with an exaggeration which shall soon engender distrust. Hath God
said, ¡§Ye shall not eat of every tree of the garden¡¨? These delicious fruits
which the earth produces, which seem to have been placed before you to spread in
your abode abundance, beauty, and well being, shall ye not taste of any of
these gifts? Are they only here to excite in you useless desires? Has He whom
you adore as your God imposed upon you such hard laws? It is thus in the
present day also; they who insinuate doubts of the truths of God¡¦s Word, guard
against presenting them faithfully and in their true light. They are skilful in
disfiguring them, in showing that observance to the laws of God is incompatible
with our weakness, that the morality of the gospel is not made for men, and
that there would be injustice in chastisement inflicted upon those who do not
conform their lives to them. They are skilful in throwing ridicule upon those
who let the Bible speak for itself, believe it in its whole extent, and abandon
the multitude to range themselves under the banner of obedience to their God.
They are skilful in presenting, under a false light, the vital doctrines of the
gospel, in showing that they are contrary to reason, and that we must, as soon
as possible, apply to them the amendments of human wisdom. They are skilful in
persuading those who hear them, that a living and a true faith is a
renunciation of reason, that filial submission is bondage, and that to give up
the world, its joys, and its vanities, is to throw a veil of gloom and
melancholy over the whole life. They would willingly say to the God of the
Bible, if they were as sincere as the unprofitable servant in the parable, ¡§I
know that thou art an austere master, reaping where thou hast not sown, and
gathering where thou hast not strawed.¡¨ Now let the temptation present itself;
everything in the heart of the unhappy being who has lent an ear to the lying
insinuations of the tempter, is prepared for the fatal hour of seduction . . .
and of ruin. Know ye, my brethren, the power of temptation? It is present, it
presses the poor heart, in which it finds but too much sympathy: it draws it
along by the charm of sin, decked in seducing colours; conscience lifts up its
voice; the conflict begins; you resist, for the thunders of God¡¦s word against
sin echo from afar, and bring trouble into the depths of your soul. But, in the
head of the conflict, a doubt arises; Hath God said? Will He be offended at
this weakness? Will He care for it? Will He punish? Thus is broken the last
restraint imposed upon the impetuosity of the temptation; the barrier of the
Word of God is overthrown: you yield . . . And thus you are delivered over to
the torments of remorse; you come forth from a vortex, to taste all the
bitterness of that which, a moment before, appeared to you so sweet! (L.
Bonnet.)
After God comes the devil
In the former chapters we have heard nothing but the Lord said,
the Lord said; but now come we to hear the serpent said, and the serpent said.
So see we plainly how after the Word of God cometh the word of the devil. It
was not so then only, but it hath so continued ever since. When the Lord hath
spoken by the mouth of His minister, prophet, apostle, pastor, or teacher, then
speaketh Satan by his serpents contrary. They in the Church, these as soon as
they be out of the Church, yea, many times even in the Church they will be
hissing in their ears that sit next them. If God have spoken to a child by his
parents, to a servant by his master, to a man by his friend what is true and
good, straight cometh a serpent, one or other, and overthroweth all, leading
them captive to a contrary course. What, say these serpents, wilt thou be thus
used, will you bear all this? you are now no child, do this and do that, you
shall not die, but you shall live and be like gods, knowing good and evil, etc.
But as Eve sped by this serpent, so shall you by those, if you avoid them not.
Such serpents were those counsellors that made Rehoboam, Solomon¡¦s son, do
contrary to the advice of the old counsellors, to his great loss. Again, mark
here which was first, the word of God or the word of Satan. Dixit Dominus, the
Lord said, goeth before Dixit serpens, the serpent said, and so you see
truth is elder than falsehood, and God¡¦s Word before Satan¡¦s lies: that is
Tertullian¡¦s rule to know truth by, namely, to look which was first; ¡§Quodcunque
primum illud verum, quodcunque posterius illud falsum.¡¨ Whatsoever was
first, that is true, whatsoever was latter that is false, and that is first
that was from the beginning, and that was from the beginning, that in the
writings of the apostles may find his warrant. Let it not blind you then that
such an error hath continued a thousand years, if it be to be proved that a
contrary truth is elder far. (Bp. Babington.)
Satan attacks the weakest point
Satan tempteth the woman as the weaker vessel, and if you have
anything wherein you are weaker than in another, beware, for he will first
assault you there. It is his manner like a false devil to take his advantage.
Happily you are easier drawn to adultery than murder: that then shall please
him, he will begin there. So did he with David, and then brought him to murder
after. David was weaker to resist the one than the other. Think of your
frailties and be godly wise, where the wall is lowest he will enter first. (Bp.
Babington.)
Satan¡¦s subtlety in tempting
Satan did break over the hedge, where it was weakest; he knew he
could more easily insinuate and wind himself into her by a temptation. An
expert soldier, when he is to storm or enter a castle, observes warily where
there is a breach, or how he may enter with more facility; so did Satan the
weaker vessel. (T. Watson.)
A crafty question
With well-feigned surprise and incredulity he puts the question,
¡§Yea, hath God said, Ye shall not eat of every tree of the garden?¡¨ meaning
thereby to insinuate the harshness of the injunction which he pretended hardly
to believe. Is it possible that God can have said so? Is it conceivable that He
who has just made you, and provided you with such abundance, should grudge you
a little fragment of that plenty, and debar you from the garden¡¦s choicest
fruits; making you lords of creation, yet not allowing you to put forth your
lordship; nay, refusing you access to that tree, the fruit of which would
enable you rightly to exercise wise dominion? In this his object was to
calumniate God; at least, cunningly to suggest an idea which would misrepresent
His character to man. He keeps out of sight all that God had done for man, all
the proofs of love, so manifold, so vast; he fixes on one thing which seemed
inconsistent with this; he brings up this before man in the way most likely to
awaken evil thoughts of God. His object is to isolate the one fact, and so to
separate it from all God¡¦s acts of love as to make it appear an instance of
harsh and unreasonable severity. Man had hitherto known the prohibition; but he
had put no such construction on it; he had not imagined it capable of being so
interpreted. Now Satan brings it up, and sets it out in an aspect likely to
suggest such constructions as these: ¡§God is not your friend after all; He but
pretends to care for you. He is a hard Master, interfering with your liberty,
not leaving you a free agent, but constraining you, nay, fettering you. He mocks
you, making you creation¡¦s head, yet setting arbitrary limits to your rule;
placing you in a fair garden, yet debarring you from its fruits. He grudges you
His gifts, making a show of liberality, while withholding what is really
valuable.¡¨ Thus Satan sought to calumniate God, to malign His character, to
represent Him as the enemy, not the friend, of man. If he can succeed in this,
then man will begin to entertain hard thoughts of God, then he will become
alienated from Him; then he will disobey; and then comes the fall, the ruin,
the guilt, the doom, the woe! Man is lost! Hell gets another inmate. The devil
gets another companion. (H. Bonar, D. D.)
The woman said unto the
serpent
Eve parleying with the tempter
We wish on the present occasion to examine with all carefulness
the workings of Eve¡¦s mind at that critical moment, when the devil, under the
form of a serpent, sought to turn her away from her allegiance unto God. This
is no mere curious examination; as it might indeed be, had Eve, before she yielded
to temptation, been differently constituted from one of ourselves. But there
was not this different constitution. A piece of mechanism may have its springs
disordered, and its workings deranged, but it is not a different piece of
mechanism from what it was whilst every part was in perfect operation. And we
may find, as we go on, that the workings of Eve¡¦s mind were wonderfully similar
to those of our own; so that we may present our common mother as a warning, and
derive from her fall instruction of the most practical and personal kind. Now
the point of time at which we have to take Eve, is one at which she is
evidently beginning to waver. She has allowed herself to be drawn into
conversation with the serpent, which it would have been wise in her, especially
as her husband was not by, to have utterly declined; and there is a sort of
unacknowledged restlessness and uneasiness of feeling, as though God might not
be that all-wise and all-gracious Being, which she had hitherto supposed. She
has not yet, indeed, proceeded to actual disobedience, but she is certainly
giving some entertainment to doubts and suspicions; she has not yet broken
God¡¦s commandment, but she is looking at that commandment with a disposition to
question its goodness, and to depreciate the risk of setting it at nought.
There are certain preludes, certain approaches, towards sin, which, even in
ourselves, are scarcely to be designated sin, and which must have been still
further removed from it in the unfallen Eve. You remember how St. James speaks:
¡§Every man is tempted, when he is drawn away of his own lust and enticed; then
when lust hath conceived, it bringeth forth sin.¡¨ The apostle, you observe,
does not give the name of sin to the first motions. If these motions were duly
resisted, as they might be, the man would have been tempted, but he would not
have actually sinned. And if so much may be allowed of ourselves, in whom the
inclinations and propensities are corrupted and depraved through original sin,
much more must it have been true of Eve, when, if not fallen, she was yet
tottering from her first estate. She was then still innocent; but there were
feelings at work which were fast bringing her to the very edge of the
precipice; and it is on the indications of these feelings, that for the sake of
warning and example we wish especially to fix your attention.
I. IT WAS A LARGE
AND NOBLE GRANT, WHICH THE ALMIGHTY HAD MADE TO MAN OF THE TREES OF THE GARDEN.
¡§Of every tree of the garden thou mayest freely eat.¡¨ It is true, indeed, there
was one exception to this permission. Man was not to eat of ¡§the tree of the
knowledge of good and evil¡¨; but of every other tree he might not only eat, he
was told to eat ¡§freely,¡¨ as though God would assure him of their being all
unreservedly at his disposal. Now observe, that when Eve comes to recount this
generous grant, she leaves out the word ¡§freely,¡¨ and thus may be said to
depreciate its liberality. It is a disposition in all of us to think little of
what God gives us to enjoy, and much of what He appoints us to suffer. It may
be but one tree which He withholds, and there may be a hundred which He grants;
but, alas! the one, because withheld, will seem to multiply into the hundred;
the hundred, because granted, to shrink into the one. If He take from us a
single blessing, how much more ready are we to complain, as though we had lost
all, than to count up what remains, and give Him thanks for the multitude! He
may but forbid us a single gratification, and presently we speak as though He
had dealt with us in a churlish and niggardly way; though, were we to attempt
to reckon the evidences of His loving kindness, they are more in number than
the hairs of our head. And when we suffer ourselves in any measure to speak or
think disparagingly of the mercies of God, it is very evident that we are
making way for, if not actually indulging suspicions as to the goodness of God;
and it cannot be necessary to prove, that he who allows himself to doubt the
Divine goodness, is preparing himself for the breach of any and of every
commandment. Learn, then, to be very watchful over this moral symptom. Be very
fearful of depreciating your mercies.
II. But we may go
further in tracing in Eve the workings of a dissatisfied mind--of a disposition
to suspect God of harshness, notwithstanding the multiplied evidences of His
goodness. You are next to observe HOW SHE SPEAKS OF THE PROHIBITION WITH REGARD
TO ¡§THE TREE OF THE KNOWLEDGE OF GOOD AND EVIL.¡¨ She left out a most important
and significant word in stating God¡¦s permission to ¡§eat of the trees of the
garden,¡¨ and thus did much to divest that permission of its generous character;
but she put in words when she spoke of the prohibition, and thereby invested it
with strictness and severity. You would have argued from her version of the
prohibition, that God had altogether closed and shut up the tree, guarding it
with the most extreme jealousy and rigour, so that there was no possibility of
detecting any of its properties; whereas the restriction was only on examining
the fruit in and through that sense, which would make it bring death, and there
was the warrant of the Divine word, that to taste would be to die. All that
could be learnt--and it was very considerable--from sight and touch and scent,
Adam and Eve were at liberty to learn, whilst what the taste could have taught
was distinctly revealed; and thus the single prohibition did not so much
withhold them from the acquisition of knowledge, as from the endurance of
disaster. But now, then, was Eve single in the misrepresenting the prohibition
of God? Was she not rather doing what has been done ever since; what is done
every day by those, who would excuse themselves from the duties and the
obligations of religion? As though He had given them appetites, which were
never to be gratified; desires, which were only to be resisted, and yet, all
the while, had surrounded them with what those appetites craved, and those
desires sought after. Whereas, there is nothing forbidden by the Divine law,
but just that indulgence of our appetites and desires, which because excessive
and irregular, would from our very constitution, be visited with present
disappointment and remorse, and, from the necessary character of a retributive
government, with future vengeance and death.
III. It was bad
enough to depreciate God¡¦s permission, or to exaggerate His prohibition; BUT IT
WAS WORSE TO SOFTEN THE THREATS. This showed the workings of unbelief; and
there could have been but a step between our common mother and ruin, when she
brought herself to look doubtingly on the word of the Lord. And this symptom
was more strongly marked than even those which we have already examined. The
declaration of God had been, ¡§Thou shalt not eat of it; for in the day that
thou eatest thereof thou shalt surely die.¡¨ But what is Eve¡¦s version of this
strong and unqualified declaration? ¡§Ye shall not eat of it, neither shall ye
touch it, lest ye die.¡¨ ¡§Lest ye die!¡¨ This is what she substitutes for--¡§In
the day that thou eatest thereof, thou shalt surely die.¡¨ ¡§Lest ye die!¡¨ An
expression which implies a sort of chance, a contingency, a bare possibility;
what might happen, or might not happen; what might happen soon, or might not
happen for years. It is thus she puts a denunciation as express, as explicit,
as language can furnish, ¡§In the day that thou eatest thereof, thou shalt
surely die.¡¨ Alas! now, for Eve. Harbouring the thought that God would not
carry His threatenings into execution--and this she must have harboured, ere
she could have softened His threatening into ¡§lest ye die,¡¨--no marvel that she
gave a ready ear to the lie of the serpent, ¡§Ye shallnot surely die.¡¨ She had
whispered this lie to herself, before it was uttered by Satan. The devil could
do little then, and he can do little now, except as openings are made for him by
those upon whom he endeavours to work. It was probably the incipient unbelief
manifested by the ¡§Lest ye die¡¨ of Eve, which suggested, as the mode of attack,
the ¡§Ye shall not surely die¡¨ of Satan. The devil may well hope to be believed,
as soon as he perceives symptoms of God¡¦s being disbelieved. And if we could
charge upon numbers in the present day, the imitating Eve in the disparaging
God¡¦s permission, and the exaggerating God¡¦s prohibition, can we have any
difficulty in continuing the parallel, now that the thing done is the making
light of His threatenings? Why, what fills hell, like the secretly cherished
thought, that perhaps, after all, there may be no hell to fill? What is a
readier or more frequent engine for the destruction of the soul, than the false
idea of the compassion of God, as sure to interfere, either to shorten the
duration, or mitigate the intenseness of future punishment, if not altogether
to prevent its inflictions? God hath said, ¡§The soul that sinneth it shall
die.¡¨ When men come to give their version of so stern and solemn a
denunciation, they put it virtually into some such shape as this: ¡§The soul
should not sin lest it die.¡¨ Christ hath said, ¡§He that believeth and is
baptised, shall be saved; but he that believeth not shall be damned.¡¨ Men often
practically throw this sweeping and startling affirmation into a much smoother
formula: ¡§Believe upon Christ lest ye die.¡¨ ¡§Lest ye die!¡¨ Is this, then, all?
Is there any doubt? Is it a contingency? Is it a ¡§maybe¡¨? ¡§Lest ye die!¡¨--when
God hath said, ¡§Ye shall surely die!¡¨ ¡§Lest ye die!¡¨ when God hath said, ¡§The
wicked shall be turned into hell and all the people that forget God!¡¨ ¡§Lest ye
die!¡¨ when God hath said, ¡§Be not deceived; neither fornicators, nor idolators,
nor adulterers, nor effeminate, nor abusers of themselves with mankind, nor
thieves, nor covetous, nor drunkards, nor revilers, nor extortioners shall
inherit the kingdom of God!¡¨ Nay, sirs, ye may give the paragraph a smoother
turn, but ye cannot give the punishment a shorter term. Ye may soften away the
expression; ye can neither abbreviate nor mitigate the vengeance. ¡§If we
believe not,¡¨ says Paul, ¡§yet He abideth faithful: He cannot deny Himself.¡¨ (H.
Melvill, B. D.)
Observations
I. MEN¡¦S WORDS
AND SPEECHES ARE USUALLY PROPORTIONED ACCORDING TO THE MEASURE OF THE
AFFECTIONS OF THE HEART.
1. First, because words being ordained to be the means of
representing the thoughts of the heart within, it is agreeable to all reason
that they should express them in their full proportion, as the glass doth the
face.
2. Secondly, because although the understanding be, or at least
should, hold the reins of the tongue, yet the affections add the spurs unto it,
as indeed they do many times give the measure to our actions themselves, as we
run according to our fear, fight according to our anger, and wake according to
our hope and desire; and so in many other of our actions.
II. WHEN WE
REMEMBER ANY LAW OF GOD, WE OUGHT WITHAL TO SET BEFORE US THE SANCTION ANNEXED
THEREUNTO.
1. Together with God¡¦s name is represented unto us His authority,
and withal both His wisdom and goodness, which will be an effectual means to
stay and silence all carnal reasonings, which otherwise will very hardly be
answered, considering how hard a matter it is for the wisdom of the flesh to
submit to the law (Romans 8:7). But against God Himself, who
dare dispute with the apostle (Romans 9:20).
2. By the same means we are quickened to obedience with
cheerfulness, when we consider that they are the commandments of that God who
gave us our being and in whom we subsist, to whom we owe ourselves and all we
have, and from whom we expect glory and immortality and eternal life. See
David¡¦s answer to his scoffing wife (2 Samuel 6:21).
3. Only this looking upon God in all His commandments makes our
services duties of obedience when they are performed at the command and in
submission to the will of Him whose we are, whereby we acknowledge both His
authority and besides His will to be the rule of righteousness. Lastly, it
wonderfully stirs us up to watchfulness, diligence, and sincerity in all our
carriage, when we behold the presence, majesty, and holiness of Him to whom we
perform our duties, serving Him with reverence and fear and with a single
heart, as being the God who sees in secret, and whose eyes are purer than to
behold evil.
III. WHEN WE LAY
THE LAW OF GOD BEFORE US, WE MUST WITHAL FIX OUR THOUGHTS UPON HIM THAT GIVES
IT.
1. For God¡¦s honour, that all our obedience may be tendered to Him,
both in faith and fear.
2. For our own necessity, whose dead hearts need such effectual
means to quicken us.
IV. IT IS A HARD
MATTER TO BRING MAN¡¦S HEART TO SUBMIT UNTO AND BEAR WITH PATIENCE AND
CHEERFULNESS ANY YOKE OF RESTRAINT.
V. WHOSOEVER WILL
NOT BE ENTANGLED BY ALLUREMENTS TO SIN, MUST NOT COME NEAR THEM. We may not
stand in the council of the ungodly Psalms 1:1), nor come near their paths,
as Solomon adviseth Proverbs 4:14); and we are commanded to
hate the very garment spotted with the flesh (Jude 1:23). And this we must do--
1. Out of the conscience of the weakness of our corrupt nature,
which as easily takes fire by the least allurement to sin as gunpowder doth by
any spark that falls into it, or rather of itself draws towards it, as iron
doth towards an adamant: now we know that he that will not be burnt must carry
no coals in his bosom (Proverbs 6:27).
2. That we may manifest our perfect detestation of evil, which every
man that will approve himself to be a lover of God must hate (Psalms 97:10).
VI. THE SLIGHTING
OF THE CURSE OF THE LAW MAKES WAY TO THE TRANSGRESSION OF THE LAW. (J.
White, M. A.)
Deceitfulness of sin
It is not only a crime that men commit when they do wrong, but it
is a blunder. ¡§The game is not worth the candle.¡¨ The thing that you buy is not
worth the price you pay for it. Sin is like a great forest tree that we
sometimes see standing up green in its leafy beauty, and spreading a broad
shadow over half a field; but when we get round on the other side there is a
great dark hollow in the very heart of it, and corruption is at work there. It
is like the poison tree in travellers¡¦ stories, tempting weary men to rest
beneath its thick foliage, and insinuating death into the limbs that relax in
the fatal coolness of its shade. It is like the apples of Sodom, fair to look
upon, but turning to acrid ashes on the unwary lips. It is like the magician¡¦s
rod that we read about in old books. There it lies; and if tempted by its
glitter or fascinated by the power that it proffers you, you take it in your
hand, the thing starts into a serpent, with erect crest and sparkling eyes, and
plunges its quick barb into the hand that holds it, and sends poison through
all the veins. (A. Maclaren, D. D.)
Danger of the eye
Satan turned Eve¡¦s eye to the apple; Achan¡¦s eye to the wedges of
gold; Ahab¡¦s eye to Naboth¡¦s vineyard; and then what work did he make of them!
(Alleine.)
Use of the eye
The eye, as it is used, will either be a help or a snare; either
it will let in the sparks of temptation, or enkindle the fire of true devotion.
These are the windows which God hath placed in the top of the building, that
man from them may contemplate God¡¦s works and take a prospect of heaven, the
place of an eternal residence. (T. Manton, D. D.)
Tests designed for the strengthening of virtue
I know not whether all soldiers love the thought of war, but there
are many who pant for a campaign. How many an officer of low rank has said,
¡§There is no promotion, no hope of rising, no honours, as if we had to fight.
If we could rush to the cannon¡¦s mouth, there would be some hope that we might
gain promotion in the ranks.¡¨ Men get few medals to hang upon their breasts who
never knew the smell of gunpowder. The brave days, as men call them, of Nelson
and Trafalgar have gone by, and we thank God for it; but still we do not expect
to see such brave old veterans, the offspring of this age, as those who are
still to be found lingering in our hospitals, the relics of our old campaigns.
No, brethren, we must have trials if we are to get on. Young men do not become
midshipmen altogether through going to the school at Greenwich and climbing the
mast on dry land; they must go out to sea. We must go out to sea and really be
on deck in the storm; we must have stood side by side with King David; we must
have gone down into the pit to slay the lion, or have lifted up the spear
against the eight hundred. Conflicts bring experience, and experience brings
that growth in grace which is not to be attained by any other means.
A talk about temptation
So paradise had a tempter in it. Then, one thing is quite
certain--get where we may in this world, we cannot get beyond temptation. Do
you think that life would have been a great deal better if there had been no
possibility of evil? Certainly we might have been made without any will,
blindly obeying instinct, an animated machine. Then we should never have
fallen. But as certain is it that then we could never have risen. Or we might
have been placed in circumstances where the will could never have exerted
itself; where no temptation could have met us. Then, again, we could not have
fallen; and then, again, we should not have risen. Innocence is not a virtue
until it has had temptation and opportunity to sin; then innocence is
strengthened by resistance, and exalted by victory into virtue. Everywhere and
in everything that is a poor, languid, sickly kind of life, which knows no
resistance; a flabby thing, not worthy the name of a man, is he who has never
had a chance of overcoming. Temptation overcome is the way, the only way, to
the very throne of God. Amongst the brave men of old there was a notion that
when one conquered an enemy the strength of the enemy went into the conqueror,
and he became so much stronger by every conquest, and thus went on from
strength to strength. It is thus that God grows His heroes, by overcoming.
Is not this the great law of all success? A young man comes to
London for business or for study. He does not expect to get on without any
struggle. He knows that if he would succeed he must be watchful, hard working,
ready to resist and to overcome. If he is worth his salt he rejoices in real
difficulties rightly dealt with; in real hard work to be done. It knits the
muscle of his character; it developes in him courage, resoluteness, heroism.
Again, there was a serpent in paradise--one. But there are a great many in the
wilderness outside--fiery flying serpents! So then all men know the devil on
one side or the other. On the resisting side they know him as a tempter only;
but on the other side, the yielding side, they know him as infinitely more than
that--as the cruel tyrant, the bitterly hard master, Apollyon the Destroyer.
Today the saddest people in the world, the hardest worked, who spend most and earn
least, who find life an awful weariness, are those who have let the tempter
lead them furthest by his promises of pleasure. It is true, there is one
serpent in the garden of God--but there are a great many outside. Learn the
lesson of his devices. ¡§Now the serpent was more subtle than any beast of the
field.¡¨ Subtlety is his stock-in-trade. He is a doctor in philosophy, a master
in logic; and if he were subtle and skilful at the first, how much more so
today, when for six thousand years he has been diligently practising his art
and perfecting it? Whenever any course wants a very clever man to defend it, be
quite sure that is not the path for you. The way of God is a narrow way, but it
is not a crooked way, nor is it a by-path; it is a highway. Trace his subtlety
in his methods. He comes to the woman first; perhaps because she is less
suspicious; possibly because she was less able to withstand his wiles; probably
because he knew the best way to get the man was to get the woman. The tempter
finds her near to the tree, looking at it and desiring it; so her eyes and her
longing were on the side of the enemy. If we would keep free from the tempter,
keep out of the way of temptation. Some do really tempt the tempter to destroy
them. The tempter begins by questioning--for he knows how innocently to
begin--¡§So, is it true that God hath said that ye may not eat of every tree of
the garden?¡¨ ¡§It is written, Thou shalt¡¨; ¡§it is written, Thou shalt not.¡¨ The
absolute surrender of ourselves to God for an utter obedience is our perfect
safety. But to loosen the authority of the law is to fall an easy prey to the
adversary. It is to come forth from our stronghold and to stand unharmed and
helpless, face to face with the old Lion. ¡§I really am quite concerned about
you,¡¨ he seems to say, ¡§to see such gifted and noble creatures as you are kept
from your true position and sacred rights?¡¨ See how Eve might have reasoned if
only she had kept in mind the goodness of God. ¡§What, then, hast thou done for
us, sir, since thou art so concerned for our welfare? Where are the tokens and
proofs of thine eagerness to serve us? He who said, ¡¥Thou shalt not eat of this
tree,¡¦ hath made this fair earth and all that is therein. He planted this
paradise, and hath given us all things richly to enjoy. Canst thou be more
generous, more gracious than He? Against thy single word, behold, He sets ten
thousand glorious assurances of His regard. If thou, indeed, wert seeking our
good, wouldst thou beget these doubts of Him whom we have found all love, and
who hath so perfect a claim upon us?¡¨ This completes our safety, when to our
utter obedience to His law there is added this abiding confidence in His love.
(M. G. Pearse.)
Longing for the forbidden
Speaking of the craving of colonists for dispossessing the Indians
of their lands, a modern writer says: ¡§On their way to the Kansas border, they
passed over thousands of desirable acres, convenient to markets and schools,
which they might have had at low rates and on long credits. But they had a
special craving for Indian lands, and lands ¡¥kept out of market¡¦; the simple
desire to enter this territory is sufficient to make them think it the fairest
portion of the universe.¡¨
Sin, a deceiver
Martha Browning, a young woman, aged twenty-four, was executed
many years ago for murder. The fatal deed was committed to obtain possession of
a £5 note; but when the tempting bait was at last really possessed, it proved
to be not a note of the Bank of England, but a flash note of the Bank of
Elegance!
Ye shall not surely die
The first lie
I. THE AUTHOR OF
THIS FIRST LIE. Satan. Devil. Deceiver.
II. THE NATURE OF
THE LIE UTTERED. Direct falsification of God¡¦s threatening.
III. A MOST DARING
AND PRESUMPTUOUS LIE. A challenge of the Almighty.
IV. A MOST
MALIGNANT AND ENVIOUS LIE.
V. A DESTRUCTIVE,
MURDEROUS LIE. It slew our first parents: destroyed their innocency--blinded
their minds--defiled their consciences--and overspread their souls with leprous
defilement and guilt.
VI. THE GERM OF
ALL UNREALNESS AND DECEPTION THAT SHOULD CURSE MANKIND.
VII. A LYING
ENTANGLEMENT FROM WHICH HUMANITY COULD NOT EXTRICATE ITSELF.
VIII. JESUS, THE
DIVINE TRUTH, CAME TO DELIVER US FROM THIS LIE AND ITS RESULTS.
IX. THE GOSPEL IS
THE DELIVERING POWER FROM SATAN¡¦S FALSEHOODS. (J. Burns, D. D.)
Satan¡¦s counter-assertion
I. THERE ARE MANY
THINGS AGAINST WHICH GOD HAS UTTERED HIS VOICE IN EVERY MAN¡¦S HEART in which,
even independently of written revelation, He has not left Himself without
witness. He who lives in concealed or open sin knows full well that God hath
said he shall surely die. But in the moment of temptation the certainty of ruin
is met by a counter assertion of the tempter--¡§Thou shalt not surely die¡¨: ¡§Do
the act and cast the consequences to the winds.¡¨ We have a notable instance of
this in the case of the prophet Balaam. Men with the full consciousness that
God is against them persist in opposition to Him, till they perish; persuading
themselves, from one step to another, that matters shall not turn out so badly
as God¡¦s words and God¡¦s monitor within tell them that they shall.
II. THERE ARE
OTHER CLASSES OF PERSONS, BESIDES NOTORIOUS PROFLIGATES WHO ARE CAUGHT BY THIS
DEVICE, ¡§Thou shalt not surely die.¡¨
1. God has declared, ¡§To be carnally minded is death.¡¨ To be
carnally minded is to be of the mind of the children of this world, to view
things through a worldly medium, to pass day by day without a thought beyond
this world, and as if there wore no life after this life. Of this kind of life
God has said that it is death, that those who live it shall surely die--nay,
are dying now; and by this is meant that such a life is the immortal spirit¡¦s
ruin, that it breaks up and scatters and wastes all man¡¦s best and highest
faculties. ¡§Ye shalt not surely die¡¨ is the tempter¡¦s fallacy with which he
deludes the carnally minded. He persuades them that they can give this life to
God¡¦s enemy, and yet inherit life eternal.
2. God has said, ¡§He that hath the Son hath life; but he that hath
not the Son of God hath not life¡¨--i.e., ¡§If ye have not the Son of God
ye shall surely die.¡¨ How many of us have any persuasion of the reality of this
sentence of death? How many have eared enough about it to ascertain what it is
to have the Son of God? Whosoever has not by his own personal act taken Christ
as his, has not life, and must certainly die eternally: first by the very
nature of things, for the desire for God has never been awakened in his heart,
the guilt of sin has not been removed from him, nor its power over him broken;
and then by solemn declarations of the God of truth--¡§He that believeth not the
Son shall not see life, for the wrath of God abideth on him.¡¨
III. Mysterious as
the history of our fall is, its greatest wonder is this: THAT GOD OUT OF RUIN
DROUGHT FORTH FRESH BEAUTY out of man¡¦s defeat, his victory; out of death, life
glorious and eternal. Thou shalt surely live is now the Divine proclamation to
man¡¦s world. ¡§Behold the Lamb of God, that taketh away the sin of the world.¡¨ (Dean
Alford.)
Satan¡¦s character shown by the first temptation
I. SUBTLE.
1. Tempted the woman.
2. When alone.
3. Concealed himself, and spoke through the serpent.
II. A LIAR. ¡§Ye
shall not surely die.¡¨
III. A SLANDERER.
¡§God doth know,¡¨ etc.
IV. A DECEIVER.
¡§Ye shall be as gods,¡¨ etc. (J. McConnell.)
Satan¡¦s temptations
Eve was vanquished by three crafty thrusts. Three poisoned arrows
gave the deadly wounds. The flesh was seduced to lust--the eyes to long--and
pride to covet. The forbidden fruit was exhibited first, as good for
food--next, as pleasant to the eyes--then, as desirable to make one wise. Now,
just as in the acorn, the monarch of the forest lives; as a small seed contains
the planks for mansions, ships, and mighty works--so, in the earliest
temptation there lies the embryo of sin¡¦s whole progeny.
I. THE FLESH IS
MIGHTY TO CORRUPT THE INNER MAN. Its doors are countless. Its casements are
seldom closed. Through these there is quick access to the heart. It also is our
encompassing mantle. We cannot escape its close embrace. We never move but in
its company. There is no time when it is absent. Hence its prodigious power.
II. THE EYE IS
ALSO AN INLET OF SOLICITATIONS. Eve warns again. She fixed her eyes upon the
fruit, and soon its beauty put forth fearful fascination. The attraction
strengthened. Resistance melted, as snow before the sun. The enchanting
appearance bewitched. The outward show injected sparks of longing. The fire
kindled. The bait was taken. The eye betrayed. From that day he has been
diligent to exhibit fascinating scenes, to gild externals with bewitching
beauty, and to lead through them into sin¡¦s vilest paths.
3. There is another broad road open for temptation¡¦s feet. It is the
desire to be great--the ambition to be distinguished--the lust of admiration.
The Spirit names it, ¡§The pride of life¡¨ (1 John 2:16). This net too was first
spread in Eden. The devil showed the fruit--and whispered that the taste would
enlarge the faculties--give nobler wings to intellect--communicate new stores
of knowledge. While she beheld, the poisonous thought took root, the tree is
¡§to be desired to make one wise.¡¨ But was not her intelligence enough? She knew
God. In that knowledge is the joy of joys, and life for evermore. (Dean Law.)
Lessons
1. Once yielding to the
tempter¡¦s charm gives him boldness to greater violence.
2. It is the devil¡¦s method to draw souls from doubting of God¡¦s
truth to deny it.
3. It is a strong delusion of Satan to persuade a sinner that he
shall not die.
4. It is the initial property of the tempter to be a lair, to deny
what God affirms (Genesis 3:4).
5. It is Satan¡¦s wile to deceive by urging God against God; and so
make him vain.
6. It is Satan¡¦s falsehood to persuade that God either allows man¡¦s
sin, or envies man¡¦s good and comfort.
7. The tempter dealeth in equivocations with double words and
senses.
8. The time and cause of misery set by God is made the time and
cause of good by Satan. That day¡¦s eating shall bring you good.
9. It is a strong temptation on man to persuade inlightning by
sinning.
10. In all the light pretended, Satan intends nothing but experience
of nakedness and shame.
11. Parity to God in place, not in nature, is a shrewd argument for
Satan to tempt with.
12. In such arguments the devil intends to make sinners like himself.
13. Knowledge of all states and things is a powerful engine to draw
man to sin (Genesis 3:5).
14. Experience of all evil and miseries is the mark that Satan aims
at in it. (G. Hughes, B. D.)
Is death a reality?
1. Let us first consult reason. It says, God is good, and as to die
would be painful, and to be attended with all the ills of sickness,
confinement, abstinence--as it necessarily includes the privation of accustomed
pleasures, the abandonment of gay associates--the absence of every eye to
admire, and every tongue to praise--it is not reasonable to suppose that He
would inflict it whose name is love. He is just--must the righteous be slain
with the wicked? Must the infant and the aged perish together? But what is
death? Has anyone ever seen or heard it? Can any tell where it is? Till all
these difficulties be removed, reason rebels against the assumption that we
must all die.
2. It is true, Scripture asserts ¡§It is appointed unto men once to
die,¡¨ and that ¡§Death has passed upon all men,¡¨ but is it not also said in
Scripture, ¡§Ye shall not surely die¡¨? David plainly says in Psalms 118:1-29; Psalms 17:1-15 th verse, ¡§I shall not
die,¡¨ and Habakkuk, giving extension to the opinion and including his brethren,
exclaims,¡¨ We shall not die¡¨ (Habakkuk 1:12). In what other sense are
we to receive the declaration of St. Paul, ¡§We shall not all sleep¡¨? (1 Corinthians 15:51) and does not
God Himself assure us that He has no pleasure in the death of a sinner, much
less therefore in the death of the righteous? Now, my friends, I have quoted
for you Scripture for Scripture--You may impugn my manner of doing it--you may
say I mould and mutilate it for my purpose--that I sacrifice its spirit to its
letter, and make the one contradict the other. To this I answer, whatever
contrivance my method exhibits, it is not mine--it is in use by thousands and
millions of rational beings for the settlement of every question involving the
paramount interests of their immortal souls.
3. Passing from Scripture, let us turn to the last test by which I propose
to try the validity of my assumption--general observation. Were there such a
formidable enemy as death to be encountered by all, it would be but natural to
expect to find it the subject of general conversation and the object of
universal alarm, its very name filling all faces with dismay, and occupying all
heads with devices either to evade or successfully resist it. Can there
therefore be such an enemy as death, not only in existence, but continually in
our very neighbourhood, and not a whisper regarding it issue from the lips of
its assumed victims in their most crowded assemblies, or an apprehension of its
approach blanch for an instant the cheek or interrupt the ceaseless smile of
the most sensitive among the daughters of mirth, who nightly record their
satisfaction with the joys of time, and their scepticism regarding those of
eternity? Both reason and precedent reject the supposition. Now, my friends,
let us suppose the position established, that death is only an empty name--a
bugbear to terrify the ignorant and superstitious; what do you suppose would be
its effect on yourselves? Doubtless, you would consider it expedient to erase
every serious impression which your mind had received, under the discipline of
an imaginative subject of apprehension--to shake off the trammels of a vulgar
superstition, and assert the freedom of a more enlightened judgment. How would
you proceed? Considering the world now as your inalienable possession--you
would rush freely into the intoxication of business, pleasure, or ambition.
Self would be your only idol, earth its capacious temple, and every achievable
gratification its justly due and most appropriate offering: to ensure the
admiration of your fellows would be your highest ambition, and to evade their
censure your most anxious solicitude. The All-wise and All-gracious Being who
created you and the world you inhabit, who bestowed upon you all the sources of
gratification you possessed, and the ability to enjoy them, would naturally be
disregarded. Oh, my friends, what an awful picture have I permitted my
imagination to draw! Surely it could never be realized, except on the
supposition that there was no death--no judgment--no eternity! What if I
undertake to convince you that such a supposition must prevail now? But meanwhile
the besom of a long-insulted, but long suffering God, is sweeping our land.
Wrath has gone out from the Lord, and hundreds are dying in the plague; but
where are the evidences of its recognition--of the hand from whence it issues,
or the object for which it is sent? Where is the ear, attentive to the lesson
of mortality it conveys?--where the fleeing, under the convictions it awakens,
for refuge to lay hold on the hope set before us? Where the awaking of the soul
from its slumber of ignorance and death? You have heard the fiat of
Jehovah--¡§The wages of sin is death.¡¨ To this Satan replies, addressing the
soul, as he did before the body--¡§You shall not surely die¡¨; and here again he
employs reason, Scripture,and experience, to substantiate his assertion.
I. Reason
testifies that the God with whom we have to do, is merciful, loving, and just,
but when under the dominion of Satan, it exacts as the price of this admission
the privilege of representing Him in an attitude of falsehood--as too tenderly
alive to the well-being of His creatures, to expend a thought upon what is due
to his own Divine attributes--upon the demands of His justice, holiness, and
truth. Its solution of a human difficulty is the degradation of Him who
dwelleth in light which no man can approach unto.
II. Let us now
advert to the mode by which Scripture is made to countenance a practical denial
of God¡¦s repeated admonition to the wicked--¡§thou shalt surely die.¡¨ This,
then, is two fold.
1. By taking refuge behind particular characters or occurrences
which bear a fancied analogy to ourselves and our actions, in some case under
reprehension, and from their acknowledged exemption from Divine censure,
feeling satisfied that we establish our own. The character and conduct of Him
who was ¡§holy, harmless, undefiled and separate from sinners¡¨ (Hebrews 7:26), are, strange to say, the
most usual refuge of ¡§revellers, banqueters, and such like,¡¨ from an assumption
that He indulged on particular occasions in the society of the worldly and
profane--engaging in their festivities and partaking of their cheer.
2. Another and very common mode of arguing the point with Jehovah
out of His own Scriptures, is by reminding Him of such examples of his long
suffering mercy and forbearance, as they represent to have been admitted by a
late repentance to the forgiveness of their accumulated guilt, and thence
asserting a claim to similar indulgence to be followed by a similar result.
III. The sect of
the Sadducees, as it existed in our Saviour¡¦s time, is now fully represented by
the generality of professing Christians, in their notions of that spiritual
kingdom of which Christ is the head. Still earth and its constitutions, its
laws, its maxims, and its incidents, supply to them their only conceivable
model of the things which must be hereafter; and, consequently, Satan finds a
ready basis for his falsehood, in the apparent discrepancy between the
character of God, as revealed in His providences here, and such as it is
represented in the Bible. Here His hatred of sin is but faintly delineated, and
His vengeance against the sinner by no means strikingly displayed: many who
confine their view to the results of conduct here, are ready to exclaim--¡§The
ways of the Lord are not equal,¡¨ since His chastisements do not seem
proportioned to the number or depravity of the offences committed. From this
the believers of the tempter often infer, that there is no positive law to
¡§regulate the adjudications of eternal punishment. (S. A. Walker, B. A.)
The subtlety of the first temptation, as impeaching the goodness,
justice, and holiness of God
The art of this temptation is very much the same as that which
still prevails over men in whom there is an evil heart of unbelief, leading
them to depart from the living God (Hebrews 3:12). It is by arguments of
unbelief that the tempter solicits Eve to sin.
I. Thus, in the
first instance, he insinuates his DOUBTS REGARDING THE EQUITY AND GOODNESS OF
GOD AS A BENEFACTOR, and the liberality of His gifts--¡§Yea, hath God said, ye
shall not eat of every tree of the garden?¡¨ (Genesis 3:1). Can it be? Has He really
subjected you to so unreasonable a restraint? And the insinuation takes effect.
Suspicion begins to rankle in the woman¡¦s breast.
II. Then, again,
in the second place, the tempter suggests DOUBTS REGARDING THE RIGHTEOUSNESS
AND TRUTH OF GOD AS A LAWGIVER:¡¨ ¡§Ye shall not surely die.¡¨ And for this he
seems to find the woman already more than half prepared. She has very faintly
and inadequately quoted the threat.
III. And, thirdly,
he has A PLAUSIBLE REASON TO JUSTIFY DOUBT AND UNBELIEF ON THIS POINT. It
cannot be that ye shall be so harshly dealt with, ¡§for God doth know that in
the day ye eat thereof, then your eyes shall be opened, and ye shall be as
gods, knowing good and evil¡¨ (Genesis 3:5). This, then, was the order
of the temptation: First, The goodness of God must be disbelieved; secondly,
His justice; and, lastly, His holiness. It begins with a rebellion of the will,
or the heart, against the moral attributes of God, as the Governor of His
creatures. It ends in blindness of the understanding, or the mind, as to His
natural and essential perfections as the infinite and eternal Creator. God
ceases to be recognized as good, and just, and holy. Man, at the suggestion of
Satan, would himself be as good, as just, as holy as God. (R. S. Candlish,
D. D.)
Observations
I. A LITTLE
YIELDING TO SATAN IN HIS TEMPTATIONS, INVITES AND ENCOURAGETH HIM TO A STRONGER
AND MORE VIOLENT ASSAULT. If a man yield so far as to stand in sinners¡¦
counsels, Satan will not leave till he have brought him to walk in sinner¡¦s
ways, till at last he sit down in the seat of scorners. The first reason hereof
may be taken from Satan¡¦s diligence and vigilancy, to make the best of, and pursue
to the uttermost all advantages (like Benhadad¡¦s messengers-- 1 Kings 20:23), as waters, where the
bank begins to yield, lie upon it with the greater weight, especially if we
join with his diligence his malice, which sets him on, and is never satisfied
till he have brought men to destruction (1 Peter 5:8). Secondly, it is just
with God to punish men¡¦s haltings and want of zeal with more dangerous errors
and backslidings. Let us then be careful to resist Satan strongly in his first
encounters, as we are advised (1 Peter 5:9), with resolute denials.
This resolute opposing of sinful motions--
1. Keeps our hearts free from all defilement by sin.
2. Moves God to strengthen us with a greater measure of grace, as
did St. 2 Corinthians 12:9).
3. And daunts the devil, and makes him fly from us when he is
readily opposed and resisted (James 4:7).
II. EVEN THOSE WHO
SEEM MODEST IN SIN AT THE FIRST, GROW BOLD AND SHAMELESS IN IT AT THE LAST.
1. Because use and custom makes sin so familiar unto men, that it
takes away, first the sense, and then the shame that follows it, which as they
feel not in themselves, so they fear it not from others.
2. By this means God brings all evils to light, that the committers
of them may be abhorred of all men, and His justice may be the more clearly
manifested in their deserved punishment.
III. THERE IS NO
TRUTH OF GOD SO CLEAR AND MANIFEST, WHICH SATAN AND HIS AGENTS DARE NOT TO
CONTRADICT.
1. Seeing Satan is both a liar, and the father of lies (John 8:44), so that by his own nature he
must needs be opposite to the truth.
2. Besides, it concerns him above all things to contradict
fundamental truths, upon which God¡¦s honour and man¡¦s salvation most depend,
both which Satan labours to overthrow with all his power.
3. And lastly, he well understands by experience, the corruption of
man¡¦s nature, which inclines him to embrace darkness rather than light, to
believe lies rather than to love the truth, which gives him great hope of
prevailing, even in suggesting the foulest untruths to such favourable hearers.
IV. SATAN AND HIS
AGENTS NEVER MAKE USE OF GOD¡¦S WORK BUT FOR MISCHIEF. (J. White, M. A.)
Satan¡¦s commentary
Said a quaint New England preacher: ¡§Beware of Bible commentators
who are unwilling to take God¡¦s words just as they stand. The first commentator
of that sort was the devil in the Garden of Eden. He proposed only a slight
change--just the one word ¡¥not¡¦ to be inserted--¡¥Ye shall not surely die.¡¦ The
amendment was accepted, and the world was lost.¡¨ Satan is repeating that sort
of commentary with every generation of hearers. He insists that God couldn¡¦t
have meant just what he said. To begin with, Satan induced one foolish woman to
accept his exegesis; now he has theological professors who are of his opinion
on these points; and there are multitudes of men and women who go on in the
ways of sin because they believe Satan¡¦s word, and do not believe the Word of
God.
A serpent-like trick
A clever serpent, truly, to begin using words in a double sense!
That is preeminently a serpent-like trick. Observe how the word ¡§die¡¨ is played
upon. It is used by the serpent in the sense of dropping down dead, or
violently departing out of this world; whereas the meaning, as we all know by
bitter experience, is infinitely deeper. We lose our life when we lose our
innocence; we are dead when we are guilty; we are in hell when we are in shame.
Death does not take a long time to come upon us; it comes in the very day of
our sin--¡§in the day that thou eatest thereof thou shalt surely die.¡¨ (J.
Parker, D. D.)
Dearth
A heathen exercised his genius in the formation of a goblet, in
the bottom of which he fixed a serpent, whose model he had made. Coiled for the
spring, a pair of gleaming eyes in its head, and in its open mouth fangs raised
to strike, it lay beneath the ruby wine. As Guthrie says: ¡§Be assured that a
serpent lurks at the bottom of guilt¡¦s sweetest pleasure.¡¨ (W. Adamson.)
Treachery of sin
Anthony Burgess says that sin is a Delilah, a sweet passion
tickling while it stabs. Eve saw that the tree was pleasant to the eye, and
from its fragrance likely to be good for food, a delicious morsel. Dr. Cuyler
forcibly illustrates this by reference to the Judas tree. The blossoms appear
before the leaves, and they are of a brilliant crimson. The flaming beauty of
the flowers attracts innumerable insects; and the wandering bee is drawn after
it to gather honey. But every bee which alights upon the blossom, imbibes a
fatal opiate, and drops dead from among the crimson flowers to the earth. Well
may it be said that beneath this tree the earth is strewn with the victims of
its fatal fascinations. (W. Adamson.)
Ye shall be as gods.
Observations
I. SATAN IN ALL
HIS PROMISES, GIVES MEN NO GROUND TO BUILD UPON, BUT HIS OWN BARE WORD. It is
true, that God Himself doth affirm things upon His own Word alone, and justly
may, seeing His Word is the standard of truth, and therefore the only ground of
faith: but this is a peculiar privilege to Him alone, incommunicable to any
creature, not to men who are all liars (Romans 3:4), much less to Satan, who is
the father of lies John 8:44). Indeed Satan sometimes
imitates God in this way, and offers also, and makes show, to confirm by
experiments what he suggests, as that proud men are happy because they prosper
(Malachi 3:15), by which means he prevails
much upon wicked men, to harden their hearts Ecclesiastes 8:11; Jeremiah 44:17-18). Yea, and sometimes
shakes the faith of the godly themselves, as he did David¡¦s (Psalms 73:2-3; Psalms 73:13). But therein he plays the
notable sophister.
1. In representing wicked men¡¦s prosperity so as if it were the reward
of their wickedness, whereas, it is either the blessing of God upon their
provident care and industry, in managing their affairs according to His own
decree (Proverbs 10:4; Proverbs 14:23), or for the manifesting
of His goodness to all (Matthew 5:45), and His justice in their
condemnation who abuse His mercies, and provoke Him by their sins, when He doth
them good; or for the fatting of them against the day of slaughter (Jeremiah 12:3), and raising them up on
high unto eminent places, their casting down into sudden and horrible
destruction may be the more observed (Psalms 73:18).
2. He deceives men, by making the world believe that to be their
happiness which is indeed their plague, as Solomon had found it in his own
experience (Ecclesiastes 5:13).
II. IT IS SATAN¡¦S
CUSTOM AND POLICY TO CAST SUSPICIONS OF EVIL ENDS, ON THAT WHICH HE CANNOT
BLAME OR DISCREDIT OTHERWISE. In the like manner he hath dealt with the Church
of God in all ages, and cloth unto this day. The reasons whereof may be--
1. Because evil intentions are, in true estimation, the greatest of
all evils, wherewith men can be charged.
2. Because nothing can be laid unto men¡¦s charge (especially where
their lives and actions are without offence) with so much advantage, because
things that appear not in themselves may with as much probability be affirmed
as they can be denied.
III. IT IS USUAL
WITH SATAN AND HIS AGENTS TO CHARGE UPON OTHER MEN THOSE EVILS FALSELY WHEREOF
THEMSELVES ARE TRULY GUILTY.
1. Those who have false and evil hearts of their own, are apt to
suspect that to be in other men which they find in themselves.
2. By casting suspicions upon other men, they hope in some measure
to clear themselves, as if they might in all probability be free from those
evils which they tax in other men; or at least they hope to gain thus much,
that their own evils may seem the less heinous, when other men appear to be
little better then they.
IV. DISCONTENT AT
OUR PRESENT CONDITION IS A DANGEROUS TEMPTATION OF SATAN. It is indeed directly
contrary to God¡¦s express direction (1 Timothy 6:8; Hebrews 13:5), and unto the practice of
all godly men (see the apostle¡¦s example, Philippians 4:11); and is the daughter of
pride and self-love, which makes us think ourselves worthy of much more than we
have, and is the parent--
1. Of unthankfulness to God for what we have received, which
proceeds from an undervaluing of those blessings which we enjoy.
2. Of unquietness in our hearts, when our desires are not satisfied,
as Ahab had no rest in himself, when he could not get Naboth¡¦s vineyard (1 Kings 21:3-4).
3. Of envy at and contention with our neighbours, who possess that
which we desire to enjoy, and are consequently looked on by us with an evil
eye, as standing in our way to the obtaining of that which we aim at.
4. Of unconscionable dealing, and taking up ways of dishonest gain,
that we may purchase that by any means, without which we think ourselves not
sufficiently supplied, according to our worth.
V. BLINDNESS AND
IGNORANCE IS A GREAT MISERY.
1. Ignorance abases a man to the condition of a beast.
2. Ignorance makes a man unuseful and unserviceable every way, in
all his undertakings, for only a wise man¡¦s eyes are in his head, but a fool
walks in darkness (Ecclesiastes 2:14), which we know hinders
all manner of employments.
3. Ignorance leaves a man without comfort, for it is the light that
is sweet, that is comfortable (Ecclesiastes 11:7), and the light of the
eyes rejoiceth the heart (Proverbs 15:30).
VI. IT IS GREAT
INJUSTICE IN ANY MAN, TO KEEP UNDER AND HINDER OTHERS FOR HIS OWN ADVANTAGE.
VII. IT IS FALSE
LIBERALITY TO WITHHOLD THINGS THAT ARE OF TRUE VALUE AND TO BESTOW THAT WHICH
IS OF LITTLE WORTH. Let us, upon this ground admire the infinite and
incomprehensible love of God unto man, upon whom He hath bestowed His own
beloved Son, His choicest jewel, His delight daily (Proverbs 7:30), and that from all
eternity.
VIII. MAN¡¦S LEANING
TO THE CREATURE MUST NECESSARILY UTTERLY DIVIDE HIS HEART FROM GOD. Let us
therefore in this sin consider--
1. The indignity, both in respect of God, whom we abase below His
own creatures (see Jeremiah 2:12-13), and in relation to
ourselves, when we stoop to those things, which are either far below us, or at
the best but equal to us.
2. The folly, in forsaking the fountain of living waters, and
digging cisterns that hold no water, which makes them prove fools in the event Jeremiah 17:11-13).
3. The danger of provoking God¡¦s jealousy, which no man is able to
endure.
IX. SELF-LOVE AND
SEEKING IS ONE OF SATAN¡¦S MOST DANGEROUS SNARES.
1. First, because it most easily seizeth upon man¡¦s heart, as it is
clearly manifested unto any that will take notice of men¡¦s ways, and of the
scope whereat they aim, not only men that live without God in this present
world, or without any form of godliness, whose character is to be lovers of
themselves (2 Timothy 3:2), inquiring after
nothing else, but who will show them any good (Psalms 4:6), referring all unto
themselves with the king of Babylon (Daniel 4:30).
2. Secondly, as this evil disposition easily seizeth upon us, and
possesseth us strongly, so is it of all others most injurious.
X. SATAN USUALLY
LAYETH HIS SNARES FOR MEN IN THOSE THINGS WHEREIN THEY NATURALLY TAKE MOST
DELIGHT.
1. First, because by this means he prevails upon men much more
easily, as having a help within our own breasts, to let in those temptations
wherewith he assails us.
2. And secondly, because such snares, when they have entangled us,
hold us of all others most strongly, as indeed love is strong as death (Song of Solomon 8:6).
XI. SATAN TEMPTS
US TO SIN, NOT ONLY IN OUR PLEASURES AND DELIGHTS, BUT EVEN IN OUR DUTIES TOO.
1. Because we are in such ways most secure, and therefore most
easily ensnared.
2. Satan desires most to corrupt our best endeavours, for the
greater dishonour to God and religion.
3. Because there be many easy and dangerous errors in circumstances
of duty, even where the substance of the action is warrantable in itself.
XII. THE SEARCHING
AFTER THE KNOWLEDGE OF UNNECESSARY THINGS, IS ONE OF SATAN¡¦S SNARES, AND
UNPROFITABLE TO US. Let us then learn to be wise to sobriety (as the words, Romans 12:3, may not improperly be
rendered), contenting ourselves with the knowledge--
1. Of such things as God hath revealed in His Word, which belong to
us Deuteronomy 29:29).
2. Which are most proper and useful to us, as our Saviour intimates
in His answer to St. Peter (John 21:21-22).
3. As are profitable to edification both of ourselves and others
(see Ephesians 4:29). These the apostle calls
wholesome words (1 Timothy 6:3). As for the searching
after the knowledge of future events, which God hath sealed up in His own
breast, and oppositions of sciences 1 Timothy 6:20), they must needs
occasion--
XIII. THE PROMISES
OF SATAN, OR HIS AGENTS, ARE OF SUCH THINGS AS ARE EITHER EVIL OR UNPROFITABLE.
XIV. THE SPECIAL
END THAT SATAN PERSUADES WICKED MEN TO AIM AT IS THAT THEY MAY BE AS GODS. This
was not only the high thought of the proud king of Babel (Isaiah 14:13-14), or of antichrist his
antitype (2 Thessalonians it. 4), but is the desire of every wicked man, to
have or do that which is peculiar to God Himself.
1. To excel alone, and to get themselves a name, that may be admired
and spoken of by all men, not only the builders of Babel (Genesis 11:4), and Absalom (2 Samuel 18:18), but generally all
proud men, as they are described unto us (Psalms 49:11).
2. To be independent, and to have sufficiency in their own hand, as
that fool thought himself to have (Luke 12:19), which is the desire of all
covetous persons.
3. To be commanded by none, but to be their own lords (Psalms 12:4), to follow only their own
counsel, and be guided by their own wills Jeremiah 44:16).
4. To give account to none but themselves, with those rebellious
Jews, that desire to have the Holy One of Israel cease from them (Isaiah 30:11), and Amaziah, who will not
be called to account by the prophet (2 Chronicles 25:16).
5. To refer all to themselves, and to their own glory, with proud
Nebuchadnezzar (Daniel 4:30), and to do well to
themselves (Psalm xlix. 18).
XV. IT IS SATAN¡¦S
POLICY TO DRAW MEN TO DEPEND UPON THE CREATURE, FOR THAT WHICH ONLY GOD CAN
GIVE. Let all that are wise take notice of the least motion of their hearts,
that tends that way, abhorring the very least inclination of our affections
that way, as a dangerous evil.
1. Dishonourable both to God and ourselves.
2. Uncomfortable, when our hearts cannot be assured of that which we
depend upon, as having no firm ground to support our hopes.
3. Unprofitable, when men gain nothing by such a kind of dependence,
more than they do by a dream of a great feast, who find themselves empty and
hungry when they are awake.
4. Most dangerous, by drawing us from the service of God, to the
service of the creature, upon which we have our dependence.
XVI. SELF-SEEKING
AND DEPENDENCE ON THE CREATURE ARE EVILS THAT BE INSEPARABLE. Now this comes to
pass--
1. By necessity, because man as well as all other creatures, wanting
sufficiency in himself for self-subsistence, having now in a sort departed from
God, and thereby lost his dependence upon Him, hath nothing else left him but
the creature to fly unto for his support.
2. Because God by His just judgment cannot bring upon a man a fitter
plague to avenge the dishonour done to Him, by lifting up ourselves against
Him, than by abasing us to submit to things below ourselves.
XVII. SATAN¡¦S
PREFERMENTS ARE IN TRUE ESTIMATION ABASEMENTS AND BASE SLAVERIES.
XVIII. HASTY RESOLUTIONS
PROVE COMMONLY DANGEROUS IN THE ISSUE.
1. Because in the thoughts of our heart natural motions, which are
full of error, come first to hand; upon which if we settle our resolutions, we
must needs be mistaken, and err dangerously ere we be aware.
2. Because our understanding, being weak in itself, is not able at
once to take in, and lay before it all things, upon which a well-grounded
judgment should be settled; so that we need some time to search out and lay
together all those circumstances and evidences which must guide us in all that
we take in hand.
XIX. THE NEARER
THINGS ARE TO BE ENJOYED, THE MORE STRONGLY THE HEART IS AFFECTED TOWARDS THEM.
1. Let us be careful to fix our eyes upon the present examples of
mercies or judgments upon ourselves or others, especially upon those which are
inward and spiritual, laying hold of eternal life, upon the sense of God¡¦s
present favours, as the Prophet David seems to do (Psalms 73:24), and beholding and
trembling at the very face of hell in present judgments.
2. Labour to work those experiments upon our hearts, till they
awaken faith by which only those things which are to come are made present Hebrews 11:1), so that they affect men
with joy, as if they were possessed already (1 Peter 1:8), and with like fear on
the other side.
3. Let us often recount with ourselves the shortness of this present
life. Meditation may and will show a man¡¦s life unto him but a span long, and
may make a thousand years seem unto him, as God accounts them, but as one day.
(J. White, M. A.)
A poisoned honour
If we are to credit the annals of the Russian empire, there once
existed a noble order of merit, which was greatly coveted by the princes and
noblesse. It was, however, conferred only on the peculiar favourites of the
Czar, or on the distinguished heroes of the kingdom. But another class shared
in its honour in a very questionable form. Those nobles or favourites who
either became a burden to the Czar or who stood in his way, received this
decoration only to die. The pin point was tipped with poison--and when the order
was being fastened on the breast by the imperial messenger, the flesh of the
person was ¡§accidentally¡¨ pricked. Death ensued, as next morning the individual
so highly honoured with imperial favour was found dead in bed from apoplexy.
Satan offered to confer a brilliant decoration upon Adam and Eve--¡§Ye shall be
as gods.¡¨ It was poisoned; the wages of sin is death. (W. Adamson.)
The devil¡¦s bait
He telleth her, ¡§they shall be like gods,¡¨ etc. And it is his
continued practice still with hope of higher climbing, to throw down many a man
and woman. He will tickle you with honour, with wealth, with friends, and many
gay things that you shall get by yielding to him, but whilst you so look to
mount aloft to better your state, and to enjoy promises, down shall you fall
from heaven to hell, and find a false serpent when it is too late to call again
yesterday, that is, to undo what you have done. Our mother Eve whilst she
looked to become like God, and her husband with her, she became like the devil,
and cast away her husband also; even so shall you if any vain hope, promise, or
speech tickle your heart to offend the Lord, and to undo yourself and your
friends. (Bp. Babington.)
She took of the fruit
thereof
The moral aspect of the senses
I. THAT MAN
REQUIRES A BOUNDARY FOR HIS SENSES. By prohibiting one tree, God declares that
there must be a limitation to the gratification of the senses. This is a most
important doctrine, and fearfully overlooked. But why should the senses be
restricted?
1. Because an undue influence of the senses is perilous to the
spiritual interests of men. The senses, as servants, are great blessings; as
sovereigns, they become great curses. Fleshly lusts ¡§war against the soul.¡¨
2. Because man has the power of fostering his senses to an undue influence.
Unlike the brute, his senses are linked to the faculty of imagination. By this
he can give new edge and strength to his senses. He can bring the sensual
provisions of nature into new combinations, and thereby not only strengthen old
appetites, but create new ones. Thus we find men on all hands becoming the mere
creatures of the senses--intellect and heart running into flesh. They are
carnal.
II. THAT MAN¡¦S
MORAL NATURE IS ASSAILABLE THROUGH THE SENSES. Thus Satan here assailed our
first parents, and won the day. Thus he tempted Christ in the wilderness, and
thus ever. His address is always to the passions. By sensual plays, songs,
books, and elements, he rules the world. ¡§Lust, when it is finished, bringeth
forth sin.¡¨ This fact is useful for two purposes:
1. To caution us against all institutions which aim mainly at the
gratification of the senses. We may rest assured, that Satan is in special
connection with these.
2. To caution us against making the senses the source of pleasure.
It is a proof of the goodness of God that the senses yield pleasure; but it is
a proof of depravity when man seeks his chief pleasure in them. Man should ever
attend to them rather as means of relief than as sources of pleasure. He who
uses them in this latter way, sinks bruteward.
III. THAT MAN¡¦S
NIGHEST INTERESTS NAVE BEEN RUINED BY THE SENSES. ¡§She took of the fruit.¡¨ Here
was the ruin. History teems with similar examples. Esau, the Jews in the
wilderness, and David, are striking illustrations. Men¡¦s highest interests--of
intellect--conscience--soul--and eternity--are everywhere being ruined by the
senses. (Homilist.)
Stages to ruin
In Genesis 3:1-7 are indicated the human
stages through which evil entered the world.
I.
INDETERMINATION. This afforded the tempter an opportunity of doing three
things.
1. Insinuating a doubt as to the truth of the prohibition.
2. Contradicting the sanction of the prohibition.
3. Impiously reflecting on the kindness of the prohibition.
Parleying with the tempter has ever been the ruin of man.
II. SELFISM. Two
impulses arose within her to an undue power.
1. Appetite.
2. Ambition.
III. SEDUCTIVENESS.
Eve no sooner falls, than she becomes a tempter. (Homilist.)
The fatal choice
I. THE PROCESS OF
TEMPTATION AND FALL.
1. The first step towards ruin was, and is, willingness to parley
with the tempter.
2. Desire.
3. Change of opinion regarding the expediency or morality of the
sin.
4. The overt act of sin.
II. THE TRAIN OF
CONSEQUENCES.
1. The tempted becomes at once a tempter of others.
2. Knowledge of sin works shame.
3. Knowledge of sin makes one especially afraid of God.
4. Sin brings the sentence of Divine displeasure.
III. THE
INTERVENTION OF DIVINE GRACE. (The Homiletic Review.)
Temptation and Fall of man
I. THE
CIRCUMSTANCES.
1. The instrument used for the temptation. A tree.
2. The agent in conducting the temptation. The serpent.
3. The mode by which the temptation was conducted to its issue.
II. THE MORAL
CHANCE which the success of this great temptation produced and perpetuated.
1. The nature of the change. A change of character. Depravity and
alienation from God.
2. The extent and application of this change beyond those who
submitted to it. Universal.
III. THE PENAL
INFLICTIONS which in consequence of the success of the great temptation and its
attendant moral changes have been incurred.
1. Exclusion from paradise.
2. Corporeal sorrow and toil.
3. The consignment of the body to death.
4. Exposure to future and eternal punishment.
CONCLUDING LESSONS:
1. The voluntariness of sin. Let no one for a moment suppose that
man sins by decree; he is saved by decree, but he is not lost by decree.
Besides the voluntariness of sin which is one truth which requires to be
acknowledged, another is the universality of sin. ¡§All have sinned and come
short of the glory of God.¡¨
2. But it is vastly important, that the remedy provided against the
consequences of man¡¦s fall should be at once and gratefully embraced. (James
Parsons, M. A.)
Observations
I. THINGS USUALLY
APPEAR UNTO US AS WE STAND AFFECTED TOWARDS THEM IN OUR HEARTS.
II. SIN PROCEEDS
NOT FROM THE OUTWARD OBJECT, BUT FROM THE CORRUPTION OF THE HEART WITHIN.
III. IT IS
DANGEROUS TO A MAN TO FIX HIS SENSES UPON ENTICING OBJECTS.
IV. MEN BY NATURE
ARE MORE APT TO GIVE CREDIT UNTO LIES THAN UNTO THE TRUTH OF GOD.
V. MEN ARE EASILY
DRAWN TO BELIEVE AND HOPE ANYTHING OF THAT WHICH THEY AFFECT AND DESIRE.
VI. THE TERRORS OF
WRATH TO COME CANNOT PREVAIL AGAINST STRONG AND VIOLENT AFFECTIONS TO THINGS
THAT ARE PRESENT.
VII. OUTWARD SENSE
IS AN ILL AND A DANGEROUS GUIDE.
1. Sense was never given men for a judge or counsellor to determine
and direct, but only for an informer.
2. Sense can show us nothing but the outward forms of such things as
it represents, upon which we shall never be able to lay the ground of a right
judgment: wherefore judgment according to appearance, is opposed to God¡¦s true
and infallible judgment (1 Samuel 16:7).
VIII. A MAN CANNOT
NATURALLY DESIRE ANYTHING BUT UNDER A SHOW AND APPEARANCE OF GOOD.
IX. MAN IS AN ILL
CHOOSER OF HIS OWN GOOD.
X. IT IS A GROSS
EVIL TO CHOOSE NOT WHAT IS GRANTED US, BUT WHAT WE LIKE ESPECIALLY, OUT OF
RESPECT TO OURSELVES IN PARTICULAR.
XI. LUST, ONCE
CONCEIVED, WILL AT LAST BRING FORTH ACTUAL SIN IN FULL PERFECTION. First, it
cannot be otherwise, because inward desires and affections are the ground of
all outward actions and performances, as Solomon tells us (Proverbs 4:23), which therefore must
needs follow, unless there be some impediment cast in the way, especially in
this corruption of man¡¦s nature, wherein they bear all the sway. Secondly, God
is pleased it shall be so, that men may be made known by their actions, as a
tree is known by his fruit.
XII. IT IS NOT IN
THE POWER OF SATAN HIMSELF, TO DRAW ANY MAN TO SIN WITHOUT HIS CONSENT.
XIII. THEY THAT SIN
THEMSELVES, ARE COMMONLY SEDUCERS OF OTHERS TO SIN.
XIV. ONE WHO HAS
FALLEN INTO SIN, IS OFTEN MOST DANGEROUS TO HIS NEAREST FRIENDS.
XV. IT IS THE
PROPERTY OF TRUE LOVE TO COMMUNICATE TO OTHERS WHATSOEVER ITSELF EMBRACETH AS
GOOD.
XVI. THE STRONGEST
MAN IS NOT ABLE TO STAND AGAINST SATAN, IF GOD LEAVE HIM TO HIMSELF. (J.
White, M. A.)
Temptation and Fall
Should it occur to any to ask, how it can be consistent with the
Divine wisdom and goodness to place creatures in the beginning of their life in
a condition of such exposure and peril, we must allow that the question is not
unattended with difficulty. We know it, however, to be a fact, imperfectly as
we may be able to reconcile it with the acknowledged character of God, that the
beginning or early part of every human life, and probably of the life of every
moral being, is especially fraught with temptations and dangers. The sacred
writer may have had this idea in his mind when he said, ¡§Better is the end of a
thing than the beginning thereof.¡¨ Childhood and youth are, in most cases,
seasons of temptation. The entrance on early manhood is a time of temptation.
Principles are then to be settled and habits to be formed, which will do much
toward shaping the character for all the future life. Viewed in relation to God
and religion, the first part of life is important. It is the period of moral
formation; and the principles which then gain an ascendency are likely to be
permanent. Hence the solicitude which parents feel in relation to their
children, and especially their sons, when they go from them to enter on a
course of study in a public institution, or to engage as clerks and apprentices
in the employment of others, or to begin life for themselves. The young cannot
wholly escape these trials and dangers; and they greatly resemble the
temptations through which Adam and Eve passed. They are inseparable from the
responsibilities of self-government, until a stable and well-tried character is
formed. Men are put into the world to meet its duties, and to discipline
themselves, amidst difficulties and moral hazards, for a better state. The
sooner in life they learn this truth, the better will it be for them. The plan
of God is not to shield any of us from temptation; but to teach us to pass
through it undamaged and with advantage. But it may help somewhat to reconcile
us to this part of the Divine government, if we inquire whether it is possible
for us to conceive of a better constitution? All creatures must begin to exist.
They must therefore either be as perfect as they ever can be at first, or they
must have scope to grow and to unfold themselves. Would we, any of us, choose
to be created so perfect at the beginning, as to preclude the idea of any
improvement, or even of any change? Would we be in favour of a constitution,
supposing it possible, which would permit no increase of knowledge, of virtue,
or of happiness? Would we prefer to be wholly without hope? Would we account a
dead, stagnant monotony, an unvarying sameness of existence, an improvement on
our present state? I cannot think we should any of us so elect, were the
election in our power. And yet all these ideas belong to the notion of a
creature made at the outset as perfect as he ever can be. (D. N. Sheldon.)
The husband tempted through the wife
Agrippina poisoned the Emperor Commodus with wine in a perfumed
cup; the cup being perfumed and given him by his wife, it was the less
suspected. Satan knew a temptation coming to Adam from his wife, would be more
prevailing, and would be less suspected: O bitter! Sometimes relations prove
temptations: a wife may be a snare, when she dissuades her husband from doing
his duty, or enticeth him to evil. ¡§Ahab, which did sell himself to work
wickedness, whom his wife Jezebel stirred up.¡¨ She blew the coals and made his
sin flame out the more. Satan¡¦s subtlety was in tempting Adam by his wife, he
thought she would draw him to sin. (T. Watson.)
The Fall of man
I. MAN¡¦S FALL
FROM A STATE OF INNOCENCE. Mark the steps of the transgression. She ¡§saw¡¨: she
should have turned away her eyes from beholding vanity; but she enters into
temptation by looking with pleasure on the forbidden fruit. ¡§She took¡¨: it was
her own act and deed. Satan may tempt, but he cannot force us into sin. She
¡§did eat¡¨: when first she looked, perhaps she meant not to touch, or if she
took, not to eat; but who can say, So far I will go in sin, and no further? It
is a downward road. Our only safety is to stop the first thought, the first
beginning. She ¡§gave also unto her husband with her.¡¨ No sooner was Eve a
sinner than, like the devil, she became a tempter. Adam, it seems, had joined
her now; and he listened to her persuasion, ¡§and he did eat.¡¨ And will any dare
to think the sin a small one? God had given him a plain and easy command; had
made him with a will free, a nature holy and good. His act, then, showed
unbelief in God¡¦s word, discontent with his state, aspiring pride; in a word,
it was disobedience. He sinned against the clearest light, the highest
knowledge, the greatest goodness, the dearest love. He turned aside quickly.
And will any ask, as men do now, What great harm was there?
II. THE UNHAPPY
CONSEQUENCES OF THE FALL.
1. Shame.
2. Fear.
3. Pride. Adam attempts to hide his offence from God.
4. Judgment. Sorrow, misery, death. Every sinner finds it so.
III. THE ONLY
REMEDY PROVIDED--in Jesus Christ our Saviour. God has stooped from heaven to
redeem man. (E. Blencowe, M. A.)
Sin and death
This narrative teaches us great facts regarding temptation and
sin.
I. REGARDING
TEMPTATION.
1. Temptation often comes through Satanic influence. As in the cases
of Eve, Judas, Ananias, so today Satan is busy in placing temptation before us.
How he does it we know not, but he evidently has supernatural power to instill
evil thoughts into our minds.
2. But the narrative teaches that, though there be Satanic influence
from without, there is a greater temptation from within (see James 1:14). Eve thought she should be as
God if she ate the forbidden fruit. She reasoned as do so many foolish young
people in these days who say about places of evil resort: ¡§I want to see for
myself. It isn¡¦t going to do me any harm, and I want to know about it.¡¨ And so
young men--bent on being as smart as their fellows and on knowing as much of
the world as any body, and seeing the gilded apple, fair to look upon and
promising temporal advantage, hanging in the liquor saloon, or the gambling
resort, or the house of death--pluck and eat.
II. REGARDING SIN.
1. The question at once arises--Why did God forbid the eating of the
fruit of this tree? The injunction was not arbitrary, we may be sure. The
inherent wrong we do not know, but we are certain that it was essential to the
character and destiny of man that there should be something prohibited. There
must be law: first, because some things are inherently right and others
inherently wrong; second, because without law, enjoining or forbidding,
character can neither be tested nor developed.
2. We see again from the narrative that the essence of sin consists
in unbelief. Why does God forbid this and enjoin that? Because He loves us and
knows a contrary course would do us harm. What subtle conviction justifies us
when we allow ourselves in disobedience to God¡¦s laws? Either that we know
better than God, or that God lays His commands on us from selfish and
ungenerous motives. It is hard to tell which conviction is the worse, but
probably the latter is the more common. At any rate, it is clear that all sin
originates in distrust of God. Doubting His wisdom or His truthfulness, or
above all, His love, we rush on, heedless of His warnings, to our destruction.
3. There is a lesson in this narrative regarding the propagation of
sin. No sooner did Eve eat the forbidden fruit than she offered it to Adam and
persuaded him to be a sinner also. In this she did but carry out instinctively
an inevitable law of sin. Sin is a contagious disease.
4. The penalty of sin is death. (A. P. Foster, D. D.)
The first sin
I. THE CHARACTER OF
THE FIRST SIN. The strength of the first sin was the law of God. There was no
intrinsic poison in the forbidden fruit, for God cannot produce an essentially
evil thing; the creature¡¦s disobedience gave to it its deadly power.
II. THE
DEVELOPMENT OF THE FIRST SIN. So long as the creature¡¦s love for God was
perfect, the first law remained unbroken; but even as in Elijah¡¦s days, there
arose out of the sea a vapour, not larger than a man¡¦s hand, which gathered
unto itself other clouds, until the whole heaven was covered with blackness; so
there arose in the horizon of Eden, as a little cloud, a doubt of God¡¦s love,
and behold now the sky is overcast above our heads, even with the shadow of
death. Yes, Eve began to think that her Maker had withholden from her that
which was good. She, looking upon the forbidden tree, formed an independent
judgment upon its qualities; she pronounced that it was good for food, pleasant
to the sight, and of a nature to communicate wisdom to the partaker thereof.
This was the first step in the development of her sin. Next, she desired it. It
was ¡§a tree to be desired.¡¨ There is something wonderful in the typicality of
the first sin; how distinctly do we see the shadow of that, which is now in the
world, as the lust of the flesh, the lust of the eye, and the pride of an
intellectual life. In the full and final development of sin the woman took of
the fruit and ate. The deed of wickedness followed the unholy thought; and the
ruin of the world was completed.
III. THE PROLIFIC
NATURE OF THE FIRST SIN. ¡§Gave unto her husband, and he did eat.¡¨ No sooner is
one sin truly born, or brought forth in its maturity, than it becomes the
parent of a thousand or a million of other transgressions. There is no point
which should make us dread sin more than its hydra-like multiplication. It
branches forth in every direction; it is impossible to check its rapidity of
reproduction.
IV. THE PERPETUITY
OF ITS EFFECT ON POSTERITY. (The Protoplast.)
I. THE NATURE OF
THE SIN.
1. Ingratitude.
2. Disbelief.
3. Disobedience.
The first sin
II. THE
CONSEQUENCES OF THE SIN.
1. Our first parents were not the same afterwards.
2. That one sin paved the way for other sins. For insincerity and
untruth.
3. It estranged them from God.
4. It broke up the home.
5. It shut them out of life.
III. THE REMEDY FOR
SIN. In Christ. (J. Ogle.)
Ten sins in Adam¡¦s disobedience
1. Incredulity. Our first
parents did not believe what God had spoken was truth.
2. Unthankfulness, which is the epitome of all sin. Adam¡¦s sin was committed
in the midst of paradise.
3. In Adam¡¦s sin was discontent: had he not been discontented, he
would never have sought to have altered his condition. How wide was Adam¡¦s
heart, that a whole world could not fill it.
4. Pride, in that he would be like God. But, by climbing too high,
he got a fall.
5. Disobedience. How could God endure to see His laws trampled on
before His face? This made God place a flaming sword at the end of the garden.
6. Curiosity: to meddle with that which was out of his sphere, and
did not belong to him. Adam would be prying into God¡¦s secrets, and tasting
what was forbidden.
7. Wantonness: though Adam had a choice of all the other trees, yet
his palate grew wanton, and he must have this tree. Adam had not only for
necessity, but for delight; yet his wanton palate lusted after forbidden fruit.
8. Sacrilege: the tree of knowledge was none of Adam¡¦s, yet he took
of it, and did sacrilegiously rob God of His due. Sacrilege is a double theft.
9. Murder: Adam was a public person, and all his posterity were
involved.
10. Presumption. One sin may have many sins in it. As in one volume
there may be many works bound up, so there may be many sins in one sin. The
dreadfulness of the effect: it hath corrupted men¡¦s nature. How rank is that
poison a drop whereof could poison a whole sea! And how deadly is that sin of
Adam, that could poison all mankind, and bring a curse upon them, till it be
taken away by Him who was ¡§made a curse for us.¡¨ (T. Watson.)
The first sin
I. THE GRADUAL
DEVELOPMENT OF THE FIRST SIN.
1. Creating uncertainty in the mind as to duty towards God.
2. Nourishing the hope that God is not in earnest.
3. Producing a doubt as to God¡¦s goodness and sincerity.
II. THE SOCIAL
ASPECTS OF THE FIRST SIN.
1. Contaminating.
2. Destructive to human love.
3. Bringing men morally to the same level.
4. The precursor of physical suffering.
III. THE IMMEDIATE
EFFECT OF THE FIRST SIN.
1. Burdening the soul with guilt.
2. Disturbing its peace with fear.
3. Obliterating its true conceptions of God.
IV. THE PUNISHMENT
OF THE FIRST SIN.
1. Its punishment shows that sin is foreign to our nature.
2. That sin and punishment are linked together.
3. That God is just in its punishment.
4. That God is willing to pardon sin.
5. That liberty is not without its attendant risks.
6. That knowledge without holiness is dangerous. (Homilist.)
I. THE TEST OF
OBEDIENCE WHICH GOD INSTITUTED.
1. It was just and reasonable.
2. Simple and plain.
3. Practicable and easy.
The Fall
II. THE MANNER OF
ITS VIOLATION.
1. The serpent tempted.
2. The woman transgressed.
3. She gave also to Adam, and he did eat.
III. THE MORAL EVIL
IT INVOLVED.
1. Great credulity, yet great unbelief.
2. Great discontent.
3. Great pride.
4. Great disobedience and presumption.
5. Great ingratitude.
IV. THE CALAMITOUS
RESULTS IT PRODUCED.
1. Overwhelming fear and shame.
2. Open exposure and correction.
3. The Divine displeasure and punishment.
16).
APPLICATION:
1. Learn the origin of human sin.
2. Its disastrous effects.
3. Our natural connection with it.
4. The only way of deliverance from it.
By faith in the Lord Jesus Christ, who was manifested in the flesh
to destroy the work of the devil (see Romans 5:12-17). (J. Burns, D. D.)
Man¡¦s moral conflict
I. THE GREAT
MORAL CONFLICT APPOINTED FOR MAN. In Eden and in every human history there is a
collision between appetite and conscience, between right and wrong, between
God¡¦s will and human wilfulness. Things know nothing of such oppositions. In
self-governments and to wills they are inevitable.
1. That it was waged between powers both good in themselves for the
exclusive rule and supremacy of the lower over the life.
2. It begins with a suggestion from without and from beneath.
3. We are assailed from the most unlikely quarters, and are injured
by the most unlikely instruments.
4. The danger in this case arose from a lawless desire for
knowledge,
II. THE
CONSEQUENCES OF MAN¡¦S MORAL DEFEAT. Given the fact of sin, the fact of a fatal
change in the condition and circumstances follows of necessity.
1. The harmonious and beautiful subordination of the powers of the
human constitution is destroyed.
2. Native innocence is lost.
3. Sin shuts out the light of heaven and prevents the enjoyment of
the vision of God.
4. Sin changes the face of nature to the guilty, and banishes the
spirit from the regions of Divine joy. Men in the first consciousness of guilt
dare not pray. (The Preacher¡¦s Monthly.)
Lessons from the Fall of man
I. TEMPTATION
LIES IN THE DIRECTION OF PLEASURE.
II. GUILT OPENS
MEN¡¦S EYES.
III. GUILT VAINLY
TRIES TO HIDE ITS DEFORMITY. (The Homiletic Review.)
A warning from Eve¡¦s Fall
She was thus tempted, seduced, and overthrown in paradise; and it
may well admonish us, that if that paradise could not free them from
temptation, surely our paradises here shall never do it. But even in our
princely palaces, our glittering chambers, our dainty and delicate gardens, the
devil will be chatting with us, and seeking to work our woe forever and ever if
he can. Nay, would God these painted paradises were not rather the places and
means of our woful falls than poorer places be, we giving ourselves so much to
the pleasures of them that God is forgotten, and the passage to Satan¡¦s
pleasure laid open a thousand ways. Oh, how have they fallen swimming in
pleasures, that stood most holy when they had fewer delights! Oh, how have
courts of princes robbed them of virtue, whom in country and meaner places no
devil could violate or defile! Beware we then of Satan even in our paradises,
yea, rather I say, than in poorer cots: when everything about us is bright and
brave, beware we that enemy that is black and foul. Many pleasures should
effect many desires to please the Giver, God Almighty, and no pleasures should
make me wanton, lusting and longing for unlawful things. Let Eve be remembered
where she was deceived, and I say no more, it was in paradise. (Bp.
Babington.)
A three-fold temptation
There were three things that wrought upon her.
1. The tree was good for food. A strong reason, had she been
famishing, but none when surrounded with the plenty of the rich garden. Strange
that she should have cared for it on such an account! She is in no need of
food, yet it is on this account that she covets it! She is without excuse in
her sin. It was the lust of the flesh that was at work (Ephesians 2:3; 1 John 2:16). She saw in the tree
the gratification of that lust, and in God a hinderer of it. Thus she fell.
2. It was a desire of the eyes. And had she no other objects of
beauty to gaze upon? Yes; thousands. Yet this forbidden one engrossed her, as
if it had acquired new beauty by having been prohibited. Or can she not be
satisfied with looking? Must she covet? Must she touch and taste? It is plain
that hers was no longer the natural and lawful admiration of a fair object, but
an unlawful desire to possess what she admired. It was ¡§the lust of the eye.¡¨
3. It was a tree to be desired for imparting wisdom. This was the
crowning allurement. She must have wisdom, and she must have it at all risks,
and she must have it without delay. She made haste to be wise. She would not in
faith wait for God¡¦s time and way of giving wisdom. Such was the desire (or
lust) of the mind (Ephesians 2:3). These three reasons
prevailed. She plucked the fruit, and did eat. Nay, more, she gave also to her
husband, who was with her, and he did eat. She was not content to sin alone.
Even the dearest on earth must be drawn into the same snare.
Let us mark here such lessons as the following:--
1. The danger of trifling with objects of temptation. To linger near
them; to hesitate about leaving them; to think of them as harmless--these are
the sure forerunners of a fall.
2. The three sources of temptation: the lust of the flesh, of the
eye, of the mind. Strictly speaking, they are not in themselves sinful, but in
their excess, or disorderly indulgence.
3. The swift progress of temptation. She listened, looked, took,
ate! These were the steps. All linked together, and swiftly following each
other. The beginning how small and simple; the end how terrible! (James 1:25). You begin with a look, you
end in apostasy from God. You begin with a touch, you end in woe and shame. You
begin with a thought, you end in the second death. Yet of all these steps God
protests solemnly that He is not the Author (James 1:13). It is man that is his own
ensnarer and destroyer. Even Satan cannot succeed unless seconded by man
himself.
4. The tendency of sin to propagate itself. No sooner has the
tempted one yielded than he seeks to draw others into the snare. He must drag
down his fellows with him. There seems an awful vitality about sin; a fertility
in reproduction, nay, a horrid necessity of nature for self-diffusion. It never
lies dormant. It never loses its power of propagation. Let it be the smallest
conceivable, it possesses the same terrific diffusiveness. Like the invisible
seeds that float through our atmosphere, it takes wing the moment it comes into
being, flying abroad, and striking root everywhere, and becoming the parent of
ten thousand others. (H. Bonar, D. D.)
Apostasy
I. THE TEMPTATION
BY WHICH ADAM WAS ASSAILED.
II. THE GREATNESS
OF HIS GUILT. A fearful complication.
1. Disbelief of the Creator.
2. Rebellion against the highest authority.
3. The most criminal ambition.
4. The basest and vilest ingratitude.
5. A sin against his own soul, and against all his posterity.
III. THE SCRUTINY
TO WHICH HE WAS SUBJECTED.
IV. THE SENTENCE
PRONOUNCED ON ADAM.
1. Exclusion from paradise must have been a painful evil considered
in itself.
2. But the sentence included death also. The death of the body, the
precursor, if grace prevent not, of the death of the soul. (H. Burder, M. A.)
Paradise lost; or, man¡¦s Fall
I. THE SUBTLE
TEMPTER. Changed the tree of probation into a tree of temptation.
II. THE FATAL
TRANSGRESSION. Eve hesitated, and was drawn into the tempter¡¦s net. Then sin
reproduces sin.
III. THE SAD
DISCOVERY. Innocence gone: in its place was shame. LESSONS:
1. To obey God¡¦s word, even when it contradicts our own
inclinations.
2. To be humble and patient, waiting God¡¦s time and will, as to His
¡§secret things.¡¨
3. To refuse to listen to temptation from without, and to evil lusts
in ourselves. (W. S. Smith, B. D.)
Temptation and Fall of man
Corroborative of the Mosaic account of the Fall are numerous
ancient corrupted traditions. Thus--
1. On an ancient bas-relief of the story of Prometheus and Pandora,
a man and woman are represented standing naked and disconsolate under a tree;
and a figure seated on a rock is strangling a serpent.
2. Apollo destroys the serpent Python, and is crowned with laurel.
3. Hercules--who in his infancy had destroyed a serpent--gathered
the apples of Hesperides, having killed the serpent that kept the tree.
4. Many gems, etc., represent Hercules killing a serpent entwined
about a fruit-laden tree.
I. THE FIRST TEMPTATION.
1. To be tempted, and to sin, two different things. Christ was
tempted but did not sin (Hebrews 4:15).
2. Its source--
3. Appeared thus to Eve, whose knowledge was partial. Speech used by
a serpent would have ¡§opened the eyes¡¨ of Adam, who had named the beasts
according to their nature.
4. Concealed the real death that would be introduced. Told a partial
truth: ¡§your eyes shall be opened.¡¨ Half truths are the devil¡¦s most successful
lies. Thus Tennyson says:--
¡§That
a lie, which is part a truth, is ever the blackest of lies;
That
a lie, which is all a lie, may be met, and fought with, outright;
But
a lie, which is part a truth, is a harder matter to fight.¡¨
II. THE FIRST SIN.
Apparently small, and by the thoughtless often spoken lightly of, as such. But
as all sin is a violation of principle, injures the moral sense, imperils the
soul, and dishonours God, no transgression can be truly called a little sin.
Sin is the transgression of law (1 John 3:4). This was the only sin
that could be committed, since there was but one law Romans 4:15). It was great, because the
only one possible. It contained the elements of all evil: disobedience (Romans 5:19), pride, unbelief, blindness,
ingratitude, selfishness, covetousness, etc. As from small fountains, mighty
rivers nave their beginning; so from this sin, all transgression took its rise
and character (Romans 5:12; 1 Corinthians 15:22). (J. C.
Gray.)
Adam; or, human nature
I. ADAM, OR MAN.
First, to trace this path in that world of thought and will which is within;
for, to this day, when we sin nothing else is done but what is here set forth
in the man, the woman, and the serpent. In this view the man is the
understanding, the woman the will, the serpent some animal faculty or emotion
in us--good when in subjection, but which may be a means, under the influence
of the evil spirit, to tempt the will and lead it to disobedience and
independence, and so to misery. For the will, not the understanding is that in
us which is first assailed, seduced by some lower sense or emotion, which seems
to promise more happiness. But for the will, the emotions would not be felt,
but only thought about: but they are felt: hence they are passions; for we
really suffer, though we should command, them. Only thus is man led away.
II. MAN¡¦S WAY.
From God to self and independence.
III. THE FRUIT OF
MAN¡¦S WAY.
1. A bad conscience.
2. An attempt to hide from God.
3. An attempt to clear self by throwing blame on some other one.
4. But there are other fruits of sin, more external, and having to
do with man¡¦s body and his dwelling place. The earth is cursed, and henceforth
sorrow and toil are to be man¡¦s due portion until he return to the dust whence
he was taken; a lot which seems hard, and yet is mercy; by toil to draw man out
of self, and then by death to destroy him that hath the power of death, that is
the devil.
5. One consequence of sin remains, characteristic of the lot of man
as man, namely, exclusion from paradise. Fallen man is driven out, lest as
fallen he eat and live forever. This, too, is love. Old Adam is shut out, but
the Seed can enter through the flaming sword and past the cherubim.
IV. THE REMEDY FOR
MAN. This too has stages, all of God; first a call, then a promise, then a
gift, from Him.
1. First comes a call, a voice which will be heard, to convince man
of his state, saying, ¡§Where art thou?¡¨ A voice which may sound in different
ways, but which in all is crying to draw man back again; at first only
convicting of sin, yet by this very conviction laying the foundation for man¡¦s
recovery; leading man to come to himself before it is too late, that he may
come to his Father, and from Him receive another life; and asking, though man
oft turns a deaf ear, why we are not with Him, who still loves and yearns over
us.
2. Then comes a promise, full of grace and truth, touching the
woman¡¦s Seed; a promise not to old Adam, for the old man is fallen and must pay
the penalty--no reprieve is given to the flesh: the cross which saves us is
Adam¡¦s condemnation--but a promise to the Seed or New Man, who shall be born,
in and by whom man shall regain paradise.
3. God adds a gift--¡§The Lord God made them coats of skins and
clothed them.¡¨ Again He works, for sin had broken His rest; working, as ever,
to restore blessedness; to cover not with fig-leaf screens only that part of
our nakedness which is before each of us; but to give us, upon us, in token of
our state--for the skins spoke of death, and so confessed trespass--a covering
which, while it puts us in our place as sinful creatures, yet shelters us. (A.
Jukes.)
The peril of capacity
Why did God make man capable of falling? Because God could not
have made man upon any other condition: He made the sun incapable of falling,
and all the stars incapable of falling; but the moment you pass from matter to
life you multiply your danger; increased life means increased risk. I drive a
nail into this piece of wood to hold some article until I return for it; I also
request a child to watch another article for a time. On my return I find the
nail where I put it, I also find the child where I left him, do I say to the
nail, ¡§You are very good for doing what I wanted to have done¡¨? Certainly not.
But I may say to the child, ¡§You have been good, and I thank you for doing me
this kindness.¡¨ But why not express my thanks to the nail? Simply because the
nail had no will in the matter. The child had a will, and could have foregone
his charge; and by so much as he could have broken his promise he was
honourable in keeping it. But put the case the other way. Suppose that on my
return I discovered that the child had abandoned his position; then I should
see that in passing from matter to life I pass from comparative certainty to
probable uncertainty; yet even the bad child is greater than the nail, for his
capacity of badness is also his capacity of goodness. (J. Parker, D. D.)
Man fallen
You see a beautiful capital still bearing some of the flowers and
some of the vestiges of the foliage which the sculptor¡¦s chisel had carved upon
the marble. It lies on the ground, half-buried under rank weeds and nettles,
while beside it the headless shaft of a noble column springs from its pedestal.
Would you not at once conclude that its present condition, so base and mean,
was not its original position? You say the lightning bolt must have struck it
down; or an earthquake had shaken its foundations; or some ignorant barbarian
had climbed the shaft, and with rude hand hurled it to the ground. Well, we
look at man, and arrive at a similar conclusion. (T. Guthrie, D. D.)
Original sin
A minister having preached on the doctrine of original sin, was
afterwards waited on by some persons, who stated their objections to what he
had advanced. After hearing them he said, ¡§I hope you do not deny actual sin
too?¡¨ ¡§No,¡¨ they replied. The good man expressed his satisfaction at their
acknowledgment; but, to show the absurdity of their opinions in denying a
doctrine so plainly taught in Scripture, he asked them, ¡§Did you ever see a
tree growing without a root?¡¨
Consciousness of the Fall
The degenerate plant has no consciousness of its own degradation,
nor could it, when reduced to the character of a weed or a wild flower,
recognize in the fair and delicate garden plant the type of its former self.
The tamed and domesticated animal, stunted in size, and subjugated in spirit,
could not feel any sense of humiliation when confronted with its wild brother
of the desert, fierce, strong, and free, as if discerning in that spectacle the
noble type from which itself had fallen. But it is different with a conscious
moral being, Reduce such an one ever so low, yet you cannot obliterate in his
inner nature the consciousness of falling beneath himself; you cannot blot out
from his mind the latent reminiscence of a nobler and bettor self which he
might have been, and which to have lost is guilt and wretchedness. (J.
Caird.)
The Fall
1. Temptation comes like a serpent; like the most subtle beast of
the field; like that one creature which is said to exert a fascinating
influence on its victims, fastening them with its glittering eye, stealing upon
them by its noiseless, low, and unseen approach, perplexing them by its wide
circling folds, seeming to come upon them from all sides at once, and armed not
like the other beasts with one weapon of offence--horn or hoof, or teeth--but
capable of crushing its victim with every part of its sinuous length.It lies
apparently dead for months together, but when roused it can, as the naturalist
tells us, ¡§outclimb the monkey, outswim the fish, outleap the zebra, outwrestle
the athlete, and crush the tiger.¡¨
2. Temptation succeeds at first by exciting our curiosity. It is a
wise saying that ¡§our great security against sin lies in being shocked at it.
Eve gazed and reflected when she should have fled.¡¨ The serpent created an
interest, excited her curiosity about this forbidden fruit. And as this excited
curiosity lies near the beginning of sin in the race, so does it in the
individual. I suppose if you trace back the mystery of iniquity in your own
life and seek to track it to its source, you will find it to have originated in
this craving to taste evil. No man originally meant to become the sinner he has
become. He only intended, like Eve, to taste. It was a voyage of discovery he
meant to make; he did not think to get nipped and frozen up and never more
return from the outer cold and darkness. He wished before finally giving
himself to virtue, to see the real value of the other alternative.
3. Through this craving for an enlarged experience unbelief in God¡¦s
goodness finds entrance. In the presence of forbidden pleasure we are tempted
to feel as if God were grudging us enjoyment. The very arguments of the serpent
occur to our mind. No harm will come of our indulging; the prohibition is
needless, unreasonable, and unkind; it is not based on any genuine desire for
our welfare.
4. If we know our own history we cannot be surprised to read that
one taste of evil ruined our first parents. It is so always. The one taste
alters our attitude towards God and conscience and life. It is a veritable
Circe¡¦s cup.
5. The first result of sin is shame. The form in which the knowledge
of good and evil comes to us is the knowing we are naked, the consciousness
that we are stripped of all that made us walk unabashed before God and men. The
promise of the serpent while broken in the sense is fulfilled to the ear; the
eyes of Adam and Eve were opened, and they knew that they were naked.
Self-reflection begins, and the first movement of conscience produces shame.
6. But when Adam found he was no longer fit for God¡¦s eye, God
provided a covering which might enable him again to live in His presence
without dismay. Man had exhausted his own ingenuity and resources, and
exhausted them without finding relief to his shame. If his shame was to be
effectually removed, God must do it. It is also to be remarked that the
clothing which God provided was in itself different from what man had thought
of. Adam took leaves from an inanimate, unfeeling tree; God deprived an animal
of life, that the shame of His creature might be relieved. This was the last
thing Adam would have thought of doing. To us life is cheap and death familiar,
but Adam recognized death as the punishment of sin. Death was to early man a
sign of God¡¦s anger. And he had to learn that sin could be covered not by a
bunch of leaves snatched from a bush as he passed by and that would grow again
next year, but only by pain and blood. Sin cannot be atoned for by any
mechanical action nor without expenditure of feeling. Suffering must ever
follow wrong-doing. From the first sin to the last, the track of the sinner is
marked with blood. (M. Dods, D. D.)
The allurements of the temptation
If we translate these words in a language more metaphysical, we
shall find that they include the three elements which are considered to
constitute perfection: goodness, beauty, and truth. Goodness in that which
pleases the taste, beauty in that which delights the sight, truth in that which
gives knowledge or wisdom. And remark, that in seeking this perfection the
woman obeyed an impulse which God Himself had given to her nature. Yes, it was
the eternal destination of man to love, admire, and appropriate to himself all
that is good, all that is beautiful, all that is true. It was his destination
to grow in that perfection which he already possessed by nature, but which
might be developed to infinity by his union with Him who is Goodness, Beauty,
Truth, and Sovereign Perfection. It was, therefore, in Him alone, and in the
harmony of their will with His, that our first parents were to seek perfection.
The commandment which God had given them was intended to lead them to this
perfection, by placing them in a state of dependence and responsibility. It was
designed to unite them to their Creator and to give them the consciousness of
all that is good, beautiful, and true in the moral, as well as in the visible
world, which was their habitation. But, alas! a doubt has entered into the mind
of Eve, already guilty through the admission of it; the word of her God is no
longer her light and the sole object of her confidence; she is going to seek
out of God, goodness, beauty, and truth; yea, she expects to find them in the
very object whose enjoyment has been forbidden her under pain of death, in
disobedience, and in sin! Henceforward all is changed in the objects of her
desires, because all is changed in her heart; henceforward we see in her
pursuit of a false perfection and of a false happiness, nothing but what St.
John calls, ¡§the lust of the flesh, the lust of the eye, and the pride of
life.¡¨ (L. Bonnet.)
Verse 7
The eyes of them both were opened, and they knew that they were
naked
The dawn of guilt
I.
A
CONSCIOUS LOSS OF RECTITUDE. Moral nudity (Revelation 3:17).
1. They deeply felt it.
2. They sought to conceal it.
II. AN ALARMING
DREAD OF GOD.
1. This was unnatural.
2. Irrational.
3. Fruitless. God found Adam out.
III. A MISERABLE
SUBTERFUGE FOR SIN. The transferring of our own blame to others has ever marked
the history of sin. Some plead circumstance, some their organization, and some
the conduct of others. (Homilist.)
The fruits of the temptation
I. They suffered
together. The immediate effects of their act of disobedience were of a sense of
shame--¡§the eyes of them both were opened, and they knew that they were naked¡¨
(Genesis 3:7); and a dread of
judgment--¡§Adam and his wife hid themselves,¡¨ through fear, as Adam afterwards
admits--¡§I was afraid¡¨ (Genesis 3:8; Genesis 3:10). They were ashamed, then,
and they were afraid. This was the fulfilment of the threatening--¡§Thou shalt
surely die--dying, thou shalt die.¡¨ There was present death felt, and future
death feared. And as shame and fear drive them away from God, so, when they are
brought into His presence, the same feelings still prevail, and prompt the last
desperate expedient, of deceit or guile, which marks the extent of their
subjection to bondage, the bondage of corruption. They do not deny, but they
palliate, and extenuate, their sin. The attempt to excuse their sin only proves
how helplessly they are debased by it, as the slaves of a hard master, who,
having them now at a disadvantage, through their forfeiture of the free favour
of God, presses unrelentingly upon them, and compels them to be as false and as
unscrupulous as himself. Shame, therefore, fear, and falsehood, are the bitter
fruits of sin. Guilt is felt; death is dreaded; guile is practised. The
consciousness of crime begets terror; for ¡§the wicked flee when no one
pursueth.¡¨ How degrading is the bondage of sin! How entirely does it destroy
all truth in the inward parts! The sinner, once yielding to the tempter, is at
his mercy, and having lost his hold of the truth of God, he is but too glad,
for his relief from despair, to believe and to plead the lies of the devil.
II. God, however,
has a better way. He has thoughts of love towards the guilty parents of our
race. For the sentence which He goes on to pronounce, when He has called them
before Him, is not such as they might have expected. It is not retributive, but
remedial, and in all its parts it is fitted exactly to meet their case.
1. In the first place, their complaint against the serpent is
instantly attended to. He is judged and condemned.
2. Having disposed of the serpent, the sentence proceeds, secondly,
to deal with his victims more directly, and announces both to the woman and to
the man a period of forbearance and long suffering on the part of God. Their
fear is, in so far, postponed. The woman is still to bear children, the man is
still to find food. But there are these four tokens of the doom they feared
still abiding on them:
III. And now, Satan
being put aside, who, as the father of lies, prompted guile, and death being
postponed, so as to give hope instead of fear, the sentence goes on to provide
for the removal of the shame which sin had caused: ¡§Unto Adam also and to his
wife did the Lord God make coats of skins, and clothed them¡¨ (Genesis 3:21). (R. S. Candlish, D. D.)
Observations
I. MAN CAN DISCERN
NOTHING BUT WHAT AND WHEN, AND HOW FAR GOD IS PLEASED TO DISCOVER IT UNTO HIM.
II. IT IS A GREAT
FOLLY IN MEN NOT TO FORESEE EVIL BEFORE IT BE TOO LATE TO HELP IT. Wise men
beforehand see a plague and prevent it Proverbs 22:3), and hearken for time to
come (Isaiah 42:23), and indeed for this
special end was wisdom given, that men having their eyes in their head
(Ecclesiastes it. 14) they might foresee both good and evil to come, that they
might lay hold on the one while it may be had, and avoid and prevent the other
before it comes. As for after-wisdom, it is of no use but to increase our
misery, by looking back upon our misery when it is too late to help it.
III. SATAN NEVER
DISCOVERS ANYTHING UNTO US, BUT TO DO MISCHIEF. Thus he shows us the baits of
sin to allure us; as he did to our Saviour Christ the glory of all the kingdoms
of the earth, to entice Him to fall down and worship him (Matthew 4:8). Thus he discovers the means
of affecting what our inordinate lusts move us unto, to encourage us to sin, as
by Jonadab he showed Ammon the means how he might satisfy his lust upon his
sister Tamar (2 Samuel 13:5), and by Jezebel to
Ahab the means of getting Naboth¡¦s vineyard (1 Kings 21:7), and if he shows the
foulness of sin, after it is acted, it is to drive men, if possibly he can,
into despair, when the case is desperate.
IV. EVEN THOSE
WHICH DISCOVER NOT BEFOREHAND THE EVILS WHICH THE ERRORS OF THEIR WAYS LEAD
THEM INTO, YET THEY SHALL SEE IN THE END, AND FEEL TOO THE MISERY INTO WHICH
THEY BRING THEM.
V. SIN IS ABLE TO
MAKE THE MOST EXCELLENT AND GLORIOUS OF GOD¡¦S CREATURES VILE AND SHAMEFUL.
1. It defaces the image of God in them, which especially consists in
righteousness (Ephesians 4:24), which sin perverts (Job 33:27).
2. It separates a man from God (as all sin doth, Isaiah 59:2) who is our Isaiah 60:19; Isaiah 28:5).
3. It disorders all the faculties of the soul, and parts of the
body, and consequently all the motions and actions that flow from them, and
subjects us to our own base lusts and vile affections, to do things that are not
comely (Romans 1:4; Romans 1:26; Romans 1:28).
VI. MEN ARE MORE
APT TO BE SENSIBLE OF, AND TO BE MORE AFFECTED WITH THE OUTWARD EVILS THAT SIN
BRINGS UPON THEM, THAN WITH THE SIN THAT CAUSETH THEM.
VII. GARMENTS ARE
BUT THE COVERS OF OUR SHAME.
1. The first occasion of the use of clothing was to cover our shame.
2. The materials of it are things much baser than ourselves, in just
estimation.
3. The apparel at the least doth but grace the body, but adorns not
the soul at all, which is the only part wherein man is truly honourable.
4. And the outward person they commend also, only to men of vain
minds, but to no wise or sober man.
5. And withal, do more discover the vanity of our minds than they
cover the shame of our bodies.
VIII. MOST OF OUR
NECESSITIES ARE BROUGHT UPON US BY SIN.
IX. WHEN MEN ARE
ONCE FALLEN OFF FROM GOD, THEIR NATURE THEREBY CORRUPTED, CARRIES THEM STRONGLY
FORWARDS TO SEEK HELP FROM THE CREATURE.
1. They Ere wholly carnal and sensual in their dispositions, and
therefore easily carried after sensual and carnal things.
2. They cannot but be enemies to God, from whom they are driven away
by the guiltiness of their own consciences, as having no cause to depend on Him
whose yoke they have cast off, and therefore have ground to expect no help from
Him, to whom they resolve to do no service.
3. And they are by the just judgment of God delivered over to abase
themselves to vile things far below them.. selves, because they have not
advanced God, nor glorified Him as God, as they ought.
X. SIN BESETS MEN
AND MAKES THEM FOOLS.
XI. ALL THE CARE
THAT MEN TAKE, IS USUALLY RATHER TO HIDE THEIR SIN THAN TO TAKE IT AWAY.
XII. ALL SATAN¡¦S
FAIR PROMISE, PROVE IN THE EVENT NOTHING ELSE BUT LIES AND MERE DELUSIONS. (J.
White, M. A.)
Sin known by its fruit
The real nature of sin, its disgrace and misery and ruin, are
never fully known till it has been committed. The tempter veils it in a false
and delusive garb, which can never be entirely stripped off but by actual
experience. As a matter of assurance, Adam and Eve knew beforehand the miserable
consequences of their breach of the Divine command: ¡§In the day that thou
eatest thereof, thou shalt surely die.¡¨ They could, therefore, have no possible
reason to doubt on this point; the terrible result lay open before them;
perhaps revealed in many more particulars than are recorded, for the history of
this eventful period is exceedingly short; yet still nothing was known, or
could be known, of the awful reality, till it was felt in the stricken heart,
till the accursed step had been taken, and the wretched working stood confessed
in all the blight and agony. And in similar ways he continues to deceive
mankind: every temptation to evil is an instrument in his hand, promising by
its appearance, or else in our imagination, some pleasure or some gain: this is
the whisper of the same great adversary of souls, this a reflection of his
deceitful image. Let us now seek, in the spirit of humility, to learn and apply
the moral lesson of the text; which teaches us the direful consequences of sin,
the evils with which it makes us acquainted, as the foretaste and assurance of
the dreadful end to which it infallibly leads. It was not till the commission
of their sin, but it was instantly after, that the eyes of our parents were
opened; that the evils of guilt and disobedience flashed upon them in all their
terribleness and extent. Their conscience was immediately smitten: new thoughts
entered their minds, new and painful feelings arose instantly in their bosom:
there was in them a sense of disgrace and degradation; love and confidence were
gone, and shame had taken possession, and fear and trembling. We must all have
felt, on manifold occasions, the sudden and painful effects of sin; the sharp
convictions, the uneasiness and wretchedness, and not seldom the injury thereby
inflicted upon us; the disgrace attending it when brought to light; our altered
position in the esteem of men, nay, even in our own esteem. How often has the
fairest character been blasted by only one transgression! and the humbled
offender suddenly brought to perceive the truth of all the denunciations and
threatenings against sin; what would he not give to retrace that one step, to
recall that one word, to undo that one miserable deed? How sad and complete was
his folly! How could he have been thus deceived and betrayed? What shame, what
indignation, what grief, what abasement, what violent self-accusation, yea,
what astonishment is raised within him! That he, a man of reason, a man of
faith, a man of religious profession, one of the people of God, should have
flung such discredit upon the whole cause, should have so sinned against the
majesty and holiness, the goodness and long suffering of the Lord; should have
admitted such corruption into that body which Christ has redeemed, which was
made one with Christ, should thus have disordered and dishonoured and
endangered his soul. I say, how many a servant of God has been distressed by
such feelings and sentiments; sometimes hurried into wretchedness, lowered to
the dust! I speak not of the hardened and abandoned sinner: of those whose
consciences are, as the apostle describes it, ¡§seared with a hot iron¡¨: when
the mind and affections have grown long familiar with vice and iniquity, and
have become inured to its effects, we must expect the feeling to be blunted,
the moral eye to be judicially closed: the Spirit of God, which keeps alive the
conscience, withdraws from the bosom of the determined offender, leaves it
ordinarily incapable of emotion: I say ordinarily, because there are seasons,
when even the vilest transgressors are suddenly roused and awakened to a sense
of guilt and ruin; led, like the prodigal, to look back upon the happiness they
have lost; and mourn, after a godly sort, over their evil and perishing
condition. But this is a conviction not to be trusted to, often appearing too
late: bringing disturbance and distress, but no comfort, no living hope of
salvation. How blessed are they, whose conscience is quickly moved and opened
to the perception of evil: there is a hope of their speedy recovery; no one,
who is truly alive to the wretchedness of sin, can be content to abide in it:
it is every way hateful and distressful, as well as dangerous, to the soul that
is humbled under a sense of it: and the consciousness and sorrow and vexation
of spirit frequently, as in the case of our first parents, follow the offence
in rapid succession, and the heart is overwhelmed. (J. Slade, M. A.)
Sad results of the Fall
The Fall of man was most disastrous in its results to our entire
being. ¡§In the day that thou eatest thereof thou shalt surely die,¡¨ was no idle
threat; for Adam did die the moment that he transgressed the command--he died
the great spiritual death by which all his spiritual powers became then and
evermore, until God should restore them, absolutely dead. I said all the
spiritual powers, and if I divide them after the analogy of the senses of the
body, my meaning will be still more clear. Through the Fall, the spiritual
taste of man became perverted, so that he puts bitter for sweet and sweet for
bitter; he chooses the poison of hell and loathes the bread of heaven; he licks
the dust of the serpent and rejects the food of angels. The spiritual hearing
became grievously injured, for man naturally no longer hears God¡¦s Word, but
stops his ears at his Maker¡¦s voice. Let the gospel minister charm never so
wisely, yet is the unconverted soul like the deaf adder, which hears not the
charmer¡¦s voice. The spiritual feeling, by virtue of our depravity, is
fearfully deadened. That which would once have filled the man with alarm and
terror no longer excites emotion. Whether the thunders of Sinai or the turtle
notes of Calvary claim his attention, man is resolutely deaf to both. Even the
spiritual smell with which man should discern between that which is pure and
holy and that which is unsavoury to the Most High has become defiled, and now
man¡¦s spiritual nostril, while unrenewed, derives no enjoyment from the sweet
savour which is in Jesus Christ, but seeks after the putrid joys of sin. As
with other senses, so is it with man¡¦s sight. He is so spiritually blind, that
things most plain and clear he cannot and will not see. The understanding,
which is the soul¡¦s eye, is covered with scales of ignorance, and when these
are removed by the finger of instruction, the visual orb is still so affected
that it only sees men as trees walking. Our condition is thus most terrible,
but at the same time it affords ample room for a display of the splendours of
Divine grace. Dear friends, we are naturally so entirely ruined, that if saved
the whole work must be of God, and the whole glory must crown the head of the
Triune Jehovah. (C. H.Spurgeon.)
The effects of the Fall
I. The effects of
the Fall may be arranged under three divisions: the loss of God¡¦s special
gifts; the corruption of man¡¦s own nature; and his new position of guiltiness
in the sight of God. And for our present purpose it will be most convenient to
consider these now under two heads--the internal, which will cover the first
and second; and the external, which corresponds to the third.
1. Viewed internally then, the effects of the Fall must be regarded
as two fold. The one was negative--the immediate loss of that original
righteousness which we have learnt to connect immediately with God¡¦s
supernatural gift of grace. The other was positive--the wound, which struck
instantly to the very heart of man¡¦s nature, carried poison along with it,
which tainted all that nature with immediate corruption. The will had rebelled,
therefore the channel of God¡¦s grace was closed. So much was negative. But
within that cast off and isolated will there lurked a prolific power of fatal
mischief, which immediately burst forth into positive evil. Hence sprung at
once that ¡§concupiscence and lust¡¨ which ¡§hath of itself the nature of sin¡¨; hence
¡§the flesh¡¨ learnt immediately to lust against ¡§the spirit¡¨; hence came ¡§the
sin¡¨ that reigns in our mortal bodies; hence that other ¡§law in our members,¡¨
which wars against the law of our minds.
2. But all this evil was man¡¦s own work. It was man himself who
closed the door of grace. It was man himself who severed his will from his only
safeguard, by withdrawing it from dependence upon God. It was man himself who
thus introduced rebellion into his nature, who caused this outburst of trouble
and confusion in his heart. We must look to another quarter for the penalty
which God imposed. And this is the external aspect, which, as I have said,
demands a separate consideration. Man no sooner fell than he recognized the
immediate certainty of punishment, and fruitlessly strove to conceal himself
from the vengeance of his offended Creator. So weak and worthless was his
new-found knowledge. It told him how he might hide his shame on earth; it could
not aid him when he wished to escape the wrath of God. God¡¦s sentence may be
briefly said to involve three different judgments; the first to toil and
sorrow; the second to exile; and the third, which completes them, to death.
II. Let us pass
then to that closing portion of our subject--the extension of the sin of Adam
to ourselves, in connection with the doctrine of the Atonement of our Lord. (Archdeacon
Hannah.)
Lessons
1. Yielding to Satan and
suffering in evil are the twins of the same day.
2. Man and woman are equal in vengeance as well as sin.
3. Sin blinds to good, but opens mind and sight to experience evil.
4. Sin makes men very knowing in misery; wise to see their fall from
heaven to hell.
5. Sin strips stark naked of spiritual and bodily good, and makes
sensible of nothing but shame.
6. Sin is ashamed of itself, and seeks a covering.
7. Sin is very foolish in patching a veil or covering to hide from
God--Leaves (Genesis 3:7).
8. The voice of God pursueth sinners after guilt; sometimes inward
and outward.
9. God hath His fit time to visit sinners.
10. God walks sometimes in wind and storms to find out the guilty.
11. Conscience hears and trembles at God¡¦s voice pursuing.
12. The face of the Lord God, which is life to His, is terrible to
the guilty.
13. Sin persuades souls as if it were possible to hide from God.
14. All carnal shifts will sin make to shun God¡¦s sight; if leaves do
not, then trees must closet them (Genesis 3:8). (G. Hughes, B. D.)
Opened eyes
What an opening of the eyes was this, my brethren! What
disclosures followed! How much is contained in these few words, ¡§The eyes of
them both were opened¡¨! Various are the circumstances under which men may open
their eyes. After a dark, dreary, stormy night, the eyes may be opened to
behold the dawn of a fine day, and the heart may be gladdened by the bright
rays of the sun gilding the chambers of the east and restoring warmth and
comfort to all around. After a night of pain and weariness on a bed of
sickness, the eyes of the sufferer from a gentle slumber may be opened to a
sense of relief at the return of light with respite from suffering. After a
tedious and dangerous sea voyage, the eyes may be opened some morning to behold
with joy the desired port at hand. Under these and a thousand such-like
circumstances the eyes of a man may be opened with emotions of various kinds;
but no case that we can imagine can be a parallel with the one now before
us--even the condition of Adam and Eve in the garden of Eden, immediately after
their fatal disobedience, when, yielding to the wiles of Satan, they ate of the
forbidden fruit, and proved the truth of the Divine warning and declaration.
The eyes of them both were opened to see the snare which had been artfully
spread for them, and in which they had been caught; and what did they see? They
saw misery before them; horror and dismay attended the sight, and their
discovery was accompanied with the most galling bitterness. For all men are
naturally more ashamed of being detected in sin than of committing it; and more
desirous of keeping up a good opinion of themselves than of obtaining pardon
from God, though they can hide nothing from Him, and can neither elude His
justice nor recover His favour by any device or contrivance of their own. What
a discovery must Adam and Eve have made when their eyes were opened! How
appalling the conviction of their condition! They were fallen, degraded
creatures; no longer holy, pure, innocent, perfect, but unholy, defiled,
guilty, depraved. They recognized sin in themselves, they felt it: and although
they vainly attempted to excuse it, yet they denied it not. They were fallen
beings; guilt lay upon them, the anger of God pressed hard on them; their
expectations were disappointed; instead of delicious enjoyment, they had
bitterness to reward their pains; and although natural death did not instantly
take place, the prospect of it was set before them, hung over them in suspense,
and spiritual death was theirs. In this sad state we are all born, children of
wrath, slaves of Satan, enemies to God, and by nature we are not sensible of
it. Adam and Eve felt their change instantly; they had known innocence and
happiness; they perceived at once the difference occasioned by guilt and
misery. But we by nature are not sensible of our guilt and danger; our eyes are
not open to behold our wretchedness: and hence we are not disposed to flee to
that Refuge promised to Adam, and fulfilled and set before us in Christ Jesus.
Like the church of the Laodiceans, we are disposed to say, ¡§I am rich, and
increased with goods, and have need of nothing.¡¨ Our eyes must be opened to a
sense of our danger and guilt; we must see spiritual things in a spiritual
light; and then we shall not only see our guilt and danger, but the mercy,
goodness, and love of God in stretching out an arm of salvation, and raising up
a Saviour in the person of Jesus Christ. Having drawn your attention to man¡¦s
wretchedness, and the cause of it, I must now invite you to consider the remedy
provided for it, and freely set before us in the gospel. This St. Paul sets
forth very forcibly (Romans 5:1-21): ¡§Wherefore, as by one man
sin entered into the world, and death by sin; and so death passed upon all men,
for that all have sinned¡¨; ¡§therefore, as by the offence of one judgment came
upon all men to condemnation, even so by the righteousness of One the free gift
came upon all men unto justification of life. For as by one man¡¦s disobedience
many were made sinners, so by the obedience of One shall many be made
righteous. Moreover, the law entered, that the offence might abound. But where
sin abounded, grace did much more abound; that as sin hath reigned unto death,
even so might grace reign through righteousness unto eternal life by Jesus
Christ our Lord.¡¨ The ¡§Son of God was manifested that He might destroy the
works of the devil.¡¨ (T. R. Redwar.)
The covering of fig leaves
This one act, this one feeling, was, above all things, expressive
of the fall of the whole condition of man as he now is; it is the sense of
something within which we wish to hide. For it has been said that there is no
man who would not rather die than that all which he knows of himself should be
known to the world. It is the want of a covering which we so deeply and
thoroughly feel. Our souls must needs dwell apart, isolated in this their own
consciousness of ill. So that when we turn for sympathy to each other, yet
language conceals as much as it expresses; and when we turn to God, our prayers
immediately take the form of confession, though it be but to confess what we
know that He knows; yet it is expressive of a burden which we feel, and which
we most of all wish to get rid of; and in turning to Him our feeling is, ¡§Thou
art a place to hide me in¡¨: ¡§Thou shalt hide me by Thine own Presence.¡¨ ¡§Hide
me,¡¨--but from what? Not from other men only, but from ourselves. And what are
the pursuits of busy life, but to hide from ourselves this our internal want
and shame? ¡§Thou sayest I am rich, and knowest not that thou art miserable, and
blind, and naked.¡¨ And what is the great dread of death? It is chiefly
connected with this divesting and stripping off of all disguises, and going
naked into the land of spirits. ¡§For in this, our earthly house, we groan,
earnestly desiring to be clothed upon¡¨; ¡§if so be that being clothed we shall
not be found naked. For we that are in this tabernacle do groan, being
burdened.¡¨ Hence the glory of the redeemed is to be ¡§clothed¡¨--to be ¡§clothed
in white raiment before the throne,¡¨ and to ¡§walk with Christ in white.¡¨ The
law of nature has become hallowed into the law of grace. ¡§Blessed is he that
watcheth and keepeth his garments, lest he walk naked.¡¨ Our great care is that
we be not ¡§found naked.¡¨ The judgment and condemnation is, ¡§Thy nakedness shall
be uncovered.¡¨ Further, another expression here in the text is remarkable and
emphatic--¡§made for themselves¡¨; ¡§made for themselves,¡¨ in distinction from the
covering of God. It is fruitless, and worse, to strive to hide ourselves from
ourselves and God. ¡§Woe unto him, saith the Lord, that cover with a covering,
but not of My spirit.¡¨ It is in this our great want He has visited us: ¡§When
thou wast under the fig tree I saw thee¡¨; under the sense of sin I succoured
thee, and ¡§thou shalt see greater things than these.¡¨ His comings to us are
called Epiphanies and Manifestations, as dissipating all vain disguises of the
soul. It is said, ¡§He will destroy the face of the covering east over all
people, and the veil that is spread over all nations.¡¨ He unclothes us, that we
may be clothed upon by Himself, ¡§that mortality might be swallowed up of life.¡¨
(I. Williams, B. D.)
The terrible disease introduced by the Fall
Sin had, like a snake from hell, crossed over and darkened human
nature. A disease had appeared on earth of the most frightful and inveterate
kind, moral in its nature, destined to be universal in its prevalence, deep
seated in its roots, varied in its aspects, hereditary in its descent, defying
all cures save one, and issuing where that one cure was not sought for or
applied--in everlasting death.
1. The disease was a moral disease. This grand disease of sin
combines all the evil qualities of bodily distempers in a figurative yet real
form--the continual fretting heat of fever, the loathsomeness of smallpox, the
fierce torments of inflammation, and the lingering decay of consumption, and
infects with something akin to these diseases, not the material, but the
immaterial part, and turns not the body but the soul into such a mass of malady
that from the ¡§crown of the head to the sole of the foot there is no soundness
in us; nothing but wounds and bruises and putrefying sores.¡¨
2. Again, the disease introduced by the sin of Adam is universal in
its ravages. It has infected not only all Adam¡¦s sons and daughters, but all of
them in almost every moment of their existence. Their very dreams are infected
with this distemper. The boa constrictor binds only the outer part of the body
of its victim, although he binds it all; but the serpent of sin has seized on
and knitted together individual man--body, soul, and spirit--and even
collective man, into a knot of selfish, malignant, mortal distemperatures. The entire
being is encrusted with this leprosy.
3. Again, the disease introduced by man¡¦s first disobedience is deep
seated in its roots. It is in the very centre of the system, and infects all
the springs of life. It makes us cold, and dead, and languid, in the pursuit of
the things that are good. It, in fine, pollutes the fountain of the heart, and
turns it into a ¡§cistern for foul toads,¡¨ instead of being a sweet and
salubrious source of living waters.
4. Again, this disease is a hereditary disease. It is within us as
early as existence; it descends from parent to child more faithfully than the
family features, or disposition, or intellect. As the tree in the seed, so lies
the future iniquity of the man in the child, and in this sense ¡§the boy is
father of the man.¡¨ And even as letters are sometimes traced in milk on white
paper, and are only legible when placed before the fire, so the evil principles
in man¡¦s heart are often not disclosed till they are exposed to the flame of
temptation, and then they come forth in black prominency and terrible
distinctness.
5. Again, this is a disease which assumes various forms and aspects.
Its varieties are as numerous as the varieties of man and of sinner. Each
particular sin is a new species of this disorder. It has one aspect in the
ambitious man who sacrifices millions in his thirst for renown. It has another
in the petty tyrant of a village or factory. It has one aspect in the openly
profane, and another in the hypocrite and secret sinner.
6. Again, this is a disease which defies all human means of cure.
Many attempts, indeed, have been made to check its ravages and abate its power.
Empires innumerable have stood up, each with his several nostrum in his hand as
an infallible remedy for the evil; all differing from each other as to the
nature of the grand specific, but all agreeing in this, that they offer a cure
apart from the help of God. When we think of the enormous number of remedies
which have been proposed, and are still being proposed, to effect the cure of the
world, we seem standing in an immense laboratory, where, however, there are
more labels than medicines; where even the medicines are, in general, exploded
or powerless, and where we miss the true and sovereign remedy, the ¡§Balm of
Gilead.¡¨ Yes, that bloody Balm, and balmy Blood, as it was in the beginning,
two thousand years ago, is still the one thing that can effectually mitigate
the evil of the disease of sin, as well as the only remedy that has the
authoritative stamp of God.
7. We remark, again, that this disease, if not cured, will terminate
in everlasting death and destruction from the presence of the Lord. And what a
termination this must be! If men are at all moved by regarding this world as a
vast bed of disease, they must surely be moved immensely more when they look to
the next as a vast bed of death. (G. Gilfillan.)
Open eyes
Some time ago passengers in the streets of Paris were attracted to
the figure of a woman on the parapet of a roof in that city. She had fallen
asleep in the afternoon, and under the influence of somnambulism had stepped
out of an open window on to the edge of the house. There she was walking to and
fro to the horror of the gazers below, who expected every moment to witness a
false step and terrible fall. They dared not shout, lest by awakening her
inopportunely they should be only hastening on the inevitable calamity. But
this came soon enough; for moving, as somnambulists do, with eyes open, the
reflection of a lamp lit in an opposite window by an artisan engaged in some mechanical
operation, all unconscious of what was going on outside, aroused her from
sleep. The moment her eyes were opened to discover the perilous position in
which she had placed herself, she tottered, fell, and was dashed below. Such is
the sleep of sin; it places the soul on the precipice of peril, and when the
spell is broken it leaves the sinner to fall headlong into the gulf of woe. (W.
Adamson.)
Men covering their sins with specious pretences reproved
As when Adam had tasted of the forbidden fruit, he espied his own
nakedness, poverty, and how that he was miserably fallen, for remedy whereof he
went about to hide it with fig leaves, and so shroud himself amongst the trees
of the garden, so it is that too, too many of Adam¡¦s sons now living go about to
cloak their sins with the fig leaves of their foolish inventions, and to hide
their treacherous designs in the thicket of their wicked imaginations, covering
their vices with the cloak of virtue. And hence it comes to pass that murder is
accounted manhood; pride looked on as decency; covetousness as frugality;
drunkenness as good fellowship, etc. (J. Spencer.)
Opened eyes
Wonderful in its depth of meaning is this expression, ¡§the eyes of
them both were opened¡¨! They saw before; no new organs of vision were created;
yet they saw what they had never seen, as we ourselves have done. Temptation
blinds us, guilt opens our eyes; temptation is night, guilt is morning. In
guilt we see ourselves, we see our hideousness, we see our baseness: we see
hell! ¡§Their eyes were opened,¡¨ and they saw that their character was gone! You
can throw away a character in one act, as you throw away a stone. Can you go
after it and recover it? Never! You may get something back by penitence and
strife, but not the holy thing exactly as it was. A stone that is thrown along
the road you may recover, but a stone thrown at night time into the sea who can
get back again! (J. Parker, D. D.)
Clothes
¡§They sewed fig leaves together and made themselves aprons.¡¨ And
this we have been doing ever since! We try to replace nature by art. When we
have lost the garment sent from heaven we try to replace it with one woven from
earth. But our deformity shows through the finest robe! The robe may be ample,
brilliant, luxurious, but the cripple shows through its gorgeous folds. Ever
since this fig-leaf sewing, life has become a question of clothes. (J.
Parker, D. D.)
A sense of shame is not natural to man
A sense of shame either in regard to soul or body is not natural.
It does not belong to the unfallen. It is the fruit of sin. The sinner¡¦s first
feeling is, ¡§I am not fit for God, or man, or angels to look upon.¡¨ Hence the
essence of confession is, being ashamed of ourselves. We are made to feel two
things; first, a sense of condemnation; and secondly, a sense of shame; we are
unfit to receive God¡¦s favour, and unfit to appear in His presence. Hence Job
said, ¡§I am vile¡¨; and hence Ezra said, ¡§I am ashamed, and blush to lift up my
face to Thee, my God¡¨ (Ezra 9:6). Hence also Jeremiah describes
the stout-hearted Jews, ¡§They were not at all ashamed, neither could they
blush¡¨ Jeremiah 6:15). Hence Solomon¡¦s reference
to the ¡§impudent face¡¨ of the strange woman (Proverbs 7:13), and Jeremiah¡¦s
description of Israel, ¡§Thou hadst a whore¡¦s forehead, thou refusest to be
ashamed¡¨ Jeremiah 3:3). It was the shame of our
sin that Christ bore upon the cross; and therefore it is said of Him that He
¡§despised the shame.¡¨ It was laid upon Him, and He shrank not from it. He felt
it, yet He hid not His face from it. He was the well-beloved of the Father, yet
He hung upon the tree as one unfit for God to look upon; fit only to be cast
out from His presence. He took our place of shame that we might be permitted to
take His place of honour. In giving credit to God¡¦s record concerning Him we
are identified with Him as our representative; our shame passes over to Him,
and His glory becomes ours forever. It was this sense of shame that led Adam
and Eve to have recourse to fig leaves for a covering. What is it but this same
consciousness of shame that leads men to resort to ornaments? These are
intended by them to compensate for the shame or the deformity under which men
are lying. They feel that shame belongs to them; nay, confusion of face. They
feel that they are not now ¡§perfect in beauty,¡¨ as once they were. Hence they
resort to ornament in order to make up for this. They deck themselves with
jewels that their deformity may be turned into beauty. But there is danger
here--danger against which the apostle warns us, specially the female sex (1 Peter 3:3-4). There is nothing,
indeed, innately sinful in the gold, or the silver, or the gems which have been
wrought by the skill of men into such forms of brightness. But in our present
state they do not suit us. They are unmeet for sinners. They speak of pride,
and they also minister to pride. They are for the kingdom, not for the desert.
They are for the city of the glorified, not for the tent of the stranger. They
will come in due time, and they will be brilliant enough to compensate for the
shame of earth. But we cannot be trusted with them now. (H. Bonar, D. D.)
Verse 8
They heard the voice of the Lord God
God¡¦s voice in nature
Whether their ears as well as their hearts heard God¡¦s voice does
not much matter.
It would have mattered if their ears and not their hearts had heard. They
doubtless often heard Him in the evening hour--the twilight which all the
faiths of all cultivated nations have chosen as their special season of
devotion. When they heard, and when men now hear God¡¦s voice in garden, meadow,
wood, of what does it tell?
I. OF GOD¡¦S
PRESENCE. Nature is a kingdom, in which the King resides as well as reigns: a
house in which the Father dwells as well as which He supports.
II. OF GOD¡¦S POWER
AND WISDOM.
III. OF GOD¡¦S
BOUNTY AND LOVE. Profusion of life.
IV. OF MAN¡¦S
MORTALITY. Nature is a sepulchre as well as a shrine.
V. OF MAN¡¦S
RETRIBUTION FOR BROKEN LAW. (Urijah R. Thomas.)
Observations
I. IF MEN WILL
NOT DRAW NEAR UNTO GOD, YET HE WILL FIND THEM OUT IN THEIR SINS, AND BRING THEM
INTO JUDGMENT BEFORE HIM. Let all those that have sinned come and prepare to
meet their God (Amos 4:12), who can neither be blinded
not escaped, nor resisted, that they may take hold of His strength to make
peace with Him, considering--
1. That it is more credit to come in voluntarily than to be drawn in
by force.
2. A readier way to obtain pardon, as Benhadad¡¦s lords found by
experience (1 Kings 20:32), and David much more
in submitting unto Psalms 32:5).
3. If we come not in voluntarily, God will bring us in by force,
which will be worse for us every way.
II. GOD, WHO HATH
ALL THE WRONG WHEN HE IS PROVOKED BY OUR SINS, IS THE FIRST THAT SEEKS TO MAKE
PEACE WITH US.
1. He allures us by His mercies, as He promised to deal with His
people Hosea 2:14-15).
2. By the inward and secret persuasions of His Spirit, in giving
them hearts to return (Zechariah 12:12).
3. By the effectual ministry of the gospel, wherein He doth not only
offer unto us, but persuade and beseech us to embrace those terms of peace
which He offers, as the apostle speaks (2 Corinthians 5:20).
The reason is--
1. Necessity, seeing we cannot turn our hearts unto Him unless He
draws John 6:44), which moves the Church to
pray, ¡§Turn us, and weshall be turned¡¨ (Jeremiah 31:18).
2. The fitness of this way, to advance the free mercy of God the
more, that all men¡¦s boasting may be taken away (Ephesians 2:8-9), and that he that
rejoiceth may rejoice in God alone (1 Corinthians 1:31), who, as He
loves us first, so He seeks us first (Isaiah 61:1), and recovers us oftwhen we
go astray.
III. GOD, WHEN HE
DEALS WITH MEN, DELIGHTS TO BE HEARKENED UNTO WITH REVERENCE AND FEAR.
IV. GOD, IN
REPRESENTING HIS MAJESTY TO MEN, SO DEALS WITH THEM THAT HE MAY HUMBLE BUT NOT
CONFOUND THEM.
1. In dispensing His Word by the ministry of men (and not of angels,
whose presence might affright us), and that, too, in such a manner, that
whereas it is in itself like a hammer (Jeremiah 23:29), mighty inoperation
through God, sharper than any two-edged sword (2 Corinthians 10:5), able, if it
were set on by the strength of His hand, to break the heart in pieces, yet is
so tempered in the dispensation thereof, by men like unto ourselves, and
therefore sensible by experience of human infirmities, that it only pricks the
heart (Acts 2:27), but cuts it not in pieces.
2. In the terrors of conscience, which being in themselves
unsupportable Proverbs 18:14), yet are so moderated
unto us, that though we be perplexed, we are not in despair (2 Corinthians 4:8), burned but yet
not consumed, like Moses¡¦ bush (Exodus 2:2), walking safely in the flames
of fire with the three children (Daniel 3:25).
3. In afflictions, which God lays on us in such a measure
proportioned to our strength (1 Corinthians 10:13) that they only
purge us, but do not destroy us (Isaiah 27:8-9).
V. GOD MANY TIMES
CALLS MEN TO ACCOUNT, AND PROCEEDS IN JUDGMENT AGAINST THEM IN THE MIDST OF
THEIR DELIGHTS.
VI. IT IS VERY
NEEDFUL TO OBSERVE A FIT SEASON IN DEALING WITH OFFENDERS AFTER THEY HAVE
SINNED. VII. THE PRESENCE OF GOD IS TERRIBLE TO A SINNER.
1. Behold, then, the miserable condition into which sin hath brought
us, which hath changed our greatest desire (Psalms 42:2), and joy (16:11), and
content (17:15), into the greatest terror, especially unto the wicked, who
neither can fly from God¡¦s presence (139:7) nor endure His revenging hand.
2. Behold the comfort of a good conscience, wherein we may behold
the face of God with comfort and confidence (1 John 3:21); but not in ourselves,
but in the name of Jesus Christ, who hath by His mediation established with us
a covenant of peace between God and us (Romans 5:1) and purchased unto us access
with boldness to the throne of grace Hebrews 4:16), so that we can not only
rejoice at present in God¡¦s presence with us in His ordinances, but withal love
and long for His appearance, when He shall come in His glory (2 Timothy 4:8; Revelation 22:20).
VIII. WHEN MEN ARE
ONCE FALLEN AWAY FROM GOD, THEY ARE LEFT TO MISERABLE AND UNPROFITABLE SHIFTS.
1. It cannot be otherwise when men are once gone away from God, in
whom only is true comfort and safety, and His name a strong tower, which they
that run unto are safe, and from whom is the efficacy of all means, which
without Him can do neither good nor evil.
2. God, in His just judgment, when men honour Him not as God,
deprives them of that wisdom.
IX. MEN ARE
NATURALLY APT TO FLY FROM THE MEANS OF THEIR OWN GOOD. The reason is--
1. Men¡¦s ignorance of spiritual things, wherein their true good
consists.
2. The wisdom of the flesh being enmity against God: as many as are
of the flesh must needs hate Him, and therefore cannot submit unto Him.
3. The ways of attaining true good are by denial of one¡¦s self and
all the lusts of the flesh, which is impossible for any man to do, remaining in
his natural condition.
X. THE TERRORS OF
GOD SHALL FIRST OR LAST SHAKE THE HEARTS OF ALL THOSE THAT DO MOST SLIGHT HIS
JUDGMENTS. Indeed, unless God should in this manner deal with the wicked of the
world, He should--
1. Suffer His honour to be trampled under foot, and His authority
and power despised.
2. Harden the hearts of wicked men in mischief (Ecclesiastes 8:11).
3. There is no fitter judgment, nor more proportionable to the sin,
than to punish security and contempt with fear and terror.
XI. A GUILTY
CONSCIENCE IS FILLED WITH TERRORS UPON EVERY OCCASION.
XII. WHATSOEVER WE
TRULY FEAR WE CANNOT BUT ENDEAVOUR TO FLY FROM AND AVOID.
XIII. THERE IS A
WONDERFUL PRONENESS IN THE HEARTS OF MEN TO CONCEIVE OF GOD AS THEY DO OF A
MORTAL MAN. (J. White, M. A.)
God¡¦s call to Adam
Our text suggests--
I. MAN¡¦S
DEPARTURE FROM GOD. Adam was in a state of--
1. Alienation from God.
2. Fear of Him.
3. Delusion about Him.
4. Danger.
II. GOD¡¦S CONCERN
ABOUT MAN¡¦S DEPARTURE. God is concerned about man¡¦s departure from Him, because
it involves--
1. Evil; and He is ¡§of purer eyes than to behold iniquity.¡¨
2. Suffering; and He ¡§is love.¡¨
III. GOD¡¦S PERSONAL
DEALING WITH THE WANDERER. (H. J. Martyn.)
The garden of the Lord concealing the Lord of the garden
The garden of the Lord concealed from Adam and Eve the Lord of the
garden. God did not turn Adam out of paradise till Adam had turned God out. It
is a long lesson to learn to be able to keep the garden of the Lord, and the
Lord of the garden both. Adam¡¦s felicities were of an innocent nature, to be
sure. There is no blessing so blessed that the unilluminated side of it will
not fall off and darken down into a curse. All the planets that dance even
about the sun are black on their off side. The better a thing is, the more harm
it is capable of doing. The very results yielded by Christianity, in the shape
of respectability, and wealth, and power, and culture, and elegant refinements,
come in to obscure the root itself out from which they are sprung. It is like a
tree shaded and hindered by its own verdure. It is like the sun waking up the
mists in the morning; its beams, like so many nimble fingers, weaving a veil to
hang across the face of the sun, till it defeats its brightness by its own
shining. We become indifferent to the cause in our engrossment with its
effects, and the old fact becomes true again, that the garden of the Lord
conceals from us the Lord of the garden.
1. One of the trees behind which the face of the Lord becomes hidden
from us is the tree of knowledge. We shall mention only two or three of these
briefly; but there is propriety in mentioning that first. It is the first
historic instance wherein a good thing demonstrated its capacity for mischief.
The tree was of God¡¦s planting, to be sure, and knowledge is no doubt good; but
from the first the devil has been a learned devil, and has posed as the patron
of erudition. That ¡§knowledge puffeth up¡¨ was known by Satan before it was
stated by Paul. Consciousness of knowledge is more stultifying than ignorance,
and is essentially atheistic; atheistic in this sense: that it converts present
cognitions into a barrier that blocks the entrance of the heavenly light and
thwarts the Holy Ghost. The tree grew in God¡¦s garden; so our schools have been
planted and fostered by the Christian Church. Still, the multitudinousness of
books, ideas, theories, and philosophies, out into which the schools have blossomed,
tends to work that intellectual complacency, and that conceit of knowledge,
which blurs every heavenly vision, discredits the wisdom that is from above,
and routs the Redeemer. ¡§Not many wise men after the flesh are called.¡¨ One
single electric light out here on Madison Square extinguishes the stars, and
the shining of the low-lying moon snuffs out all the constellations of the
firmament. The garden of the Lord grows up at length into such prodigality of
leaf and flower as to conceal the Lord of the garden.
2. Another tree behind which the face of the Lord becomes hidden
from us is that of affluence. The tree of wealth, verily, like the tree of
knowledge, has its best rooting in the soil of paradise. We should no sooner
think of speaking a disparaging word of money than we should of knowledge. But
as knowledge trails behind it its shadow (as we have seen), so money is
regularly attended by its shadow. Money is just as holy a thing in one way as
wisdom is in another. But it makes not the slightest difference how holy a
thing is, if, like Adam, the Lord is on one side of it and you are on the
other. And the more this consciousness of money is developed, the more truly
the man becomes encased in a little world that is all his own, and the more
impervious to any influences that bear upon him from without. The verdure
becomes so thick that the sky gets rubbed out, and the tree so broad and
massive that the Lord God shrinks into invisibility behind it.
3. I mention only one other tree in God¡¦s garden, and that is the
tree of respectability. More evidently, perhaps, than either of the others, it
is the outcome of heavenly soil. The devil of decency is more incorrigible than
the devil of dirt. (C. H. Parkhurst, D. D.)
No hiding from God
It was said of the Roman empire under the Caesars that the whole
world was only one great prison for Caesar, for if any man offended the emperor
it was impossible for him to escape. If he crossed the Alps, could not Caesar
find him out in Gaul? If he sought to hide himself in the Indies, even the
swarthy monarchs there knew the power of the Roman arms, so that they could
give no shelter to a man who had incurred imperial vengeance. And yet, perhaps,
a fugitive from Rome might have prolonged his miserable life by hiding in the dens
and caves of the earth. But, O sinner, there is no hiding from God. (C. H.
Spurgeon.)
Sinner shuns God
A burglar, not long ago, rifled an unoccupied dwelling by the
seaside. He ransacked the rooms, and heaped his plunder in the parlour. There
were evidences that here he sat down to rest. On a bracket in the corner stood
a marble bust of Guido¡¦s ¡§Ecce Homo¡¨--Christ crowned with thorns. The guilty
man had taken it in his hands and examined it. It bore the marks of his
fingers; but he replaced it with its face turned to the wall, as if he would
not have even the sightless eyes of the marble Saviour look upon his deeds of
infamy. So the first act of the first sinner was to hide himself at the sound
of God¡¦s voice. (Professor Phelps.)
A bad conscience embitters comforts
There is no friend so good as a good conscience. There is no foe
so ill as a bad conscience. It makes us either kings or slaves. A man that hath
a good conscience, it raiseth his heart in a princely manner above all things
in the world. A man that hath a bad conscience, though he be a monarch, it
makes him a slave. A bad conscience embitters all things in the world to him,
though they be never so comfortable in themselves. What is so comfortable as
the presence of God? What is so comfortable as the light? Yet a bad conscience,
that will not be ruled, it hates the light, and hates the presence of God, as
we see Adam, when he had sinned, he fled from God (Genesis 3:8). A bad conscience cannot joy
in the midst of joy. It is like a gouty foot, or a gouty toe, covered with a
velvet shoe. Alas! what doth ease it? What doth glorious apparel ease the
diseased body? Nothing at all. The ill is within. There the arrow sticks. (R.
Sibbes.)
The sinner afraid of God
I once met a little boy in Wales, crying bitterly at his father¡¦s
door, afraid to go in. I asked him what was the matter. He told me that his
mother had sent him out clean in the morning, but that he had got into the
water, and made his clothes dirty. So he feared to go in, because his father
would punish him. We have soiled our characters by sin, and therefore is it
that we fear death--dread the meeting with our Father. (Thomas Jones.)
An ill conscience
An ill conscience is no comfortable companion to carry with thee.
An ill conscience is like a thorn in the flesh. A thorn in the hedge may
scratch you as you pass by it, but a thorn in the flesh rankles with you
wherever you go; and the conscience, the ill conscience, the conscience that is
ill at ease, it makes you ill at ease. You cannot have peace so long as you
have an evil conscience, so long as there is that continual monition flashing
across your mind: Judgment cometh, death cometh--am I ready? Many a time, when
you go to your worldly scenes of pleasure, this conscience, like the finger
writing on the wall of the palace of the king of Babylon, alarms and frightens
you. You tell nobody about it. Strange thoughts strike across your mind. You
have no rest. Can a man rest on a pillow of thorns? Can a man rest with the
heartache? Can a man rest with his soul disturbed with the horrors of guilt? I
tell thee there is no rest to thee till thou comest to Christ. He alone can
calm a conscience. (S. Coley.)
A troubled conscience
As the stag which the huntsman has hit flies through bush and
brake, over stock and stone, thereby exhausting his strength, but not expelling
the deadly bullet from his body, so does experience show that they who have
troubled consciences run from place to place, but carry with them wherever they
go their dangerous wounds. (Gotthold.)
The voice of God
The voice of God was heard, it seems, before anything was seen;
and as He appears to have acted towards man in His usual way, and as though He
knew of nothing that had taken place till He had it from his own mouth, we may
consider this as the voice of kindness, such, whatever it was, as he had used
to hear beforetime, and on the first sound of which he and his companion had
been used to draw near, as sheep at the voice of the shepherd, or as children
at the voice of a father. The voice of one whom we love conveys life to our
hearts; but, alas, it is not so now! Not only does conscious guilt make them
afraid, but contrariety of heart to a holy God renders them averse to drawing
near to Him. The kindest language to one who is become an enemy will work in a
wrong way. ¡§Let favour be shewed to the wicked, yet will he not learn
righteousness: in the land of uprightness will he deal unjustly, and will not
behold the majesty of the Lord.¡¨ Instead of coming at His call as usual, ¡§they
hide themselves from His presence among the trees of the garden.¡¨ Great is the
cowardice which attaches to guilt. It flies from God, and from all approaches
to Him in prayer or praise; yea, from the very thoughts of Him, and of death
and judgment when they must appear before Him. But wherefore flee to the trees
of the garden? Can they screen them from the eyes of Him with whom they have to
do? Alas, they could not hide themselves and their nakedness from their own
eyes; how, then, should they elude discovery before an omniscient God! (Gotthold.)
Suppose (what is not to be supposed) that they could have run from
God, yet this would not do, unless they could have run from themselves too, for
the wounded deer, whither ever he runs, carries with him the fatal arrow
sticking fast in his sides. The guilt of their souls and the terror of their
consciences went along with them, whither ever they went. So would only have
been like the angled and entangled fish with the hook of the fisherman, that
may indeed swim away all the length of the line, but the hook in her mouth
hales her back again; so God summons in sinful man: Adam, where art thou? (Genesis 3:9). (C. Ness.)
The cool of the day
Evening
I. THE PRIVILEGES
OF EVENING.
1. Evening has calmness.
2. Evening has leisure.
3. Evening is social.
II. THE DUTIES OF
EVENING.
1. It is a season for review.
2. It is a season for settlement.
3. It is a season for preparation.
III. THE TEACHING
OF EVENING. A type of the close of life. Night is death, and the morrow the day
which will break beyond the grave. (Homilist.)
God appearing, in the wind
It was ¡§in the wind of the day¡¨ that Jehovah was heard. Meaning
thereby, either at the time that the breeze was blowing, or in the breeze; or,
more probably, both. It is generally in connection with the wind, or whirlwind,
that Jehovah is said to appear Ezekiel 1:4). In 2 Samuel 22:11 we read, ¡§He was seen
upon the wings of the wind¡¨; in Psalms 18:10 we read, ¡§He did fly upon
the wings of the wind¡¨; in Psalms 104:3 we read, ¡§Who walketh upon
the wings of the wind.¡¨ In these passages we note the difference of expression,
yet the identity of the general idea--He was seen upon the wind; He did fly
upon the wind; He did walk upon the wind; which last is the very expression in
the passage before us. (H. Bonar, D. D.)
Evening the time for reflection
¡§The cool of the day,¡¨ which to God was the season for visiting
His creatures, may, as it respects man, denote a season of reflection. We may
sin in the daytime; but God will call us to account at night. Many a one has
done that in the heat and bustle of the day which has afforded bitter
reflection in the cool of the evening; and such in many instances has proved
the evening of life. (A. Fuller.)
Verses 9-12
Where art thou?
--
God¡¦s question
I. The speaker is
God; the person spoken to is the representative of us all.
II. The call is--
1. Individual.
2. Universal.
III. God calls in
three ways.
1. In conscience.
2. In providence.
3. In revelation.
IV. His call is--
1. To attention.
2. To recognition of God¡¦s being.
3. To reflection on our own place and position.
V. It is a call
which each must answer for himself, and which each ought to answer without
delay. (Dean Vaughan.)
An important question
Here God asks an important question: ¡§Where art thou?¡¨
1. Where are you?--are you in God¡¦s family or out of it? When you
are baptized, you are put into God¡¦s family upon certain conditions--that you
will do certain things; and it depends upon you how you live, because if you do
not love God you cannot be God¡¦s child.
2. Supposing you are one of God¡¦s children, ¡§Where art thou?¡¨--near
to thy Father or far from Him?--because some children are nearer to their
fathers than others. Mary and Martha were sisters, and they were both
Christians, but one was much nearer to Christ than the other. Mary sat at
Jesus¡¦ feet, Martha was ¡§troubled about many things.¡¨ If we delight to tell
Jesus everything, than we shall be near God.
3. Are you in the sunshine or the shade? If you follow Christ you
will always be in the sunshine, because He is the Sun.
4. Are you in the path of duty? Are you where you ought to be? The
path of duty is a narrow path sometimes a steep path. God could say to many of
us, as He said to Elijah, ¡§What doest thou here?¡¨--thou art out of the path of
duty.
5. How have you progressed? The surest way to know that we get on is
to be very humble. When the wheat is ripe it hangs down; the full ears hang the
lowest. (J. Vaughan, M. A.)
The first question in the Bible
This is the first question in the Bible. It was addressed by God
to the first man, and likewise to you.
I. THAT GOD
THINKS ABOUT YOU. A watchmaker sells the watches which he has made, and thinks
no more of them. The same with a ship builder and his ships, a shepherd and his
sheep. Some say that as these men have acted, so does God. He has made you, but
He never thinks about you. This is an error. The text proves that He thought of
Adam, and there are many things which show that He thinks of you. A mother
thinks of her children, and causes the gas to be lighted for them when the
shadows of the evening have come. For the same reason God sends forth the sun
every morning. As He thinks about you, so you ought to think about Him; in the
morning when you awake, often during the day, and always before you sleep.
II. THAT GOD
SPEAKS TO YOU. He spoke to Adam. In what manner? Not like the severe slave
holder, the stern master, the passionate father; but like a loving mother to
her children. He addresses you also, though not exactly in the same way. Men
have many methods by which they communicate their thoughts to one another. The
telegraph; letters; signs; the living voice. As it is with men in this respect
so with the Lord. He speaks to you in nature, in events great and small. By
conscience, parents, teachers, ministers. Sometimes thoughts come into your
minds directly from God. Think of the honour thus put on you. The Queen
speaking to that little boy. This is nothing when compared with the great God
speaking to the same boy.
III. THAT GOD KNOWS
WHEN YOU ARE NOT IN YOUR RIGHT PLACE. More than all, Calvary. The Divine Father
is there to meet you and save you. Have you never been there?
IV. THAT GOD
WISHES YOU TO TELL HIM WHY YOU ARE NOT IN YOUR RIGHT PLACE. As He dealt with
Adam, so He deals with you. To Him you are responsible for all your actions as
well as your words. (A. McAuslane, D. D.)
The position of man as a sinner
I. A CHANGE IN
MAN¡¦S MORAL POSITION.
1. His one sin brought guilt upon his conscience, and anarchy into
his heart.
2. This developed itself in a dread of God.
II. A DIVINE
INTEREST IN MAN, NOTWITHSTANDING HIS ALTERED POSITION.
III. THE IMPORTANCE
OF MAN FEELING HIS MORAL POSITION. (Homilist.)
Where art thou?
1. The Christian ought always to be at his proper and assigned work.
God fails not to mark every dereliction, to note every hour, every gift and
power not given to the work of salvation.
2. The Christian ought ever to be in his proper place. He has his
own place in the family circle, in the Church of Christ, in every sphere of
Christian duty and enterprise, and in the world of guilt, misery, and ignorance
around him.
3. The Christian ought ever to be in a state of mind to seek the
Divine blessing. Sin cherished, Or duty neglected, not only loses us the favour
of God, but what is, if possible, worse still, robs us of the disposition to
desire or seek it.
4. The Christian ought ever to be where he can meet God in judgment
without fear.
I. THE SINNER.
1. In his sins.
2. In the pathway of eternal ruin.
3. In a state of awful condemnation.
4. In a land of darkness and gloom.
5. Ever under God¡¦s immediate eye.
6. In the hands of an angry God. (W. B. Sprague, D. D.)
The voice of God
I. THE VOICE HERE
WAS DOUBTLESS AN AUDIBLE VOICE. And God has yet His voice. He can speak by awful
providences; He can speak by terrific judgments; or He can speak by the ¡§still,
small voice¡¨ of love.
II. THE VOICE OF
GOD IS ALWAYS A TERRIFIC VOICE TO THE SOUL THAT IS OUT OF CHRIST. The voice of
God is the voice of a holy God--the voice of a just God--the voice of a
faithful God. And how can an unpardoned, unjustified, and unsanctified soul
hear that voice and not tremble?
III. HOW IS IT,
THEN, THAT THE BELIEVER IN CHRIST JESUS CAN LISTEN TO THOSE WORDS, ¡§WHERE ART
THOU?¡¨ AND CAN HEAR THEM IN PEACE? What answer does he give? ¡§Where art
thou?¡¨--In Christ. In Christ? Then ¡§there is no condemnation to them that are
in Christ Jesus, who walk not after the flesh, but after the Spirit.¡¨ (J. H.
Evans, M. A.)
Observations
I. TERRORS MAY
PREPARE A MAN¡¦S HEART, BUT IT IS ONLY THE WORD OF GOD THAT INFORMS AND SUBDUES
IT.
1. That this is God¡¦s ordinance, wherein He hath both discovered His
will unto us, and annexed unto it the power of His Spirit, to subdue every
thought in us to the obedience of Jesus Christ.
2. That it is the only means to bring unto God His due honour, by
bearing witness to His truth in His promises, and to His righteousness in His
laws, and to His authority in submitting to His directions.
II. THE WAY TO GET
OUR HEARTS AFFECTED WITH WHAT WE HEAR, IS TO APPREHEND OURSELVES TO BE SPOKEN
UNTO IN PARTICULAR.
1. Because self-love is so rooted in us, that we slight and make
little account of those things in which ourselves have not a peculiar interest.
2. Because it much advanceth God¡¦s honour (1 Corinthians 14:25), when by such
particular discoveries and directions it is made manifest unto us that God
oversees all our ways, and takes care of our estates in particular, which
cannot but work in us both fear, and care, and confidence,
III. THOSE WHO
ENDEAVOUR TO FLY FROM GOD, YET CAN BY NO MEANS SHIFT THEMSELVES OUT OF HIS
PRESENCE. Let it then be every man¡¦s care and wisdom to take hold of God¡¦s
strength, to make peace with Him, as Himself adviseth us (Isaiah 27:5), seeing He cannot be--
1. Resisted (Isaiah 27:4).
2. Nor escaped (Jeremiah 25:35).
3. Nor entreated (1 Samuel 2:25).
4. Nor endured (Isaiah 33:14).
IV. GOD LOVES A
FREE AND VOLUNTARY ACKNOWLEDGMENT OF SIN FROM HIS CHILDREN, WHEN THEY HAVE
TRESPASSED AGAINST HIM.
1. Because it brings God most honour, when we clear Him, and take
the blame unto ourselves (See Joshua 7:19), whereby every mouth is
stopped, and His ways acknowledged, and His judgments to be just, in visiting
men¡¦s transgressions upon them; and His mercies infinite, in sparing men upon
their repentance.
2. It most justifies ourselves, when we condemn our own ways and
actions 2 Corinthians 7:11), and are grieved
in our own hearts, and ashamed of our folly, in the errors of our ways.
V. GOD IS FULL OF
MILDNESS AND GENTLENESS IN HIS DEALING WITH OFFENDERS, EVEN IN THEIR GREATEST
TRANSGRESSIONS.
1. To clear Himself, that the whole world may acknowledge, that He
afflicts not willingly (Lamentations 3:33)..
2. Because the sin itself is burthen some and bitter enough to a
tender conscience, so that there needs no mixture with it of gall and wormwood.
VI. THE KNOWLEDGE
AND CONSIDERATION OF ONE¡¦S ILL CONDITION IS AN EFFECTUAL MEANS TO BRING HIM ON
TO TRUE REPENTANCE. VII. ALL THOSE THAT DESIRE TO GET OUT OF THEIR MISERY MUST
SERIOUSLY CONSIDER WITH THEMSELVES WHAT WAS THE MEANS THAT BROUGHT THEM INTO
IT.
1. There can be no means of removing evil but by taking away the
cause of it, neither is there any means to take that away till it be known.
2. Besides, God can no way gain so much honour, as when men, by
searching out the cause of the evils that befall them, find and acknowledge
that their destruction is from themselves (Hosea 13:9). Hence it is that the Lord
oftentimes makes the judgment which He inflicts to point it out, either by the
kind of the judgment, or by some circumstance of the time, place, instrument,
or the like, by the observation whereof the evil itself that brought that
judgment on us may be made manifest, especially if we take with us for the
discovery thereof the light of God¡¦s Word. (J. White, M. A.)
Lessons
1. Jehovah may suffer sinners
to abuse His goodness, but He will call them to judgment.
2. The eternal God only, who is the cause of every creature, who
hath made, and knows man, He will be Judge.
3. Adam and all his sons shall be made to judge themselves by the
Lord.
4. God is not ignorant of the lurking places of sinners (Psalms 139:1-24).
5. God¡¦s inquiries are invincible criminations on sinners.
6. He that hides, cannot hide, and he that flieth, cannot fly from
God.
7. Foolish sinners think themselves safe in hiding and flying from
God, but God teacheth it must be by coming to Him.
8. Sin deals falsely in its speaking to the inquisition of God.
9. It is sin alone that makes God¡¦s voice so terrible, which sinners
would conceal.
10. Sinners pretend their fear rather than their guilt to drive them
from God.
11. Sinners pretend their punishment, rather than their crime, to
cause them hide.
12. Sin makes souls naked, and yet souls cover sin.
13. How hard it is to bring a soul to the true acknowledgment of sin!
(G. Hughes, B. D.)
God¡¦s first words to the first sinner -
1. Mark the alienation of
heart which sin causes in the sinner. Adam ought to have sought out his Maker.
He should have gone through the garden crying for his God, ¡§My God, my God, I
have sinned against Thee. Where art Thou?¡¨ But instead thereof, Adam flies from
God. The sinner comes not to God; God comes to him. It is not ¡§My God, where
art Thou?¡¨ but the first cry is the voice of grace, ¡§Sinner, where art thou?¡¨
God comes to man; man seeks not his God.
2. And while the text manifestly teaches us the alienation of the
human heart from God, so that man shuns his Maker and does not desire
fellowship with Him, it reveals also the folly which sin has caused. How we
repeat the folly of our first parent every day when we seek to hide sin from
conscience, and then think it is hidden from God; when we are more afraid of
the gaze of man than of the searchings of the Eternal One, when because the sin
is secret, and has not entrenched upon the laws and customs of society, we make
no conscience of it, but go to our beds with the black mark still upon us,
being satisfied because man does not see it, that therefore God does not
perceive it.
3. But now, the Lord Himself comes forth to Adam, and note how He
comes. He comes walking. He was in no haste to smite the offender, not flying
upon wings of wind, not hurrying with His fiery sword unsheathed, but walking
in the garden. ¡§In the cool of the day¡¨--not in the dead of night, when the
natural gloom of darkness might have increased the terrors of the criminal; not
in the heat of the day, lest he should imagine that God came in the heat of
passion; not in the early morning, as if in haste to slay, but at the close of
the day, for God is long suffering, slow to anger, and of great mercy; but in
the cool of the evening, when the sun was setting upon Eden¡¦s last day of
glory, when the dews began to weep for man¡¦s misery, when the gentle winds with
breath of mercy breathed upon the hot cheek of fear; when earth was silent that
man might meditate, and when heaven was lighting her evening lamps, that man
might have hope in darkness; then, and not till then, forth came the offended
Father.
I. We believe
that the inquiry of God was intended in an AROUSING SENSE--¡§Adam, where art
thou?¡¨ Sin stultifies the conscience, it drugs the mind,so that after sin man
is not so capable of understanding his danger as he would have been without it.
One of the first works of grace in a man is to put aside this sleep, to startle
him from his lethargy, to make him open his eyes and discover his danger.
¡§Adam, where art thou?¡¨ Lost, lost to thy God, lost to happiness, lost to
peace, lost in time, lost in eternity. Sinner, ¡§Where art thou?¡¨ Shall I tell
thee? Thou art in a condition in which thy very conscience condemns thee. How
many there are of you who have never repented of sin, have never believed in
Christ? I ask you, is your conscience easy?--is it always easy? Are there not
some times when the thunderer will be heard? Thy conscience telleth thee thou
art wrong--O how wrong, then, must thou be! But man, dost thou not know thou
art a stranger from thy God? You eat, you drink, you are satisfied; the world
is enough for you: its transient pleasures satisfy your spirit. If you saw God
here, you would flee from Him; you are an enemy to Him. Oh! is this the right
case for a creature to be in? Let the question come to thee--¡§Where art thou?:¡¨
Must not that creature be in a very pitiable position who is afraid of his
Creator? You are in the position of the courtier at the feast of Dionysius,
with the sword over your head suspended by a single hair. Condemned already!
¡§God is angry with the wicked every day.¡¨ ¡§If he turn not, He will whet His
sword: He hath bent His bow and made it ready.¡¨ ¡§Where art thou?¡¨ Thy life is
frail; nothing can be more weak. A spider¡¦s line is a cable compared with the
thread of thy life. Dreams are substantial masonry compared with the bubble
structure of thy being. Thou art here and thou art gone. Thou sittest here
today; ere another week is past thou mayest be howling in another world. Oh,
where art thou, man? Unpardoned, and yet a dying man! Condemned yet going
carelessly towards destruction! Covered with sin, yet speeding to thy Judge¡¦s
dread tribunal!
II. Now, secondly,
the question was meant to CONVINCE OF SIN, and so to lead to a confession. Had
Adam¡¦s heart been in a right state, he would have made a full confession of his
sinfulness. ¡§Where art thou?¡¨ Let us hear the voice of God saying that to us,
if today we are out of God and out of Christ.
III. We may regard
this text as the VOICE OF GOD BEMOANING MAN¡¦S LOST ESTATE.
IV. But now I must
turn to a fourth way in which no doubt this verse was intended. It is an
arousing voice, a convincing voice, a bemoaning voice; but, in the fourth
place, it is a SEEKING VOICE. ¡§Adam, where art thou?¡¨ I am come to find thee,
wherever thou mayest be. I will look for thee, till the eyes of My pity see
thee, I will follow thee till the hand of My mercy reaches thee; and I will
still hold thee till I bring thee back to myself, and reconcile thee to My
heart.
V. And now,
lastly, we feel sure that this text may be used, and must be used, in another
sense. To those who reject the text, as a voice of arousing and conviction, to
those who despise it as the voice of mercy bemoaning them, or as the voice of
goodness seeking them, it comes in another way; it is the voice of JUSTICE
SUMMONING THEM. Adam had fled, but God must have him come to His bar. ¡§Where
art thou, Adam? Come hither, man, come hither; I must judge thee, sin cannot go
unpunished.¡¨ (C. H.Spurgeon.)
I was afraid, because I
was naked, and I hid myself
The sad effects of yielding to temptation
I. THAT A
YIELDING TO TEMPTATION IS GENERALLY FOLLOWED BY A SAD CONSCIOUSNESS OF PHYSICAL
DESTITUTION.
II. THAT A
YIELDING TO TEMPTATION IS GENERALLY FOLLOWED BY A GRIEVOUS WANDERING FROM GOD.
1. After yielding to temptation, men often wander from God by
neglecting
2. By increasing profanity of life.
III. THAT A
YIELDING TO TEMPTATION IS GENERALLY FOLLOWED BY SELF-VINDICATION.
1. We endeavour to vindicate ourselves by blaming others. This
course of conduct is
2. By blaming our circumstances.
IV. THAT IN
YIELDING TO TEMPTATION WE NEVER REALIZE THE ALLURING PROMISES OF THE DEVIL.
1. Satan promised that Adam and Eve should become wise, whereas they
became naked.
2. Satan promised that Adam and Eve should become gods, whereas they
fled from God. (J. S. Exell, M. A.)
The wanderer from God
I. WHERE IS MAN?
1. Distant from God.
2. In terror of God.
3. In delusion about God.
4. In danger from God.
II. GOD¡¦S CONCERN
FOR HIM.
1. His condition involves evil--God is holy.
2. His condition involves suffering--God is love.
III. GOD¡¦S DEALINGS
WITH HIM.
1. In the aggregate--¡§Adam,¡¨ the genius.
2. Personally. ¡§Where art thou?¡¨ (W. Wythe.)
The dawn of guilt
I. A CONSCIOUS
LOSS OF RECTITUDE. They were ¡§naked.¡¨ It is moral nudity--nudity of soul--of which
they are conscious. The sinful soul is represented as naked (Revelation 3:17). Righteousness is spoken
of as a garment (Isaiah 61:3). The redeemed are clothed
with white raiment. There are two things concerning the loss of rectitude
worthy of notice.
1. They deeply felt it. Some are destitute of moral righteousness,
and do not feel it.
2. They sought to conceal it. Men seek to hide their sins--in
religious professions, ceremonies, and the display of outward morality.
II. AN ALARMING
DREAD OF GOD. They endeavour, like Jonah, to flee from the presence of the
Lord.
1. This was unnatural. The soul was made to live in close communion
with God. All its aspirations and faculties show this.
2. This was irrational. There is no way of fleeing from
omnipresence. Sin blinds the reason of men.
3. This was fruitless. God found Adam out. God¡¦s voice will reach
the sinner into whatever depths of solitude he may pass.
III. A MISERABLE
SUBTERFUGE FOR SIN. ¡§The woman,¡¨ etc. And the woman said, ¡§The serpent beguiled
me,¡¨ etc. What prevarication you have here! Each transferred the sinful act to
the wrong cause. It is the essential characteristic of moral mind that it is
the cause of its own actions. Each must have felt that the act was the act of
self. (Homilist.)
I. THE SENSE OF
GUILT BY WHICH THEY WERE OPPRESSED.
Sad results of disobedience
1. There were circumstances which aggravated their guilt--they knew
God--His fellowship--were perfectly holy--happy--knew the obligations--knew the
consequences of life and death.
2. They felt their guilt aggravated by these circumstances. Their
consciences were not hardened. Their present feelings and condition were a
contrast with the past. In these circumstances they fled. They knew of no
redemption, and could make no atonement.
II. THE MELANCHOLY
CHANGE OF CHARACTER WHICH HAD RESULTED FROM THEIR FALL.
1. Our moral attainments are indicated by our views of
God--progressive. The pure in heart see God. Our first parents fell in their
conceptions of God--omnipresence. ¡§Whither shall I go?¡¨ etc. This ignorance of
God increased in the world with the increase of sin Romans 1:21-32). This ignorance of God is
still exemplified. ¡§The fool hath said in his heart, there is no God.¡¨ He may
worship outwardly; and there are gradations of the foolish--some shut God
within religious ordinances--some exclude Him.
III. THAT THEY HAD
LOST THEIR COMMUNION WITH GOD.
1. One barrier interposed was guilt.
2. Another barrier was moral pollution. (James Stewart.)
Hiding after sin
I. ADAM
REPRESENTS THE AVERAGE SINNER. A man may do worse than Adam--hide from God
after outraging Him by sin. Sense of God¡¦s presence, awfulness, greatness,
still intact in soul.
II. THEY HID
THEMSELVES. An instinct; not the result of a consultation. Two motives:
1. Fear.
2. Shame. The greatness of God was the measure of Adam¡¦s fear; his
own lost greatness was the measure of his shame.
III. AMONGST THE
TREES OF THE GARDEN.
1. Pleasure.
2. Occupation.
3. Moral rationalism.
IV. ADAM¡¦S CONDUCT
WAS FOOLISH AND IRRATIONAL.
1. Attempting the impossible.
2. Flying from the one hope and opening for restoration and safety.
(Canon Liddon.)
Hiding from God
As the account of Eve¡¦s temptation and fall truly represents the
course of corruption and sin, so the behaviour of our first parents afterwards
answers exactly to the feelings and conduct of those who have forfeited their
innocence and permitted the devil to seduce them into actual sin.
I. Any one sin,
wilfully indulged, leads to profaneness and unbelief, and tends to blot the
very thought of God out of our hearts.
II. Much in the
same way are backsliding Christians led to invent or accept notions of God and
His judgment, as though He in His mercy permitted them to be hidden and
covered, when in truth they cannot be so.
III. The same
temper naturally leads us to be more or less false towards men also, trying to
seem better than we are; delighting to be praised, though we know how little we
deserve it. Among particular sins it would seem that two especially dispose the
heart towards this kind of falsehood;
IV. When any
Christian person has fallen into sin and seeks to hide himself from the
presence of the Lord, God is generally so merciful that He will not suffer that
man to be at ease and forget Him. He calls him out of his hiding place, as He
called Adam from among the trees. No man is more busy in ruining himself, and
hiding from the face of his Maker, than He, our gracious Saviour, is watchful
to awaken and save him. (Plain Sermons by Contributors to ¡§Tracts for
the Times. ¡¨)
Two kinds of retreats
I. THE SINNER¡¦S
RETREAT.
1. Complete thoughtlessness.
2. The occupations of life.
3. The moralities of life.
4. The forms and observances of religion.
II. THE SAINT¡¦S
RETREAT. ¡§I flee unto Thee to hide me¡¨--
Hiding places
I. Note here the
anticipative sentence of the human conscience pronouncing doom on itself. The
guilty rebel hides from the Divine Presence.
II. The inexorable
call which brings him immediately into the Divine Presence.
III. The bringing
to light of the hidden things of darkness. The soul has many hiding places.
There are--
The unconscious confession
I. ADAM¡¦S HASTE
TO MAKE EXCUSE WAY A PROOF OF HIS GUILT. The consciousness of evil leads to
self-condemnation.
II. ADAM¡¦S
CONFESSION OF FEAR PROVED HIS GUILT. If a child dreads its parent, either the
child or the parent must be wrong.
III. ADAM¡¦S MORBID
MORAL SENSITIVENESS PROVED HIS GUILT. The worst kind of indelicacy is in being
shocked at what is natural and proper. Conclusion:
1. Sin cannot escape from God.
2. Sin cannot stand before God.
3. Sin may find compassion from God. (A. J. Morris.)
Observations
I. ALL MEN MUST
APPEAR BEFORE GOD, AND ANSWER ALL THAT THEY ARE CHARGED WITHAL, WHEN HE COMES
TO JUDGMENT.
1. That God by His power can enforce and draw all men before Him,
and to confess Him too, no man can deny (Romans 14:11).
2. Besides, it is fit that God should do it, for the clearing of His
justice, both in rewarding His own and punishing the wicked and ungodly, when
every man¡¦s work is manifest, and it appears that every man receives according
to his deeds (Romans 2:8). Of this truth there can be
no clearer evidence than the observation of that judgment which passeth upon
every man in the private consistory of his own conscience, from which none can
fly nor silence his own thoughts, bearing witness for him, or against him, no,
not those which have no knowledge of God or His law Romans 2:15).
II. ALL MEN BY
NATURE ARE APT TO COLOUR AND CONCEAL ALL THAT THEY CAN AND THAT EVEN FROM GOD
HIMSELF.
1. Because all men desire to justify themselves, and are by nature
liars Romans 3:4), and therefore easily fall
into that evil to which their nature inclines them.
2. The want of the full apprehension of God¡¦s Providence.
III. ONE SIN
COMMONLY DRAWS ON ANOTHER.
1. Any sin committed weakens the heart, and consequently leaves it
the more unable to withstand a second assault--as a castle is the more easily
taken when the breach is once made.
2. And sins are usually fastened one to another, like the links of a
chain; so that he who takes hold of one of them necessarily draws on all the
rest.
3. And God in justice may punish one sin with another, and to that
end both withdraw His restraining grace from wicked men, that being delivered
over to the lusts of their own hearts they may run on to all excess of riot,
that they may fill up the measure of their sin, that God¡¦s wrath may come upon
them to the uttermost, and many times for a while withholds the power of His
sanctifying grace from His own children.
IV. GOD¡¦S WORD IS
TERRIBLE TO A GUILTY CONSCIENCE.
V. IT IS A HARD
MATTER TO BRING MEN TO CONFESS ANY MORE THAN IS EVIDENT IN ITSELF.
VI. MEN MAY BE
BROUGHT MORE EASILY TO ACKNOWLEDGE ANYTHING THAN THEIR SIN.
VII. NO MEANS CAN
WORK ANY FARTHER THAN THEY ARE ACTED AND CARRIED ON BY GOD HIMSELF. (J.
White, M. A.)
Conscience
I. In briefly
adverting then to the fact THAT IT IS THE VOICE OF THE LORD WHICH AWAKENS
CONVICTION, LET US ATTEMPT TO ASCERTAIN EXACTLY WHAT IS INTENDED BY SUCH AN
EXPRESSION. In the case of Adam it was, of course, the direct and audible voice
of the Lord whereby he was aroused. There is no doubt that that voice had
struck home to his conscience long before it fell upon his ear--as is prevent
by his sense of nakedness, which he pleaded as an excuse for his concealment;
but that conviction of sin which drove him to the shade of the foliage
immediately after he had eaten the fruit, and before the Lord called him from
his hiding place, was but the echo of the Almighty¡¦s previous warning, ¡§In the
day that thou eatest thereof thou shalt surely die.¡¨ If it was the voice of God
which awakened conviction in Adam, how does He make that voice heard by us? Is
there not a steady monitor within us, and which at times the most hardened of
us cannot stifle--which is constantly telling us, ¡§thou shalt surely
die¡¨--which is ever reminding us that God¡¦s law requires perfection, absolute
and unblemished purity, without which we cannot enter into His rest--which also
shows us our own hearts, and forces us to bear them to the standard of God¡¦s
law (a light in which we see in every part of ourselves the elements of eternal
perdition and utter ruin)--which proclaims death to us at every step--which
haunts our rest, disturbs our thoughts, distracts our minds, and terrifies our
souls with the unceasing warning, ¡§thou shalt surely die¡¨?
II. THE EFFECT
PRODUCED BY THE VOICE--FEAR. ¡§I heard Thy voice in the garden, and I was
afraid.¡¨ There are two kinds of fear--the one generally termed reverence, or,
as it is scripturally called, ¡§godly fear,¡¨--the other dread, or terror,
induced by fear of punishment The former always results from a suitable
attitude before God in the contemplation of His majesty and power, and forms
one of the most indispensable and becoming attributes in the character of the
true disciple of God. The latter is an infallible indication of the absence of
the Spirit from the heart, and of the consciousness of guilt without the wish
for, or hope of, a remedy. It was this fear which engendered the slavish
obedience of the Israelites, and induced that dogged and sullen compliance with
the law¡¦s demands which characterized the spirit in which their services were
rendered. A fear which urges nothing more than a bare fulfilment of a demand
from a sense of coercion and compulsion, cannot fail to beget a spirit of
enmity against its object. Hence it is that our churches are filled with
unwilling worshippers, and the altar of Jehovah is insulted with constrained
oblations.
III. The next
consideration suggested by the text was, THE MISERABLE AND HUMILIATING SENSE
AWAKENED BY THE CONVICTION OF SIN--NAKEDNESS. It is a feeling which manifests
itself under three aspects--bringing with it a sense of ignorance, of a want of
righteousness, and of impurity. We may be extensively versed in what this world
calls knowledge--may be widely acquainted with the works of philosophers and
poets,and may even be deeply read in the Oracles of God; able to descant with
subtilty and power upon the doctrines of revealed truth; but no sooner does the
abiding conviction of sin break in upon us, than these attributes, upon which
we once rested a hope of preference before our less favoured brethren, become
only as so many scorpions to sting us with the reproach of baying abused them,
and leave us under a sense of ignorance even in the possession of the gifts of
knowledge. But it is not only upon such as these that the sense of ignorance
accompanies the voice of conviction. It creeps over those who, without worldly
as well as spiritual knowledge of any kind, have never felt their ignorance
before. There are many who, while they are of the night and know nothing, think
there is nothing which their own strength is not sufficient to perform, and
that there is no degree of excellence to which they cannot of their own power
attain. When conscience speaks to such as these, the helplessness which they
feel partakes largely of this sense of ignorance. They look back upon that
career of self-sufficiency during which they have been arrested, like awakened
sleepers upon the visions of a dream; and yet, amidst the realities to which
they have been aroused, they feel a need; but know not where to turn for help.
Our helplessness under conviction of sin is increased by a feeling of our want
of righteousness being super-added to this sense of ignorance. Self-dependence
is the invariable accompaniment of an ungodly life. Ungodliness itself consists
chiefly, if not entirely, in a want of faith in Christ; and if this want of
faith in Him exists, our trust must be reposed elsewhere; we either consider
ourselves too pure to need a Saviour, or else we trust in future virtue to
redeem past transgression. When the floods of conviction all at once break down
the sandy barriers of self-trust behind which we have sought to screen
ourselves, one of the principal elements in the sense of helplessness resulting
from it is a void within ourselves which we find widening more and more as
conviction becomes the stronger. It brings with it, too, in an equal degree, a
feeling of impurity. Before conviction has firmly fastened hold upon the mind;
when, as it were, its first strivings for audience are all that can be
experienced, it is apt to be checked by the trite expedient of comparing our
own godliness with that of others. But such specious delusions are all
overthrown when conscience has us completely in its chains. It leads us to
measure ourselves, not by a relative standard, or by the contrast we present to
our brethren around us; but by the contrast we present to the requirements of
that law which demands perfect purity; a purity to which we feel we can never
attain, and a law whereby we know we shall be ultimately judged. We look
within, and see ourselves stained with every sin which that law condemns, and
we feel that the very lightest of our transgressions is sufficient to crush us
beneath its curse. It is in vain that we make future resolves. But, terrible as
the situation of a mind thus disturbed may seem, it is in a far more enviable
condition than that which is reposing in the lap of sin, and saying, ¡§Peace,
peace, when God has not spoken peace.¡¨
IV. But it will be
necessary now to glance at the next head of discourse, namely, THE VAIN
EXPEDIENT FOR ESCAPE MENTIONED IN THE TEXT. ¡§I heard Thy voice in the garden,
and I was afraid, because I was naked; and I hid myself.¡¨ This attempt at
personal concealment on the part of our first parents, furnishes a striking
example of the deceitfulness of sin. The supposition that the mere shade of the
leaves could conceal them from the eye of God would have appeared to their
reason, while unwarped by sin and shame, as preposterous and absurd; but now
that the taint of guilt was on their souls they were ready to believe in the
efficacy of any miserable subterfuge to cheat the omniscience of the Almighty.
In like manner does sin lead its victims now from one degree of dissimulation
to another, commending the mask of hypocrisy in its most attractive forms, and
deluding the sinner into every species of sophistry, from which the purer mind
would instinctively recoil. A more rigid observance of Divine ordinances is
often resolved upon as a means of propitiating the monitions of the conscience.
A mare serious and attentive demeanour is likewise assumed. A closer vigil kept
upon the words and actions. And determinations are made to conform more
literally to the demands of the Divine law. Such resolves in themselves are
admirable, and, inasmuch as they evidence a dissatisfaction with present
godliness, are highly commendable. But in what spirit and for what reason are
these reforms undertaken? Is it a glowing desire for the promotion of the glory
of God; a zeal for the advancement of His kingdom; and an anxiety for the
spread of His cause which animates us? Are these high resolves prompted by an
indignant sense of our ingratitude to a merciful and beneficent Creator, and a
childlike desire to return to Him from whom we have departed? No, my friends.
It is from no contrition for past unthankfulness towards the giver of every
good and perfect gift that these resolves are made; but their fulfilment is set
about from a sullen and constrained sense of compulsion to satisfy the
exorbitant demands of a hard taskmaster whose laws we hate, and whose sway we
would fain be freed from; they are undertaken in our own strength, and prompted
by a slavish fear of death. We have before seen that this servile dread, though
productive of great apparent submission and obedience, generates enmity instead
of love in the heart. It is only the light of revelation which can dispel that
enmity, and shed abroad that love in the soul. (A. Mursell.)
Hidings
I. Let us
contemplate THE SINNER ¡§HIDING HIMSELF.¡¨ For is not this flight and concealment
of Adam among the trees of the garden like a symbolical representation of what
sinners have been doing ever since?--have they not all been endeavouring to
escape from God, and to lead a separated and independent life? They have been
fleeing from Divine Presence, and hiding themselves amid any trees that would
keep that Presence far enough away.
1. One of the most common retreats of the sinner is that of complete
thoughtlessness. What countless thousands of human beings have fled to this
retreat; and how easily and naturally does a man take part and place with ¡§all
the nations that forget God!¡¨ We have said complete thoughtlessness; but it is
not complete. If it were, there would be no conscious hiding, no more flight;
the forest would then be so deep and dense that no Divine voice would be heard
at all, and no Divine visitation of any kind felt or feared. But it is not so.
Now and again a gleam of light will come piercing through. Now and again a
voice from the Unseen Presence will summon the fugitive back.
2. The occupations of life furnish another retreat for man when
fleeing from God. Man works that he may be hidden. He works hard that he may
hide himself deep. The city is a great forest, in which are innumerable
fugitives from God, and sometimes the busiest are fleeing the fastest; the most
conspicuous to us may be the farthest away from Him. Work is right--the allotment
of God, the best discipline for man. Trade is right--thedispenser of comforts
and conveniences, the instrument of progress and civilization; and from these
things actual benefits unnumbered do unceasingly flow; and yet there can be
little doubt that the case is as we say. These right things are used at least
for this wrong end--as a screen, a subterfuge, a deep retreat from the voice
and the presence of the Lord.
3. The moralities of life form another retreat for souls hiding from
God. Some men are deeply hidden there, and it is hard to find them; harder
still to dislodge them. This does not appear to be an ignominious retreat; a
man seems to retire (if, indeed, he may be said to retire at all) with honour.
Speak to him of spiritual deficiency, he will answer with unfeigned wonder, ¡§In
what?¡¨ And if you say again, ¡§In the keeping of the commandments,¡¨ he will give
you the answer that has been given thousands and thousands of times since the
young man gave it to Jesus, ¡§All these things have I kept from my youth up. Not
perfectly, not as an angel keeps them, but as well as they are usually kept
among men; and what lack I yet?¡¨ So fair is the house in which the man takes
shelter. So green is the leafage of the trees amid which he hides. He does not
profess to be even ¡§afraid,¡¨ as Adam was. He hears the Voice, and does not
tremble. Why, then, should it be said that he is hiding? Because in deep truth
he is. He is attending to rules, but not adopting soul principles of life. He
is yielding an outward and mechanical compliance to laws, but be has not the
spirit of them in his heart.
4. The forms and observances of religion constitute sometimes a
hiding place for souls. Men come to God¡¦s house to hide from Him. They put on
¡§the form of godliness, but deny its power.¡¨ They have a name to live, but
continue dead. They seem to draw near, but in reality ¡§are yet a great way
off.¡¨ They figure to themselves an imaginary God, who will be propitiated and
pleased by an outward and mechanical service--by the exterior decencies of the
Christian life--when all the while they are escaping from the true God, whose
continual demand is, ¡§My son, give Me thine heart.¡¨ Ah, the deceitfulness of
the human heart! that men should come to God to flee from Him! Yet so it is,
and therefore let a man examine himself, whether he be in the faith or merely
in the form; whether he have a good hope through grace, or a hope that will
make him ashamed, whether he be in the very Presence reconciled, trustful, and
loving, or yet estranged, deceiving himself, and fleeing from the only true
Shelter. For we may depend upon it that in all these ways men do fly from God.
And God seeks them, for He knows they are lost. He pursues them, not in wrath,
but in mercy; not to drive them away into distance, condemnation, despair; but
to bring them out from every false refuge and home to Himself, the everlasting
and unchanging shelter of all the good.
II. And many do
turn and flee to Him to hide them. Adam is the type of the flying sinner. David
is the type of THE FLEEING SAINT (Psalms 143:9). Here we have the very
heart and soul of conversion, ¡§I flee unto Thee.¡¨ The man who says this has
been turned, or he is turning.
1. ¡§I flee unto Thee to hide me¡¨ from the terrors of the law. He
alone can hide us from these terrors. But He can. In His presence we are
lifted, as it were, above the thunders of the mountain; we see its lightnings
play beneath our feet. He who finds his hiding place with God in Christ does
not flee from justice; he goes to meet it. In God, the saint¡¦s refuge justice
also has eternal home; and purity, over which no shadow can ever pass; and
law--everlasting, unchanging law--so that the trusting soul goes to meet
allthese and to be in alliance with all these.
2. ¡§I flee unto Thee to hide me¡¨ from the hostility and the hatred
of men. This was a flight that David often took, and, in fact, this is the
fleeing mentioned in the text. ¡§Deliver me, O Lord, from mine enemies. I flee unto
Thee to bide me.¡¨ Believer, if you have David¡¦s faith you have David¡¦s Refuge.
The Name of the Lord is an high tower, into which all the righteous run and are
safe.
3. ¡§I flee unto Thee to hide me¡¨ from the trials and calamities of
life. A storm comes to a ship in mid-voyage. She is driven far out of her
course, and is glad at last to find shelter in some friendly port. But there
would soon have been shipwreck in the fair weather. The sunken rock, the
unknown current, the treacherous sand, were just before the ship. The storm was
her salvation. It carried her roughly but safely to the harbour. And such is
affliction to many a soul. It comes to quench the sunshine, to pour the
pitiless rain, to raise the stormy wind and drive the soul away to port and refuge,
away to harbour and home within the circle of Divine tranquillity--in the deep
calm of the everlasting Presence.
4. ¡§I flee unto Thee to hide me¡¨ from the fear and from the tyranny
of death. This is the very last flight of the godly soul. It has surmounted or
gone through every evil now but one: ¡§The last enemy that shall be destroyed is
Death.¡¨ (A. Raleigh, D. D.)
Terrors of conscience, and remedies
There is no cure for the terrors of conscience but from God.
1. Because these fears are seated in the soul, and are awakened
there by the voice of God. ¡§I heard Thy voice,¡¨ said Adam. It is the voice of
God in the mind that makes it so terrified: no created being can strike fear or
convey comfort into the conscience.
2. The fears of the mind, being supernatural and spiritual, can
admit only of a spiritual remedy. All outward applications will never cure
inward distempers: the sickness of the mind can only be cured by Him who seeth
into it. Jesus only can raise and comfort those whom the terrors of the Almighty
have cast down and dejected. His peculiar work and office it is to release us
from the terrors of conscience. He is entitled to the merit of doing it; He was
made acquainted with fear, with trouble, with amazement, with agony of mind,
that He might merit comfort for us under our fears. Christ is the end of the
law for comfort, by conferring pardon; which pardon He is more fitted to give
by reason of that compassion which is in Him; that pity and tenderness with
which He is moved toward all that are under any kind of want, or sorrow, or
misery. Another way to lessen our fears is to maintain our peace with God by
such a regard to His law as will not suffer us to persevere in any known sin.
For the conscience can never be at rest so long as wilful sin remains in the
heart. The man who is at peace with God ¡§fears no evil tidings,¡¨ his ¡§heart is
fixed.¡¨ I add this further rule: acquaint thyself much with God, and then thou
wilt be less afraid when He visits Thee. If He be new and strange to thee,
every appearance of Him will be fearful; but if thou art acquainted with Him,
thou mayest then be confident. Next to this, nourish a voluntary religious fear
of God in the heart, and that will prevent those other violent and enforced
Years which bring torment. Feared He will be; all knees must bow to Him, all
hearts must yield to Him; therefore a devout fear is the best way to prevent a
slavish dread. The humble spirit that bows itself shall not be broken. Above
all, take care to be of the number of those to whom His promises are made--that
is, the Church. To them it is said, ¡§they shall dwell safely,¡¨ and none shall
make them afraid.
1. In much pity and tenderness, like as a father catches up a child
that is fallen, yea, ¡§like as a father pitieth his own children, so is the Lord
merciful to them that fear Him.¡¨ He ¡§taketh pleasure in the prosperity of His
servants,¡¨ and loves to see them in a comfortable condition. ¡§For a small
moment,¡¨ saith He, ¡§have I forsaken thee, but witch great mercies will I gather
thee. In a little wrath I hid my face from thee for a moment, but with
everlasting kindness will I have mercy upon thee, saith the Lord thy Redeemer.¡¨
2. They are assured also of His care over them, lest they should be
swallowed up and overwhelmed with grief and fear. Hear His words: ¡§For I will
not contend forever, neither will I be always wrath; for the spirit should fail
before Me and the souls which I have made. I will restore comforts to him and
to his mourners.¡¨ God brings His servants seasonably out of their distresses;
because in them they are unfit and unable for any service. I have now only to
observe that all these things are contrariwise with the wicked. No relief in
their extremity, but fear and anguish. (W. Jones, M. A.)
Divine vision
Adam forgot that God could see him anywhere. Dr. Nettleton used to
tell a little anecdote, beautifully illustrating that the same truth which
overwhelms the sinner¡¦s heart with fear, may fill the renewed soul with joy. A
mother instructing her little girl, about four years of age, succeeded, by the
aid of the Holy Spirit, in fastening upon her mind this truth, ¡§Thou God seest
me!¡¨ She now felt that she ¡§had to do¡¨ with that Being ¡§unto whose eyes all
things are naked,¡¨ and she shrank in terror. For days she was in deep distress;
she wept and sobbed, and would not be comforted. ¡§God sees me, God sees me!¡¨
was her constant wail. At length one day, after spending some time in prayer,
she bounded into her mother¡¦s room, and with a heavenly smile lighting up her
tears, exclaimed, ¡§Oh, mother, God sees me, God sees me!¡¨ Her ecstasy was now
as great as her anguish had been. For days her soul had groaned under the
thought, ¡§God sees me; He sees my wicked heart, my sinful life, my hatred to
Him and to His holy law¡¨: and the fear of a judgment to come would fill her
soul with agony. But now a pardoning God had been revealed to her, and her soul
exclaimed exultingly, ¡§God sees me, takes pity on me, will guide and guard me.¡¨
(W. Adamson.)
Afraid of God
So there is a consistency in sin: they who hid themselves from one
another hid themselves from the presence of the Lord. Sin is the only
separating power. Goodness loves the light. Innocence is as a bird that follows
the bidding of the sun. When your little child runs away from you, either you
are an unlovely parent or the child has been doing wrong. Adam was afraid of
the Lord (Genesis 3:10). Afraid of Him who had made
the beautiful garden, the majestic river, the sun, and the moon and the stars!
How unnatural! Instead of running to the Lord, and crying mightily to Him in
pain and agony of soul, he shrunk away into shady places, and trembled in fear
and shame. We do the same thing today. We flee from God. Having done some deed
of wrong, we do not throw ourselves in utter humiliation before the Lord,
crying for His mercy, and promising better life; we stand behind a tree,
thinking He will pass by without seeing us. This sin makes a fool of a man as
well as a criminal--it makes him ridiculous as well as guilty. It makes its own
judgment day. (J. Parker, D. D.)
Who told thee that thou
wast naked?--
The moral sense
What is significant, as I think, in the Bible narrative, is that
the moment when man hears the voice of God in the garden is the moment when he
feels himself estranged from Him; he is not happy in the presence of his Maker;
he shrinks from Him, and seeks any covering, however feeble, to hide him from
his God. And he who looks across the page of history, and seeks to read the
secret of the human soul, will find everywhere, I think, this same contrariety
between man¡¦s duty and his desire, the same consciousness that he has not
performed the work God has given him to do. For what can be told as a truer
truth of the human story, than that man has high desires and cannot attain to
them; that he is living between two worlds, and is often false to what he knows
to be most Divine in himself; or, in a word, that he has tasted of the fruit of
the tree of knowledge, and yet that between him and the tree of life stands a
flaming sword which turns every way?
I. THE HUMAN
CONFESSION. It is not a little strange, upon the face of it, that man, who is
the lord of the physical world, or counts himself so, should be visited by a
haunting sense of failure. Why should he be ashamed of himself? Why conceive a
Power needing propitiation? Why waste his time in penitence for sin? What is
sacrifice--that venerable institution--but an expression of the discordance
between man and his environment? We know we are sinners; we cannot escape the
chiding of conscience.
II. THE DIVINE
INTERROGATION. Whence comes, then, this sense of sin, this longing for
holiness? It is a testimony to the Divinity of our human nature. If the
prisoner sighs for liberty and flight in the prison, the reason is that the
prison is not his home. If the exile gazes with yearning eyes upon the waste of
waters which parts him from his native land, the reason is that his heart is
there beyond the seas. And if the human heart here in the body sighs and yearns
for a perfectness of love and a joy Divine, the reason is, it is the heir of
immortality. (J. E. C. Welldon, M. A.)
God¡¦s question
¡§Who told thee that thou wast naked?¡¨ or how is it that this
nakedness is now a cause of shame to thee? Wast thou not clothed with
innocence, with light, and with glory? Didst thou not bear the image of thy
God, in whom thou gloriedst? Didst thou not rejoice in all the faculties which
He had given thee? Why, then, art thou despoiled, covered with shame, and
miserable? Hast thou sullied the garment of innocence and purity which I
bestowed upon thee? Hast thou lost the crown with which I adorned thy brow?
Who, then, hath reduced thee to this state? ¡§Who told thee that thou wast
naked?¡¨ Adam is confounded and speechless before his Judge. It is necessary,
then, to deepen the conviction which he feels in his troubled conscience. It is
necessary to give him a nearer view of the evil which he has committed, by
putting to him a still more home question. It is necessary to set full before
his eyes the mirror of the Divine law. ¡§Hast thou eaten of the tree whereof I
commanded thee that thou shouldest not eat?¡¨ My brethren, what instructive
lessons does this simple question contain! Let us pause here for a moment, and
direct our thoughts to this important subject. And, first, remark that God, in
order that ¡§He might be justified even when He condemned,¡¨ with a condescension
which was intended to redound to His own glory, pronounces no curse, nor even a
sentence of condemnation upon man, until He has first convicted him in his own
conscience. But this condescension of the Lord towards man was also intended to
subserve the happiness of the creature, by leading him to repentance, and,
through repentance, unto salvation. The Lord, by the question which He puts to
Adam, confronts him with His holy law. Man, the sinner, will then no longer be
able to withhold the confession of his guilt, under the plea of ignorance. ¡§I
commanded thee,¡¨ saith his Judge, ¡§thou knewest thy duty, the full extent of
thy responsibility, even the tremendous sanction of the law and the penalty of
its violation.¡¨ If, then, Adam perish, it is his own fault. But the Almighty,
in reminding man in so solemn a manner of the command which He had given him,
designed not merely to lead him to confess that he had sinned knowingly and
willingly, and that he had made no account of his awful responsibility, but
also to show him the real nature of his sin. ¡§Hast thou eaten of the tree
whereof I commanded thee that thou shouldest not eat?¡¨ I gave thee a command,
hast thou violated it? This is sin--the violation of the law of God,
disobedience, rebellion. That sin would have been the same, in point of nature,
whatever had been the object of the command. For us, as well as for Adam, for
every responsible being, sin is simply that which is opposed to the Divine law.
(L. Bonnet.)
Hast thou eaten of the
tree?--
Observation
I. MAN¡¦S
FROWARDNESS CANNOT OVERCOME GOD¡¦S LOVE AND PATIENCE.
II. GOD CAN
EASILY, WITHOUT ANY OTHER EVIDENCE, CONVINCE MEN BY THEMSELVES.
III. GOD SEES US
EVEN WHEN WE SEE NOT HIM, AND TAKES NOTICE OF ALL OUR WAYS, AND OBSERVES THEM.
Let all men walk as in God¡¦s presence, always beholding Him that is invisible (Hebrews 11:27), as sitting in His throne
of majesty and power, and observing the ways of men with those eyes which are
purer then to behold evil. This is indeed the only way--
1. To give unto God the honour due to His glorious attributes.
2. To keep our hearts low that we may walk humbly with our God, as
we are required (Micah 6:8).
3. To make us watchful in all our ways, that we may do nothing that
may provoke the eyes of His glory (see Exodus 23:21).
4. To encourage us in well-doing, when we know we walk in the sight
of our Master, who both approves us, and will reward us, when our ways please
Him (Psalms 18:24), and takes notice of a cup
of cold water bestowed in His name upon any of His children (Matthew 10:42), or the least faithful
service performed by a servant to his Master Ephesians 6:6), and will defend and stand
by us while we do Him service (Exodus 23:22-23).
IV. GOD ACCEPTS OF
NO CONFESSION TILL MEN SEE AND ACKNOWLEDGE THE SIN OF THEIR ACTIONS, AND THAT
TOO AS IT IS SIN.
1. Because without such a confession, God hath neither the honour of
His justice in punishing sin (wherefore Joshua requires Achan to confess his
sin, that he might give glory to God, Joshua 7:19), as David doth Psalms 51:4), nor of His mercy in
pardoning it.
2. We cannot otherwise be in any state of security after we have
sinned, but by suing out our pardon; which if He should grant, without our
condemning and abhorring of our own evil ways, it would neither further our own
reformation, nor justify God in pardoning such sins, as we have neither
acknowledged, nor grieved for at all.
V. MEN MUST BE
DEALT WITHAL IN PLAIN TERMS BEFORE THEY WILL BE BROUGHT TO ACKNOWLEDGE AND BE
MADE SENSIBLE OF THEIR SINS.
1. Because the heart is never affected with sin till it be
represented unto them in full proportion, but it may appear shameful and
odious.
2. Because all men being by nature lovers of themselves, do all that
they may to maintain their own innocency, and therefore endeavour what they can
to hide sin from their own eyes, as well as from other men, as being unwilling
to look upon their own shame.
VI. WHOSOEVER WILL
CONVINCE A MAN OF SIN MUST CHARGE HIM PARTICULARLY WITH THE VERY ACT IN WHICH
HE HATH SINNED. VII. IN SINFUL ACTS OUR HEARTS OUGHT ONLY TO BE FIXED UPON OUR
OWN ACTIONS, AND NOT UPON OTHER MEN¡¦S SOLICITATIONS AND PROVOCATIONS THEREUNTO.
1. Because of the proneness of our own hearts to shift off the evil
of our actions from ourselves, if possibly we can.
2. And while we do this, we harden our own hearts, and make them
insensible of our sins, which affect us not, when we think the evil proceeds
not from ourselves, but charge it upon other men that provoke us.
3. Other men¡¦s provocations cannot excuse us, seeing it is the
consent of our own hearts and nothing else that makes it a sin.
VIII. THE BREACH OF
GOD¡¦S COMMANDMENT IS THAT WHICH MAKES ANY ACT OF OURS A SIN.
1. Disobedience is not only an injury to God, but an injury to Him
in the highest degree, wherein His authority is rejected, His wisdom slighted,
His holiness despised, and His providence, and power, and justice, both in
rewarding and punishing not regarded.
2. Disobedience knows no bounds, no more than waters do that have
broken down their banks. (J. White, M. A.)
She gave me of the tree
and I did eat.
Adam¡¦s mean excuse
1. Adam, we find, was not
content to be in the image of God. He and his wife wanted to be as gods,
knowing good and evil. He wanted to be independent, and show that he knew what
was good for him: he ate the fruit which he was forbidden to eat, partly
because it was fair and well-tasted, but still more to show his own
independence. When he heard the voice of the Lord, when he was called out, and
forced to answer for himself, he began to make pitiful excuses. He had not a
word to say for himself. He threw the blame on his wife. It was all the woman¡¦s
fault--indeed, it was God¡¦s fault. ¡§The woman whom Thou gavest to be with me,
she gave me of the tree, and I did eat.¡¨
2. What Adam did once we have done a hundred times, and the mean
excuse which Adam made but once we make again and again. But the Lord has
patience with us, as He had with Adam, and does not take us at our word. He
knows our frame and remembers that we are but dust. He sends us out into the
world, as He sent Adam, to learn experience by hard lessons, to eat our bread
in the sweat of our brow till we have found out our own weakness and ignorance,
and have learned that we cannot stand alone, that pride and self-dependence
will only lead us to guilt and misery and shame and meanness; that there is no
other name under heaven by which we can be saved from them, but only the name
of our Lord Jesus Christ. (C. Kingsley, M. A.)
A tardy and reluctant confession
Here is, it is true, a confession of his sin. It comes out at
last, I did eat; but with what a circuitous, extenuating preamble, a preamble
which makes bad worse. The first word is, ¡§the woman,¡¨ aye the woman; it was
not my fault, but hers. The woman whom ¡§Thou gavest to be with me¡¨--It was not
me; it was Thou Thyself! If thou had¡¦st not given me this woman to be with me,
I should have continued obedient. Nay, and as if he suspected that the Almighty
did not notice his plea sufficiently, he repeats it emphatically: ¡§She gave me,
and I did eat!¡¨ Such a confession was infinitely worse than none. Yet such is
the spirit of fallen man to this day. It was not me . . . it was my wife, or my
husband, or my acquaintance, that persuaded me; or it was my situation in life,
in which Thou didst place me! Thus ¡§the foolishness of man perverteth his way,
and his heart fretteth against the Lord.¡¨ It is worthy of notice, that God
makes no answer to these perverse excuses. They were unworthy of an answer. The
Lord proceeds, like an aggrieved friend who would not multiply words: ¡§I see
how it is; stand aside!¡¨ (A. Fuller.)
Observations
I. NO MAN CAN
BEAR OUT SIN BEFORE GOD, HOWSOEVER HE MAY FOR AWHILE OUT-FACE IT BEFORE MEN.
II. WHEN MEN¡¦S
SINS ARE SO MANIFEST THAT THEY CANNOT DENY THEM, THEY WILL YET LABOUR BY
EXCUSES, TO EXTENUATE THEM WHAT THEY MAY.
III. A MAN, IN THIS
STATE OF CORRUPTION, RESPECTS NONE BUT HIMSELF, AND CARES NOT ON WHOM HE LAYS
THE BURTHEN, SO HE MAY EASE HIMSELF.
IV. SEDUCERS ARE
JUSTLY CHARGEABLE WITH ALL THE SINS COMMITTED BY THOSE THAT ARE SEDUCED BY
THEM. Beware, then, of that dangerous employment, to become a solicitor, or
factor in sin, and tremble at the very motion of it, and avoid carefully the
society of such agents--
1. Who carry the mark and character of Satan, who is styled by the
name of the tempter, and is the father of all that walk in that waver seducing.
2. Show themselves much more dangerous enemies to mankind than
murderers, who destroy only the body, whereas these lay wait for the soul Proverbs 22:25).
3. Proclaim war against God, whom they fight against, not only by
their own sins, but much more, by making a party against Him, by drawing as many
as they can procure, to be companions with them in their evils.
4. And therefore are above others, children of wrath, reserved unto
them by the just judgment of God, in a double proportion, according to the
measure of their sins acted by themselves, and furthered in other men by their
procurement.
V. IT IS USUAL
WITH MEN, WHEN THEMSELVES HAVE COMMITTED THE SIN, TO LAY THE BLAME OF IT IN
PART EVEN UPON GOD HIMSELF.
VI. IT IS A USUAL
PRACTICE WITH MANY MEN TO CAST GOD¡¦S BLESSINGS IN HIS TEETH WITH DISCONTENT.
1. Because, many times, common blessings suit not with men¡¦s private
ends and desires, so that we judge many things, which are blessings in
themselves, to be crosses unto us.
2. Because our unthankful hearts, being not satisfied in all that
they inordinately desire, scorn that which they have as a trifle, because it
answers not to the full of what is desired.
VII. MEN MAY EASILY
BY THEIR OWN FOLLY TURN THE MEANS ORDAINED BY GOD FOR THEIR GOOD INTO SNARES
FOR THEIR DESTRUCTION. Let it warn every one of us to use all the helps and
blessings which we receive from God with fear and trembling.
1. Purging our own hearts carefully, for to those which are defiled
nothing is pure (Titus 1:15).
2. Sanctifying unto ourselves the blessings themselves, by the word
and prayer (1 Timothy 4:5).
3. Using all things according to the rule laid down to us in the
Word, and referring them to the end for which He gives them, His own glory, and
the furthering of our sanctification, that He may bless us in those things, the
fruit whereof returns unto Himself at last.
VIII. IT IS VERY
DANGEROUS TO EMBRACE ANY MOTION PRESENTED UNTO US WITHOUT EXAMINING THE WARRANT
AND GROUND OF IT. (J. White, M. A.)
Adam¡¦s admission, not confession
He makes no direct and honest answer to God in freely confessing
that he had eaten; yet he cannot deny the deed, and therefore, in the very act
of admitting (not confessing), he casts the blame upon the woman--nay, upon
God, for giving him such a tempter. Here let us mark such truths as these.
1. The difference between admitting sin and confessing it. Adam
admits it--slowly and sullenly--but he does not confess it. He is confronted
witha Being in whose presence it would be vain to deny what he had done; but he
will go no father than he can help. He will tacitly concede when concession is
extorted from him, but he will make no frank acknowledgment. It is so with the
sinner still. He does precisely what Adam did; no more, till the Holy Spirit
lays His hand upon his conscience and touches all the springs of his being. Up
till that time he may utter extorted and reluctant concessions, but he will not
confess sin. He will not deal frankly with God.
2. The artfulness of an unhumbled sinner. Even while admitting sin,
he shakes himself free from blame; nay, he thrusts forward the name of another,
even before the admission comes forth, as if to neutralize it before it is
made. How artful! yet how common still! Ah! where do we find honest, unreserved
acknowledgment of sin? Nowhere, save in connection with pardon.
3. The self-justifying pride of the sinner. He admits as much of his
guilt as cannot be denied, and then takes credit to himself for what he has
done. He is resolved to take no more blame than he can help. Even in the blame
that he takes, he finds not only an extenuation, but a virtue, a merit; for he
fled because it was not seemly for him to stand before God naked! Nay, even in
so much of the blame as he takes, he must divide it with another, thus leaving
on himself but little guilt and some considerable degree of merit. Had it not
been for another, he would not have had to admit even the small measure of blame
that he does!
4. The hardened selfishness of the sinner. He accuses others to
screen himself. He does not hesitate to inculpate the dearest; he spares not
the wife of his bosom. Rather than bear the blame, he will fling it anywhere,
whoever may suffer. And all this in a moment! How instantaneous are the results
of sin!
5. The sinner¡¦s blasphemy and ingratitude to God. ¡§The woman whom
Thou gavest me,¡¨ said Adam. God¡¦s love in giving him a helpmeet is overlooked,
and the gift itself is mocked at.
6. The sinner¡¦s attempt to smooth over his deed. ¡§The woman gave me
the fruit, and I ate of it; that was all. Giving, receiving, and eating a
little fruit; that was all! What more simple, natural, innocent? How could I do
otherwise?¡¨ Thus he glosses over the sin. (H. Bonar, D. D.)
Excuses
¡§Say not thou,¡¨ says the son of Sirach, ¡§it is through the Lord
that I fell away; for thou oughtest not to do the things that He hateth. Say
not thou, He hath caused me to err.¡¨ This is just what Adam and Eve did say.
When accused of disobedience they retorted, and dared to blame God for their
sin. ¡§If only Thou hadst given me a wife proof against temptation,¡¨ says Adam.
¡§If only the serpent had never been created,¡¨ says Eve. Very similar are most
of the excuses we make. We blame the gifts that God gives us rather than
ourselves, and turn that free will which would make us only a little lower than
the angels if rightly used into a ¡§heritage of woe.¡¨ A man has a bad temper, is
careless about his home, and is led to eat the forbidden fruit of unlawful
pleasures. When his conscience asks him, ¡§Hast thou eaten of the tree whereof I
commanded thee that thou shouldest not eat?¡¨ he answers, ¡§It¡¦s all my wife¡¦s
fault. She provokes my temper by her extravagance, carelessness, and fondness
for staying away from home. She does not make my home home-like, so I am driven
to solace myself with unlawful pleasures.¡¨ ¡§The woman whom Thou gavest to be
with me, she gave me of the tree, and I did eat.¡¨ And wives are not less ready
to make the conduct of husbands an excuse for a low tone of thought and
religion. They ask how it is possible for them to retain their youthful desire
of serving Christ when their husbands make home wretched and sneer at
everything high and holy. ¡§Easy it is for others to be good, but for myself I
find that a wife cannot be better than her husband will allow her to be.¡¨ How
often is ill health pleaded as an excuse for bad temper and selfishness! If we
are rich, we allow ourselves to be idle and luxurious. If poor, we think that
while it is easy to be good on ten thousand a year, it is impossible for us to
resist the temptations of poverty. Is a man without self-restraint and
self-control? He thinks it enough to say that his passions are very strong. In
the time of joy and prosperity we are careless and thoughtless. When sorrow
comes to us, we become hard and unbelieving, and we think that the joy and the
sorrow should quite excuse us. Again, evil-doers say that no man could do
otherwise were he in their position, that there is no living at their trade
honestly, that their health requires this and that indulgence, that nobody
could be religious in the house in which they live, and so on. If God wanted us
to fight the good fight of faith in other places and under other circumstances,
He would move us; but He wishes us to begin the battle where we are, and not
elsewhere. There subdue everything that stands in conflict with the law of
conscience, and the law of love, and the law of purity, and the law of truth.
Begin the fight wherever God sounds the trumpet, and He will give you grace,
that as your day is, so your strength shall be. As long as people say, ¡§I
cannot help it,¡¨ they will not help it; but if they will only try their best
they will be able to say, ¡§I can do all things through Christ who strengtheneth
me.¡¨ On comparing the excuses which we modern sinners make with those
attributed in the text to the first sinners, Adam and Eve, we find one
circumstance characterizing them both. We, as well as they, virtually say, that
only for difficulty and temptation we would be very good. And yet how absurd it
would be to give a Victoria Cross for bravery in the absence of the enemy. We
would all laugh if we heard a man greatly praised for being honest and sober
when in prison, because we would know that it was impossible for him to be
anything else. It is just because the Christian life is not an easy thing that
at our baptism we are signed with the sign of the Cross, in token that we shall
have to fight manfully under His banner against sin, the world, and the devil.
(E. J. Hardy, M. A.)
Adam¡¦s vain excuse for his sin
We have here the antiquity of apologies: we find them almost as
ancient as the world itself. For no sooner had Adam sinned, but he runneth
behind the bush.
I. First, we will
anatomize and dissect this excuse of Adam¡¦s.
II. Next we will
look into ourselves; take some notice of our own hearts, and of those excuses
which we commonly frame.
III. And then, to
make an exact anatomy lecture, we will lay open the danger of the disease, that
we may learn to avoid what was fatal to our parents,, and, though we sin with
Adam, yet not with Adam to excuse our sin. Of these in their order.
I. ¡§And the man
said, The woman,¡¨ etc. I told you this was no answer, but an excuse; for indeed
an excuse is no answer. An answer must be fitted to the question which is
asked; but this is quite beside it. The question here is, ¡§Hast thou eaten of
the forbidden tree?¡¨ The answer is wide from the purpose, an accusation of the
woman, yea, of God Himself: ¡§The woman whom Thou gavest to be with me, she gave
me of the tree, and I did eat.¡¨ ¡§I have eaten,¡¨ by itself, had been a wise
answer; but it is, ¡§I did eat,¡¨ but ¡§the woman gave it,¡¨ a confession with an
extenuation; and such a confession is far worse than a flat denial. His apology
upbraideth him, and he condemneth himself with his excuse.
1. For, first, Mulier dedit, ¡§The woman gave it me,¡¨ weigh it
as we please, is an aggravation of his sin. We may measure sin by the
temptation: it is always the greatest when the temptation is least. A great sin
it would have been to have eaten of the forbidden fruit though an angel had
given it: what is it, then, when it is the woman that giveth it? What a shame
do we count it for a man of perfect limbs to be beaten by a cripple! for a son
of Anak to be chased by a grasshopper! (Numbers 13:33); for Xerxes¡¦ army, which
drank up the sea, to be beaten out of Greece by three hundred Spartans!
Certainly he deserveth not power who betrayeth it to weakness. ¡§The woman gave
it me,¡¨ then, was a deep aggravation of the man¡¦s transgression.
2. Again: It is but, ¡§The woman gave it.¡¨ And a gift, as we commonly
say, may be either taken or refused; and so it is in our power whether it shall
be a gift or no. Had the man been unwilling to have received, the woman could
have given him nothing. ¡§The gods themselves have not strength enough to strive
against necessity¡¨; but he is weaker than a man who yieldeth where there is no
necessity. ¡§The woman gave it me,¡¨ then, is but a weak apology.
3. Further yet: What was the gift? Was it of so rich a value as to
countervail the loss of paradise? No; it was ¡§the fruit of the tree.¡¨ We call
it ¡§an apple¡¨: some would have it to be an Indian fig. The Holy Ghost
vouchsafeth not once to name it, or to tell us what it was. Whatever it was, it
was but fruit, and of that tree of which man was forbidden to eat upon penalty
of death (Genesis 2:17). ¡§An evil bargain is an
eyesore, because it always upbraideth him with folly who made it.¡¨ And such a
bargain here had our first father made. He had bought gravel for bread, wind
for treasure, ¡§hope for a certainty,¡¨ a lie for truth, an apple for paradise.
The woman, the gift, the gift of an apple--these are brought in for an excuse,
but are indeed a libel.
4. Further still: To aggrandize Adam¡¦s fault, consider how the
reason of his excuse doth render it most unreasonable. Why doth he make so busy
a defence? Why doth he shift all the blame from himself upon the woman? Here
was no just detestation of the offence, but only fear of punishment.
5. In the last place: That which maketh his apology worse than a
lie, and rendereth his excuse inexcusable, is, that he removeth the fault from
the woman on God Himself. Not the woman alone is brought in, but ¡§The woman
whom Thou gavest me, she gave me of the tree, and I did eat.¡¨ Which indeed is a
plain sophism: that is made ¡§a cause which is not a cause,¡¨ but an occasion
only. It is a common axiom, ¡§That which produceth the cause, produceth also the
effect of that cause¡¨; and it is true in causes and effects essentially
co-ordinate. But here it is not so. God, indeed, gave Adam the woman; but He
gave him not the woman to give him the apple. ¡§He gave her for a companion, not
for a tempter¡¨; and He gave her not to do that which He had so plainly
forbidden.
II. And now I wish
that the leaves of those trees among which Adam hid himself had cast their
shadow only upon him. But we may say, as St. Ambrose doth of the story of
Naboth and Ahab, ¡§This history of Adam is as ancient as the world; but is fresh
in practice, and still revived by the sons of Adam.¡¨ We may therefore be as
bold to discover our own nakedness as we have been to pluck our first father
from behind the bush. We have all sinned ¡§after the similitude of Adam¡¦s
transgression,¡¨ and we are as ready to excuse sin as to commit it. Do we only
excuse our sin? No; many times we defend it by the gospel, and even sanctify it
by the doctrine of Christ Himself. Superstition we commend for reverence,
profaneness for Christian liberty, indiscretion for zeal, will worship for
obedience. To come close home therefore, we will stay a little, and draw the
parallel, and show the similitude that is betwixt Adam and his sons. We shall
still find a Mulier dedit to be our plea as well as his. Some ¡§woman,¡¨
something weaker than ourselves, overthroweth us, and then is taken in for an
excuse. ¡§We all favour ourselves, and our vices too; and what we do willingly
we account as done out of necessity of nature.¡¨ If we taste the forbidden
fruit, we are ready to say, ¡§The woman gave it us.¡¨ Again: it is some gift,
some proffer, that prevaileth with it, something ¡§pleasant to the eye,¡¨
something that flattereth the body and tickleth the fancy, something that
insinuateth itself through our senses, and so by degrees worketh upward, and at
last gaineth power over that which should ¡§command¡¨--our reason and understanding.
Whatsoever it is, it is but a gift, and may be refused. Further: As it is
something presented in the manner of a gift which overcometh us, so commonly it
is but an apple; something that cannot make us better, but may make us worse;
something offered to our hope, which we should fear; something that cannot be a
gift till we have sold ourselves, nor be dear to us till we are vile and base
to ourselves; at the best but a gilded temptation; an apple with an
inscription, with an Eritis sicut dii, upon it; with some promise, some
show, and but a show and glimpse, of some great blessing; but earthy and
fading, yet varnished with some resemblance of heaven and eternity. Lastly. The
Tu dedisti will come in too. For, be it the world, God created it; be it
wealth, He openeth His hand and giveth it; be it honour, He raiseth the poor
out of the dust; be it our flesh, He fashioneth it; be it our soul, He breathed
it into us; be it our understanding, it is a spark of His Divinity; be it our
will, He gave it us; be it our affections, they are the impressions of His
hand. But, be it our infirmities, we are too ready to say that that is a woman
too of God¡¦s making. But God never gave it. For, suppose the flesh be weak, yet
the spirit is strong. ¡§If the spirit be stronger than the flesh,¡¨ saith
Tertullian, ¡§it is our fault if the weaker side prevail.¡¨ And therefore let us
not flatter ourselves, saith he, because we read in Scripture that ¡§the flesh
is weak¡¨; for we read also that ¡§the spirit is ready¡¨ (Matthew 26:41); ¡§that we might know that
we are to obey, not the flesh, but the spirit.¡¨
III. And thus ye
see what a near resemblance and likeness there is between Adam and his
posterity; that we are so like him in this art of apologizing that we cannot
easily tell whether had most skill to paint sin with an excuse, the father or
the children. Adam behind the bush, Adam with a Mulier dedit, is a fair
picture of every sinner; but it is not easy to say that it doth fully express
him. But now, to draw towards a conclusion, that we may learn ¡§to cast off the
old man,¡¨ and to avoid that danger that was fatal to him, we must remember that
we are not only of the first Adam, but also of the second; not only ¡§of the earth,
earthy,¡¨ but also of ¡§the Lord from heaven: and as we have borne the image of
the earthy, so we must also bear the image of the heavenly¡¨ (1 Corinthians 15:47-49). We must remember
that we are born with Christ, that we are baptized and buried with Christ, and
that we must rise with Christ; that the woman was given to be in subjection,
the flesh to be subdued by us, and the world to be trodden under our feet; that
we must not count these as enforcements and allurements before sin, lest we
take them up as excuses after sin; that we must not yield to them as stronger
than ourselves, that we may not need to run and shelter ourselves under them in
time of trouble.
1. To conclude: my advice shall be--First, that of Arsenius the
hermit: ¡§Command Eve, and beware of the serpent, and thou shalt be safe; but,
if thou wilt be out of the reach of danger, do not so much as look towards the
forbidden tree.¡¨
2. But, if thou hast sinned, if thou hast tasted of the forbidden
fruit, if thou hast meddled with the accursed thing, then, as Joshua speaketh
to Achan, ¡§My son, give, I pray thee, glory to the Lord God of Israel, and make
confession unto Him¡¨ (Joshua 7:19). Run not behind the bush,
study not apologies; make not the woman, who should help thee to stand, an
excuse of thy fall; nor think that paint nor curtains can hide thy sin from Him
whose ¡§eyes are ten thousand times brighter than the sun¡¨ (Sirach 23:19), and in whose bosom thou
art, even when thou runnest into the thicket of excuses. No; ¡§Give glory to
God,¡¨ that God may seal a pardon to thee. Open thy sin by confession to God,
and the mercy of God will hide it: condemn it, and judge thyself for it; and
thy excuse is made, thou shalt never be judged for it by the Lord: lay it open
before the Lord, and He will blot it out forever. (A. Farindon, D. D.)
The resistance of temptation
You will observe how in this expression Adam directs attention to
Eve as the more guilty of the two; as, if it had not been for her, had she not
pressed and persuaded him to eat, that awful and fatal fruit would have remained
untouched; as if she, the first to disobey, had urged him on, she leading, and
he only following; she daring to pluck, to eat, and to give, and he only
consenting to receive what she had taken. And no doubt he stated the case as it
really was; the guilt did not begin with him; Eve led the way; her foot first
crossed the forbidden line. But the question for us to consider is this: Did
this defence, strictly true as it was, and in some sort placing with justice
the greater blame on her, free him from condemnation in God¡¦s sight? Nay,
however it was that he came to sin, sin was condemned in him; the sentence was
passed, in all its awfulness, that he should die; there was no lesser death, no
milder punishment decreed against him. When Eve enticed, it was his part to
have withstood, to have resisted all the beguiling words; it was his to have
refused the fruit, to have held back his hand, to have kept his hold of the
commandments of God; concession to her was sin; and whether or not the greater
blame was his, there was blame enough to bring down upon himself the awful
vengeance of the Lord, and the awful decree of death. And should we not dwell
upon this point, and see how, when Adam pleaded his wife¡¦s first step in sin as
the cause and excuse for his, God¡¦s wrath fell upon him as well as her? For in
this, as in all former times, men often weave the same flimsy web of
self-defence, and think to screen themselves behind others who have led them
into sin, to lighten their load of iniquity, and to blunt the sharper edge of
the sword of punishment. The young, when pursuing youthful sins, point to the
young already before them on the same sinful course, saying, ¡§See you not that
it was always so, that I am but as the young have ever been, that I am only
doing what has been done by those before me?¡¨ The middle-aged, busied with the
world, and in their worldly dealings showing a sharp, a grasping, an
unscrupulous spirit, wanting in all that is generous, simple, and high-minded,
point to what they call ¡§the ways of the world,¡¨ shelter themselves behind the
customs of the age, the habits of other men, the examples that are around them,
saying that others gave them of this low standard of morals, these sharp ways
of dealing, these lax principles, and they did eat; that they did not of
themselves begin thus to deal, thus to push their way; that they even wish
things were different, but that they found the world a pushing world, and that
they only followed in the train, doing what others did, and following in the
lead. But what is the use of such defences of ourselves? How will this bear the
light? How do we clear ourselves by such means as this? If it be sin to tempt,
it is also sin to yield; if it be sin to give of forbidden fruit, it is also
sin to take; if it be sin to Suggest evil counsel, it is also sin to follow it.
It is this very point that the ease of Adam urges on us all. It may be our part
to hear evil counsel, to have evil friends, to live in an atmosphere of evil
principles, to be offered in some form other forbidden fruit, to see others
eating of it themselves; but are we at once to be led by the evil friend, to
act on the evil advice, to imbibe the evil principles, to yield to the evil
ways which others tread? Nay, we are called to the very opposite course; we are
called to resist evil, to quit ourselves like men, to endure temptation, to
drive off tempters, to bear witness to our Saviour, to confess Him in the world
by opposing the spirit of the world. Yes, this often is our part, and to this
we are called by God, to bear witness to the truth, to be surrounded by
tempters and temptations, wrong views, wrong ways of going on, wrong habits,
unchristian conduct, unchristian patterns, and, amid all this darkness of the
world, to see by faith the true and narrow way, not to be beguiled, but to
steer our vessel straight. We each, in one sense, stand alone. Every man has
his own appointed course, to which the Spirit leads him on; from which, if he
would be saved, he must not swerve to the right hand or to the left, whatever
influences may be at work on either side. (Bishop Armstrong.)
False excuses for sin
The first thing which strikes us, on the perusal of this passage,
is the extreme readiness and proneness of man to urge an excuse for sin, and to
shift the blame from himself upon some other person or thing. One of the
commonest grounds on which men rest their apology for irreligion and laxity is
a defective education. They were not trained in youth to the way wherein they
should go; parents did not teach it, did not walk in the way before them.
Others, again, are thinking to throw the fault of their disobedience or their
sinful habits upon the circumstances in which they are placed, upon their
profession or trade, upon the maxims and habits of society, upon the companions
with whom they must associate. And it is undeniable that many strong
temptations are thus presented. But this can by no means justify a yielding to
sin. Not a few there are who account for the frequency of their offences from
an untowardness of disposition and temper, from the violence of passion, or
from bodily infirmities; and there are allowances to be made on these grounds;
but no free pardon, no license hereby for sin. (J. Slade, M. A.)
Man¡¦s readiness to invent excuse for sin
A traveller in Venezuela illustrators the readiness of men to lay
their faults on the locality, or on anything rather than on themselves, by the
story of a hard drinker who came home one night in such a condition that he
could not for some time find his hammock. When this feat was accomplished, he
tried in vain to get off his big riding boots. After many fruitless efforts, he
lay down in his hammock, and soliloquized aloud, ¡§Well, I have travelled all
the world over; I lived five years in Cuba, four in Jamaica, five in Brazil; I have
travelled through Spain and Portugal, and been in Africa, but I never yet was
in such an abominable country as this, where a man is obliged to go to bed with
his boots on.¡¨ Commonly enough are we told by evil-doers in excuse for their
sins that no man could do otherwise were he in their position; that there is no
living at their trade honestly; that in such a street shops must be open on a
Sunday; that their health required an excursion to Brighton on the Sabbath
because their labours were so severe; and so on, all to the same effect, and
about as truthful as the soliloquy of the drunkard of Venezuela. (C. H.
Spurgeon.)
Verses 13-21
What is this that thou hast done?
--
The general results of the Fall
I. ETERNAL ENMITY
BETWEEN SATAN AND HUMANITY (Genesis 3:14).
1. This curse was uttered in reference to Satan.
2. This address is different from that made to Adam and Eve.
3. There was to commence a severe enmity and conflict between Satan
and the human race.
II. THE SORROW AND
SUBJECTION OF FEMALE LIFE.
1. The sorrow of woman consequent upon the Fall.
2. The subjection of woman consequent upon the Fall.
3. The subjection of woman consequent upon the Fall gives no
countenance to the degrading manner in which she is treated in heathen
countries.
III. THE ANXIOUS
TOIL OF MAN, AND THE COMPARATIVE UNPRODUCTIVENESS OF HIS LABOUR.
1. The anxious and painful toil of man consequent upon the Fall.
2. The comparative unproductiveness of the soil consequent upon the
Fall.
3. The sad departure of man from the earth by death consequent upon
the Fall.
IV. THE GRAND AND
MERCIFUL INTERPOSITION OF JESUS CHRIST WAS RENDERED NECESSARY BY THE FALL.
Lessons:
1. The terrible influences of sin upon an individual life.
2. The influences of sin upon the great communities of the world.
3. The severe devastation of sin.
4. The love of God the great healing influence of the world¡¦s
sorrow.
5. How benignantly God blends hope with penalty. (J. S. Exell, M.
A.)
The first sin
I. THE RECORD
BEFORE US IS THE HISTORY OF THE FIRST SIN. It needed no revelation to tell us
that sin is, that mankind is sinful. Without, within, around, and inside us, is
the fact, the experience, the evidence, the presence of sin. It is sin which
makes life troublous and gives death its sting. The revelation of the Fall
tells of an entrance, of an inburst of evil into a world all good, into a being
created upright--tells, therefore, of a nature capable of purity, of an enemy
that may be expelled, and of a holiness possible because natural. From man¡¦s
fall we infer a fall earlier yet and more mysterious. Once sin was not; and
when it entered man¡¦s world it entered under an influence independent, not
inherent.
II. THE FIRST SIN
IS ALSO THE SPECIMEN SIN. It is in this sense, too, the original sin, that all
other sins are copies of it. Unbelief first, then disobedience; then
corruption, then self-excusing; then the curse and the expulsion. Turn the
page, and you shall find a murder!
III. THE ORIGINAL
SIN IS ALSO THE INFECTIOUS SIN. Not one man of all the progeny of Adam has
drawn his first breath or his latest in an atmosphere pure and salubrious. Before,
behind, around, and above there has been the heritage of weakness, the presence
and pressure of an influence in large part evil. Fallen sons of a fallen
forefather, God must send down His hand from above if we are to be rescued ever
out of these deep, these turbid waters. (Dean Vaughan.)
The moral and renal results of the Fall
I. ITS MORAL
RESULTS.
1. Separation from nature (Genesis 3:7). Things naturally innocent
and pure become tainted by sin. The worst misery a man can bring on himself by
sin is that those things which to pure minds bring nothing but enjoyment are
turned for him into fuel for evil lusts and passions, and light the flames of
hell within his soul.
2. Separation from God (Genesis 3:8). Let the sceptic enjoy his
merriment. To us there is something most touching in the statement that to our
first parents in the most hallowed hour of the whole day the voice of God
seemed like the thundering of the Divine anger. A child might interpret that
rightly to himself. When he has done wrong he is afraid, he dares not hear a
sound; a common noise, in the trembling insecurity in which he lives, seems to
him God¡¦s voice of thunder. To the apostles the earthquake at Philippi was a
promise of release from prison; to the sinful jailer, a thing of judgment and
wrath--¡§Sirs, what shall I do to be saved?¡¨
3. Selfishness (Genesis 3:12-13). The culprits are
occupied entirely with their own hearts; each denies the guilt which belongs to
each; each throws the blame upon the other. The agriculturist distinguishes
between two sorts of roots--those which go deep down into the ground without
dividing, and those which divide off into endless fibrils and shoots.
Selfishness is like the latter kind; it is the great root of sin from which
others branch out--falsehood, cowardice, etc.
II. THE PENAL
CONSEQUENCES.
1. Those inflicted on the man.
2. Those inflicted on the woman. In sorrow she was to bring forth
children, and her desire was to be to her husband, and he was to rule over her.
This penalty of suffering for others, which is the very triumph of the Cross,
know we not its blessing? Know we not that in proportion as we suffer for one
another we love that other; that in proportion as the mother suffers for her
child, she is repaid by that love? Know we not that that subjection which man
calls curtailment of liberty is in fact a granting of liberty, of that gospel
liberty which is born of obedience to a rule which men venerate and love? (F.
W. Robertson, M. A.)
Lessons of the Fall
1. It is profoundly
significant that this narrative traces the first sin to an external tempter.
Evil does not spring spontaneously in the unfallen heart. Sin is not, as some
would have it, a necessary step in man¡¦s development, nor does it spring from
his own nature; it is an importation.
2. Whatever more may be taught by the serpent form of the tempter,
we may safely regard it as a kind of parable of the nature of evil. The reptile
is a symbol both of temptation and of sin. Its colours, sometimes brilliant,
but always weird; its lithe, insinuating motions; its slimy track, its sudden
spring; its sting so slender, and leaving so minute a puncture, but so deadly;
its poison, which kills, not by hideous laceration, as in a lion¡¦s rending, but
by passing the fatal drop into the very life blood--all these points have their
parallels in the sinuous approaches, the horrid fascinations, the unnoticed
wounds, and the fatal poison of sin. If we turn to the story, we find that it
falls into three parts.
I. THE SUBTLE
APPROACHES OF TEMPTATION. Notice that we have here, however, a picture of the
way in which a pure nature was led away. The way taken with one which has
already fallen may be much shorter. There is no need for elaborate and gradual
approaches then, but it is often enough to show the bait, and the sinful heart
dashes at it. Here more caution has to be used.
1. First comes an apparently innocent question, ¡§Is it so that God
has said, Ye shall not eat?¡¨ The tempter might as well have asked whether the
sun shone at midday. To cloud the clear light of duty with the mists of doubt
is the beginning of falling. A sin which springs with a rush and a roar is less
dangerous than one which slides in scarcely noticed. When the restrictions of
law begin to look harsh, and we begin to ask ourselves, ¡§Is it really the case
that we are debarred from all these things over the hedge there?¡¨ the wedge has
been driven a good way in. Beware of tampering with the plain restrictions of
recognized duty, and of thinking that doubt may be admissible as to them.
2. The next speech of the tempter dares more. Questioning gives
place to assertion. There is a fiat lie, which the tempter knows to be a lie,
to begin with. There is a truth in the statement that their eyes will be opened
to know good and evil, though the knowledge will not be, as he would have Eve believe,
a blessing, but a misery. So his very truth is more a lie than a truth. And
there is a third lie, worse than all, in painting the perfect love of God,
which delights most in making men like Himself, as grudging them a joy, and
keeping it for Himself. In all these points we have here a picture of sin¡¦s
approaches to the yielding will. Strange that tricks so old, and so often found
out, should yet have power to deceive us to our ruin. But so it is, and
thousands of young men and women today are listening to these old threadbare
lies as if they were glorious new truths, fit to be the pole stars of life!
II. THE FATAL
DEED. The overwhelming rush of appetite, which blinds to every consideration
but present gratification of the senses, is wonderfully set forth in the brief
narrative of the sin. The motives are put at full length. The tree was ¡§good
for food¡¨; that is one sense satisfied. It was ¡§pleasant to the eyes¡¨; that is
another. If we retain the translation of the Authorized and Revised Versions, it
was ¡§to be desired to make one wise¡¨; that appealed to a more subtle wish. But
the confluent of all these streams made such a current as swept the feeble will
clean away; and blind, dazed, deafened by the rush of the stream, Eve was
carried over the falls, as a man might be over Niagara. This is the terrible
experience of everyone who has yielded to temptation. For a moment all
consequences are forgotten, all obligations silenced, every restraint snapped
like rotten ropes. No matter what God has said, no matter what mischief will
come, no matter for conscience or reason; let them all go! The tyrannous
craving which has got astride of the man urges him on blindly. All it cares for
is its own satisfaction. What of remorse or misery may come after are nothing to
it.
III. THE TRAGIC
CONSEQUENCES. These are two fold:
1. The change on the physical world which followed on man¡¦s sin is a
distinct doctrine of both Old and New Testaments, and is closely connected with
the prophecies of the future in both. Here it comes into view only as involving
the necessity of a life of toilsome conflict with the sterile and weed-bearing
soil. The simple life of the husbandman alone is contemplated here, but the law
laid down is wide as the world.
2. The sentence of death is repeated in unambiguous terms. Physical
death, and nothing else, is meant by the words. Observe the significant silence
as to what is to become of the other part of man. The words distinctly refer to
Genesis 2:7, but nothing is said now as
to the living soul. The curse of death is markedly limited to the body. The
very silence is a veiled hint of immortality.
God is death. When He withdraws His hand from the body it dies;
when the soul withdraws itself from Him it dies.
3. Finally, the temptation in the garden reminds us of the
temptation in the wilderness. Christ had a sorer temptation than Adam. The one
needed nothing; the other was hungered. The one had nothing of terror or pain
hanging over him, which he would escape by yielding; the other had His choice
between winning His kingdom by the cross, and getting rule by the easy path of
taking evil for His good. The one fell, and, as the most godless scientists are
now preaching, necessarily transmitted a depraved nature to his descendants.
The other stood, conquered, and gives of His spirit to all who trust Him. (A.
Maclaren, D. D.)
Observations
I. NO ACTOR IN
ANY SIN CAN ESCAPE GOD¡¦S DISCOVERY.
1. He is able to search into the deepest secrets, seeing all things
are naked in His sight (Hebrews 4:13).
2. It concerns Him to do it, that the Judge of all the world may
appear and be known to do right, to which purpose He must necessarily have a
distinct knowledge, both of the offenders and of the quality and measure of
their offences, that everyone¡¦s judgment may be proportioned in number, weight,
and measure, according to their deeds.
II. MEN¡¦S SINS
MUST AND SHALL BE SO FAR MANIFESTED AS MAY CONDUCE TO THE ADVANCING OF GOD¡¦S
GLORY. Let it be our care--
1. To take heed of dishonouring God by committing of any sin.
2. If by human infirmity we fall into any sin by which the name of
God may be blasphemed or the honour of it impaired, let us endeavour to take
off the dishonour done to Him by laying all the shame upon ourselves.
III. A GOOD MAN¡¦S
HEART OUGHT TO BE DEEPLY AND TENDERLY AFFECTED WITH THE SENSE OF HIS OWN SIN.
Such a manner of the affecting of the heart by the sense of sin--
1. Brings much honour to God.
2. Proclaims our own innocence (2 Corinthians 7:11).
3. Moves God to compassion towards us (Joel 2:17).
4. Furthers our reformation.
5. Makes us more watchful over our ways for time to come.
IV. THE SEDUCING,
ESPECIALLY OF ONE¡¦S NEAREST FRIENDS, IS A FOUL, AND SHOULD BE AN HEART-BREAKING
SIN.
V. SIN AND THE
ENTICEMENTS THEREUNTO ARE DANGEROUS DECEITS AND SO WILL PROVE TO BE AT THE
LAST. Now this deceit of sin is two fold. First, in proposing evil under the
name of good, calling light darkness and darkness light (Isaiah 5:20), or at least the shadows of
good, instead ofthat which is really and truly good, like the passing of gilded
brass for perfect gold. Secondly, in proposing unto us a reward in an evil way,
which we shall never find (see Proverbs 1:13; Proverbs 1:18), as they are justly
accounted deceivers who promise men largely that which they never make good in
performance. (J. White, M. A.)
Verse 14
Upon thy belly shalt thou go
The Divine sentence on the serpent
1.
I
lay down the position that no punishment in the way of physical degradation was
inflicted by God in His sentence upon the serpent tribe. No doubt this idea has
been held by most of those in past days who knew very little of natural history
or of science; and it is held still by some who have no capacity of understanding
scientific evidence. They cherish still, it may be, some strange notion that
serpents, once upon a time, walked upright and ate fruits in an innocent and
becoming manner. I cannot argue with such. The testimony of science on this
subject is so absolutely overwhelming, that one might just as well call in
question the revolution of the earth round the sun, or the circulation of the
blood. Unless all science is a lie, there were plenty of serpents on the earth
ages before man was made, and these serpents precisely like the present ones in
their general construction. If our serpents may be said to go on their bellies
and eat dust, so might those. From the creation of the world--long ages ago--it
has been ¡§their nature to.¡¨ Further, I must maintain that the structure and
habits of the serpent tribe bear no trace of any designed degradation. To the
eye of one who has studied the ¡§ways of God¡¨ in His fair and marvellous book of
nature, who has learnt to recognize on every hand the exquisite adaptation of
each tribe to the place of each, the serpent is as beautiful and perfect a
piece of workmanship as any other creature. Admitting the fact (which no
thoughtful observer could deny) that the animal tribes were made to prey upon
one another to a great extent, and so to maintain the balance of life upon the
earth.
admitting
this palpable fact, it is obvious that the serpent is most wonderfully adapted
to play his own part and fulfil his own ends upon the earth. There is no more
degradation about his means of progression, surprisingly swift and easy as it
is, than about the downward swoop of an eagle, the ponderous rush of a lion, or
the noiseless flight of an owl. Nor is his food in reality of a more disgusting
nature than theirs; the creatures which he swallows, great or small, are as
much his natural food as their prey is to the eagle, the lion, and the owl. He
would not condescend to eat carrion like the vulture or the jackal. It may
indeed be true, as St. Paul seems to teach us, that the whole creation suffers
in some little-understood way from the fall of man; and no doubt the lower
animals often suffer severely from the sinful passions of man; but to
acknowledge this is a totally different thing from acknowledging that God
deliberately and judicially decreed degradation and punishment upon a creature
which had not really sinned. Shall not the Judge of all the earth do right?
2. I lay down the position, which I think no one will seriously
dispute, that the real tempter was not the serpent at all, but the devil. It is
true that there is no hint of this in Genesis, and this is very important to my
argument. Had we no other information, we should have to assume that the
serpent was in truth an intelligent being, supremely wicked, and capable of
pursuing a most crafty policy. But the testimony of other Scriptures is clear
and positive that it was the devil who tempted Eve (2 Corinthians 11:3; Revelation 12:9; Revelation 20:2; John 8:44). There can be but one way of
understanding the inspired testimony: the devil availed himself of the form of
the serpent, and of his known character for natural cunning, to speak by his
mouth, and so to gain a safer audience. Just as the demoniacs of the New
Testament and the evil spirits who possessed them seemed to have a mixed
personality which is reflected in the very words of the Evangelists, so the
tempter and the serpent remain, as it were, confounded, and the one is called
by the name of the other--¡§that old serpent, which is the devil and Satan.¡¨
Nevertheless, the witness is clear that the devil was the real agent in the
temptation of our first parents.
3. I conclude from the foregoing positions, and conclude with
confidence, that the serpent was not really cursed at all, while the devil was.
All I know of God tells me that He would not--all I know of nature tells me
that He did not--inflict punishment on the unwitting victim of another¡¦s craft.
All I know from reason or from revelation of His ways assures me that He would
not and did not leave unpunished the malice which wrecked (for the time) His
fairest work.
4. I proceed to argue that while the form of the sentence was
accommodated to the outward and visible form of which the tempter made use, the
real meaning of the sentence applied to the tempter himself, and to the tempter
alone. To the educated eye, as I have said, there is no trace of degradation
about the structure or habits of the serpent; he does not in any real sense go
upon his belly or eat dust. But to the untutored eye of the ¡§unlearned,¡¨ i.e.,
to the vast bulk of mankind in all ages, he appears to do both, and he is
an object of natural loathing and disgust. As the upright position of man seems
to raise him in dignity above the general level of animal life, so the prone
and sinuous position of the snake seems to sink him below that level; having
nothing degrading about it in reality, it is yet the accepted symbol of
contempt. We, who are unacquainted with snakes, speak of a man as a ¡§reptile¡¨
if we wish to express utter contempt and abhorrence of his ways; but a
¡§reptile¡¨ is one that ¡§goes upon his belly.¡¨ Again, every student of nature
knows that the serpent does not eat dust, but small animals which he often
catches out of the dust and dirt; but, because he has neither hands nor
anything in the nature of hands, he appears to swallow with his food a great
deal of dust and dirt. The great difficulty we have to encounter in this Divine
sentence on the serpent is that it is not really fulfilled in the literal
serpent, though it is apparently. This difficulty seems to me to vanish wholly
when we perceive that it is really fulfilled in the mystical serpent, the
devil.
5. I am greatly confirmed in this understanding of the phrase by
what we read in Isaiah 65:25. In that passage we are told
that in the time of the ¡§new heavens and new earth¡¨ ¡§dust shall be the
serpent¡¦s meat.¡¨ It makes no difference to my argument whether we understand
the prophecy to refer to the millennium or (as I think) to the future world. No
one surely will maintain that serpents are to eat dust in that blessed state.
Why should the unfortunate creatures be so ill-fated? Is it not clearly to be
spiritually interpreted, that then, as now, only more clearly and absolutely
then than now, disgrace, disappointment, and disgust will be the portion of the
tempter and accuser? And if this ¡§eating dust¡¨ on the part of the serpent be of
spiritual interpretation in Isaiah, why should it not be the same in Genesis?
It is admitted by all that the latter part of the sentence must be applied
parabolically to the tempter himself--why not the former part also, in which
the parable is quite as simple and as easy to read?
6. Two other conclusions seem to be necessary in order to complete
the subject, and in order to ¡§justify¡¨ on every side the heavenly ¡§Wisdom¡¨
which pronounced and recorded this ancient doom.
Observations
I. GOD MANY TIMES
WILL NOT SO MUCH AS REASON THE CASE WITH SUCH AS HE DESTINES TO DESTRUCTION.
II. WHOMSOEVER
HATH A HAND IN ANY SIN SHALL BE SURE TO HAVE A SHARE IN THE PUNISHMENT.
1. God is able both to convince and punish; and nothing can be hid
from His pure eye, or escape His revenging hand.
2. The respect to His own honour necessarily moves Him to declare
Himself to be just, in rendering to every man according to his deeds, and
according to his works (Psalms 62:12).
III. EVERY
INSTRUMENT IN THE ACTING OF SIN, AND WHATSOEVER IS DEFILED THEREBY, IS LIABLE
TO GOD¡¦S CURSE.
IV. ONE MAN¡¦S
PUNISHMENT OUGHT TO BE OTHER MEN¡¦S INSTRUCTION. Whether inflicted by men in a
course of justice (Deuteronomy 13:14), or laid on by God¡¦s
immediate hand (Zephaniah 3:5-6).
V. GOD LAYS HIS
JUDGMENT UPON NO CREATURE BUT UPON JUST DESERTS. Reason--
1. His nature; fury is not in Him (Isaiah 27:4), but long suffering and
abundant goodness (Exodus 34:6; Psalms 103:8; Psalms 103:13).
2. Respect to His own honour, infinitely advanced by manifesting His
justice, mercy, faithfulness, and truth, which appears when He dispenseth all
His administrations according to men¡¦s deserts.
3. Neither could He otherwise encourage men to His service, but by
accepting and rewarding them in well-doing, and punishing only their errors,
and that too with so much moderation that it tends only to their good, and not
to their destruction.
VI. GOD¡¦S CURSE
UPON ANY CREATURE IS THE FOUNTAIN OF ALL PLAGUES AND MISERIES.
VII. IT IS USUAL,
WITH GOD IN HIS JUDGMENTS SO TO ORDER THEM THAT THEY MAY POINT AT THE SIN FOR
WHICH THEY ARE INFLICTED.
1. To justify Himself, that by such lively characters His
righteousness in all His ways may be read by him that runs.
2. To farther men¡¦s repentance, by pointing out unto them the sin
that brings the judgment upon them.
VIII. IT IS ONLY SIN
THAT MAKES ONE MORE VILE THAN ANOTHER.
IX. IT IS A
SHAMEFUL ABASEMENT TO BE GLUED TO THE EARTH. (J. White, M. A.)
The tempter in the presence of God
The serpent is now, so to speak, summoned into court. It would
appear as if the power of fascination supposed to reside in his race had been
reversed, and as if he had been compelled to draw near by the mightier
fascination of justice, descended in the person of the great I AM. He has left,
at least, the lurking place into which he seems to have crept after the eating
of the fruit, and appears now a crushed and crest-fallen worm, writhing in the
sunlight of the face of his Creator. How singular the meeting in such
circumstances of the two grand foes, the archangel of darkness and the God of
light! It is their first meeting, probably, since Lucifer was thrust out of
heaven. And what a contrast! Then Lucifer was a powerful, magnificent, though
lost being; now he is in the form of a snake, in the likeness of one of earth¡¦s
basest reptiles; then he had the trace of the morning on his brow; now his eye
and bearing are sunken and sullen: then he was the ruined angel; now he is the
mean tempter and base deceiver: then he was striking, or had newly struck, at
the throne of God; now he has succeeded in ruining the peace, and injuring the
position of a happy human pair; then he was raging in defiance, and lifting up
his voice against the Highest; now he is cowering in His presence, and not
daring to utter a word in his own defence. It is significant that during this
scene the serpent is quite silent; no question is asked of him, no reply is
given; he is caught, as it were, in the fact, and there is no need of trial.
Judgment is immediately pronounced. And what waves of torment, shame,
self-loathing, disappointment, and fear cross his soul, as he listens,
helpless, hopeless, speechless, to the words of God. (G. Gilfillan.)
The curse
Though the serpent was but the instrument, yet he is cursed. And
the words, ¡§above all cattle,¡¨ imply that the rest of the animal creation were
made to share the curse which had come down upon it as Satan¡¦s special agent in
the plot against man. And why this universal curse?
1. To show the spreading and contaminating nature of sin. One sin is
enough to spread over a world. There is something in the very nature of sin
that infects and defiles. It is not like a stone dropped in a wilderness, upon
the sand, there to lie motionless and powerless. It is like that same stone
cast into a vast waveless lake, which raises ripple upon ripple, and sends its
disturbing influence abroad, in circle after circle, for miles on every side,
till the whole lake is in motion.
2. To show how all the manifold parts of creation hang together and
depend upon each other. One being displaced, all are ruined. The arch is not
more dependent on the keystone than are the different parts of creaturehood
dependent on each other for stability and perfection. It is as if the unity of
the Godhead had its counterpart in the unity of creation. And, strange to say,
it is the Fall that has so fully discovered this oneness, and made us
acquainted with its manifold relations.
3. To be a monument of the evil of sin. Sin needs something visible,
something palpable, to make known both its existence and its ¡§exceeding
sinfulness.¡¨ It must exhibit itself to our senses. It must stand forth to view,
branded with the stroke of God¡¦s judgment, as the abominable thing which He
hates. Thus He has strewn the memorials of sin all over the earth. He has
affixed them to things animate and inanimate, that we may see and hear and feel
the vileness and the bitterness of the accursed thing. (H. Bonar, D. D.)
Verse 15
I will put enmity between thee and the woman
The believer¡¦s conflict with Satan
I.
THAT
THERE IS A CONTINUAL CONFLICT BETWEEN SATAN AND EVERY BELIEVER IN JESUS CHRIST,
WHOM HE REPRESENTED IN THE FIRST PROMISE, ACCORDING TO THE PURPOSE AND GRACE OF
ALMIGHTY GOD.
II. In that stern
combat which the Lord of glory, God manifest in the flesh, was to wage with
Satan, it was declared that the enemy should bruise the heel of the seed of the
woman, and that Jesus should not get the victory unwounded. And thus it is with
His spiritual offspring; as ¡§He was, so are they in this world.¡¨ We learn,
therefore, secondly, THE CHRISTIAN¡¦S SUFFERING IN HIS CONFLICT WITH THE OLD
SERPENT.
III. But although
the conflict may be fierce, and long, and stubborn, we are not permitted to
doubt on which side the victory will fall. Hence I would observe, thirdly, THE
ASSURANCE OF TRIUMPH GIVEN IN THE TEXT TO THE SEED OF THE WOMAN--THE BELIEVING
MEMBERS OF CHRIST. Satan will bruise their heel, but, as assuredly, they shall
bruise his head. As Jesus assumed human nature, that He might avenge Himself
and His people upon Satan, so shall they triumph in Christ. The God of peace
shall bruise Satan under your feet shortly, who are in Christ Jesus. (R. P.
Buddicom, M. A.)
The first promise
Here, in this verse, first springs a river which flows right
through the broad wilderness of Time, refreshing every generation as they pass;
and will yet, beyond the boundary, make glad forever the city of our God. In
this verse the gospel of grace takes its rise. If we saw only the tiny spring
we should not be able fully to estimate its importance. It is our knowledge of
the kingdom in its present dimensions and its future prospects that invests
with so much grandeur this first, short message, of mercy from God to man. We
know the import of that message better than they who heard it first. And yet,
as the negro native on the mountains near the sources of the Nile can drink and
satisfy his thirst from the tiny rill that constitutes the embryo river, while
he who sails on its broad bosom near the sea can do no more; so those who lived
in the earliest days of grace might satisfy their souls at the narrow stream
then flowing, as well as those who shall be found dwelling on the earth at the
dawn of the millennial day. From the feeble stream that burst through the stony
ground near the closed gate of paradise righteous Abel freely drank the water
of life: the same, and no more, shall they do who shall see the knowledge of
the Lord covering the earth in the latter day. God opened a spring in the
desert as soon as there were thirsty souls sojourning there. Here, as we have
said, the gospel springs. But this is not the beginning of mercy. Its date is
more ancient; its fountainhead is higher. ¡§God is love¡¨: there, if you will
trace mercy to its ultimate source--there Redemption springs, thence Redemption
flows. One or two things of an introductory character must be at least stated,
inasmuch as they are essential to the comprehension of the main lesson. And the
first of these is the existence and agency of an evil spirit, the enemy of man.
¡§Didst thou not sow good seed in thy ground?¡¨ said the surprised and grieved
servants to their Master; ¡§whence, then, hath it tares?¡¨ ¡§An enemy hath done
this,¡¨ said the Lord. Man has been damaged by the impact of evil after he came
from his Maker¡¦s hands: and the damage, now that help has been laid on the
Mighty, may be removed. There is a healing for the deadly wound. The enemy, in
this text and in other instances all through the Scripture, is impersonated as
the serpent. Now a series of lessons directly practical.
1. There is a kind of friendship or alliance between the destroyer
and his dupe. The root of the ailment lies here. If the first pair had not
entered into a covenant with the wicked one, there would not have been a fall.
Neither at the first nor at any subsequent period has the enemy come forward as
an enemy, declaring war, and depending on the use of force. Not the power, but
the wiles of the devil have we cause to dread. If either he or we should assume
the attitude of adversary, our cause were won.
2. Enmity must be engendered between these two friends. The first
and fundamental necessity of the case is that the friendship should be
dissolved. As long as the adversary by his wiles succeeds in making it sweet,
and as long as the dupe loves it, so long is the captive held. Nothing in
heaven or earth can do a sinner any good until he has fallen out with his own
sin!
3. God will put enmity between a man and the enemy who has enticed,
and so overcome him. When created beings are involved in sin, as a law of their
being they cannot break off by an effort or wish of their own. The spirit that
launches once into rebellion against God, goes on helplessly in rebellion
forever, unless an almighty arm, guided by infinite love, be stretched out to
arrest the fallen--the falling star. It is profitable to remember that we are
helpless. It is only a cry out of the depths that will reach heaven, and bring
help from One that is mighty. ¡§Lord, save me, I perish,¡¨ is a prayer that
reaches the Redeemer¡¦s ear: it melts His heart, and moves His hand. To put
enmity between a man and the devil who inhabits his heart--to change his
affections, so that he shall henceforth loathe what he formerly loved, and love
what he formerly loathed--this is God¡¦s prerogative. ¡§Create in me a clean
heart, O God, and renew a right spirit within me.¡¨
4. Notice now the relation which Christ our Redeemer bears to the
breach of peace between a man and his Tempter. Over and above the promise that
enmity will be put between the serpent and the woman, it is said in the text
that enmity will be put between his seed and hers. We are guided by the Spirit
of inspiration in the interpretation of this clause. We know certainly from
Scripture ¡§her seed¡¨ means first and chiefly the second Adam, the Lord from heaven.
As enmity between the two friends must be generated, and as only God can
efficiently kindle that enmity, so it is only through Christ the Mediator that
such a breach could be made. He is Mediator between God and man, for
reconciling the alienated; He is Mediator between man and Satan, for alienating
the united. As His acceptance with the Father is our acceptance with the
Father, when we are found in Him; so His breach with the adversary is our
breach, when we are found in Him. His two-fold mission is to break up one
friendship and begin another.
5. The part which Christians act in the quarrel. Christ was the
first fruits in this enmity; but, afterwards they that are Christ¡¦s. In Him the
strife began; and it is continued in His members after the Head is exalted. The
feud is hereditary, inextinguishable, eternal. The Church on earth is the
Church militant; that is, the Church soldiering. There is another wing of the
grand army, called the Church triumphant. Those who remain in the body wield
the sword: those who have been admitted into heaven wave the palm and wear the
crown. The real business in hand for Christians is not heaven, but holiness.
The issue may be left in the Leader¡¦s hands: the duty of the soldiers is to
stand where they are placed, and strike as long as they see a foe. Until the
trumpet shall sound, calling the weary to rest, our part is to fight. (W.
Arnot, D. D.)
The beginning of the gospel
These words have been appropriately called the ¡§Protevangelium,¡¨
the first gospel. At first sight it seems strange that these words should be
considered the beginning of the gospel. The form is not that of a gospel but of
a curse. It is the first curse that we meet with in reading the Bible. But
think a moment. On whom, on what is it a curse? It is a curse on the great
adversary of mankind. It is a curse upon evil--on sin, and death and hell. It
is a curse upon our curse. You will observe, and it is well worth noticing,
that there is no curse pronounced upon the man, nor upon the woman either. But
can the gospel come in the form of a curse? It can--nay, it must. There are
those who, shutting their eyes to the terrible fact of sin with all its
dreadful consequences, as they are seen in the world, please themselves and try
to please others by preaching a gospel of easy good nature, of love and mercy
and goodwill to all mankind--a sort of universal salvation on the easiest terms
possible, or withoutany terms at all. But sin and its terrible consequences are
fearful facts that cannot be ignored. ¡§Love is the fulfilling of the law,¡¨ and
the end of the gospel; but hatred--hatred of sin--is the only portal to true,
and pure, and holy love. When the Spirit, the Comforter, comes, what is the
first thing He does? He convinces of sin (John 16:8-9).
I. As soon as we
look at it, we recognize, speaking generally, A GREAT CONFLICT ENDING IS
VICTORY. Of this conflict there is a threefold presentation.
1. First, there is a personal conflict: ¡§I will put enmity between
thee and the woman.¡¨ Here it is worth while to notice that the Hebrew tense
admits of a present as well as a future interpretation. So it is not only, ¡§I
will put enmity¡¨; but, ¡§I am putting and will put enmity between thee and the
woman.¡¨ The work is begun. The unholy alliance, into which Eve had been
beguiled by the Evil One, is already broken. She is already a changed woman.
She is no longer on the serpent¡¦s side. She is on the Lord¡¦s side. There is
enmity between her and the serpent.
2. After the personal comes the general conflict: ¡§Enmity between
thy seed and her seed.¡¨ What is meant by the two ¡§seeds¡¨? We would not have
very much difficulty in guessing, but we are not left to guess work. We are
very plainly told in the later Scriptures. For example, in the eighth chapter
of the Gospel of John, the Jews had been congratulating themselves on belonging
to the promised seed--¡§We be Abraham¡¦s seed¡¨ (verse 33). Our Saviour said, in
reply: ¡§I know that ye are Abraham¡¦s seed; but ye seek to kill Me.¡¨ That is a
strange thing for Abraham¡¦s seed. You may be Abraham¡¦s seed literally, but
certainly not spiritually. ¡§They answered and said unto Him: Abraham is our
father. Jesus saith unto them: If ye were Abraham¡¦s children, ye would do the
works of Abraham.¡¨ Notice how distinctly He recognized the spiritual sense of
the term, not the literal. ¡§If ye were Abraham¡¦s children ye would do the works
of Abraham.¡¨ ¡§Ye are of your father the devil, and the lusts of your father ye
will do. He was a murderer from the beginning. That is the reason ye seek to
kill Me.¡¨ Or turn to Matthew 23:33, where, addressing the same
kind of people, the Saviour says--¡§Ye serpents, ye generation of vipers¡¨ (i.e.,
ye seed of the serpents)
, ¡§how can ye escape the damnation of hell?¡¨ Or take the parable of the tares (Matthew 13:38): ¡§The good seed are the
children of the kingdom. But the tares are the children of the wicked one.¡¨
Perhaps most definite of all is a passage in the 3rd chapter of the 1st Epistle
of John. Read from the 8th verse: ¡§He that committeth sin is of the devil; for
the devil sinneth from the beginning. For this purpose the Son of God was
manifested, that He might destroy the works of the devil.¡¨ Then follows
something like a definition of the two seeds. ¡§In this the children of God are
manifest, and the children of the devil: whosoever doeth not righteousness is not
of God, neither he that loveth not his brother. Not as Cain, who was of that
wicked one and slew his brother.¡¨ You see how plainly it is stated that the
seed of the serpent are those who follow the deeds of the serpent; they are
those who inherit the wickedness of their father the devil, as it is put here.
And, of course, if the seed of the serpent are those who inherit the wickedness
of the evil one, the seed of the woman are those that inherit the saintliness
of the woman. It is as plain as anything can be, that it is the spiritual, and
not the literal, seed that is meant; that character is in view, and not simple
descent.
3. Not only is there a personal and a general conflict, but there is
a special one. ¡§Thee and the woman¡¨--personal. ¡§Thy seed and her
seed¡¨--general. ¡§It¡¨ (or he, because the pronoun is masculine) ¡§shall bruise
thy head, and thou shalt bruise his heel¡¨--special. Now, I do not say that
Christ is very plainly indicated here. The time had not yet come for this. The
hope of the coming personal Saviour was only gradually unfolded. But I do say
that certain lines are drawn which, when produced, are found to converge on
Christ, who occupies the point of sight, away on the distant horizon. Observe,
further, that it is only at this point that victory comes in: ¡§I will put
enmity between thee and the woman,¡¨ only conflict there; no victory. ¡§And
between thy seed and her seed,¡¨ only enmity, no victory. But come to the point
of sight, and there is not only conflict, but victory--¡§He shall bruise thy
head.¡¨ Apart from the Captain of our Salvation, there was nothing for us but
defeat. Though victory is finally assured to all the true seed of the woman, it
will be His victory, made theirs by faith.
II. Let us now
look at THE FACTS IN HISTORY, TO WHICH THE PROPHECY POINTS, AND WHICH
CONSTITUTE ITS FULFILMENT. In the first place, we see the development of this
conflict right along from the time of its first beginning; ¡§from the blood of
righteous Abel to the blood of Zacharias, slain between the temple and the
altar¡¨; and from the days of the first martyr, Stephen, down to the present
time, when in heathen lands converts still must seal, at times, their testimony
with their blood, and when in Christian lands ¡§those that will live godly in
Christ Jesus must suffer¡¨ certain kinds of persecution, and keep up a constant
conflict with the powers of evil. The conflict will go on, and will not cease
until the last of Satan¡¦s captives shall be rescued from his grasp and brought
as sons to glory; when there shall be the great gathering of the people around
Shiloh, the Prince of Peace, the Captain of our Salvation. But of all that long
conflict, the crisis, the decisive action, is that to which our attention is
specially called in the prophecy--the conflict that the Lord Jesus had to wage
against the powers of darkness and the machinations of evil men when He was
here upon the earth. Our Saviour, having taken our place, had this warfare to
fight all through His life. Have you not often asked yourself the reason of the
great difference between the death of the Lord Jesus and the death of so many
martyrs, who endured unheard of tortures without flinching or uttering a cry?
Had the Master less courage than the servants? Was He less able to endure
suffering than Stephen, or any of the martyrs? Oh, no! It was because He had
sufferings to bear that none of them had any knowledge of. He had their battle
to fight as well as His own. As the Captain of their Salvation and ours, He
stood in the front and thickest of the battle, and by His strong agony gained
the victory for them and us. Now that He has gained the victory, that victory
is secured for all the rest, who may well face death in any form bravely, now
that the Captain of their Salvation has conquered all its terrors for them. It
is secured for all the seed; and we have a picture of its consummation in the
book of Revelation, where is celebrated in thrilling imagery the final victory
of the saints of the Lord ¡§by the blood of the Lamb.¡¨ But while victory has
been secured for us, it must also be accomplished in us. There must be a
conflict and a victory in every human heart. There is not only the special
conflict, which the Lord Jesus so victoriously waged, and the general conflict
ending so triumphantly for all the seed, but there must be a personal conflict
in each individual soul. (J. M. Gibson, D. D.)
Christ the conqueror of Satan
The promise plainly teaches that the Deliverer would be born of a
woman, and, carefully viewed, it also foreshadows the Divine method of the Redeemer¡¦s
conception and birth. So also is the doctrine of the two seeds plainly taught
here--¡§I will put enmity between thee and the woman, between thy seed and her
seed.¡¨ There was evidently to be in the world a seed of the woman on God¡¦s side
against the serpent, and a seed of the serpent that should always be upon the
evil side even as it is unto this day. The church of God and the synagogue of
Satan both exist.
I. THE FACTS. The
facts are four, and I call your earnest attention to them.
1. The first is, enmity was excited. Satan counted on man¡¦s
descendants being his confederates, but God would break up this covenant with
hell, and raise up a seed which should war against the Satanic power. Thus we
have here God¡¦s first declaration that He will set up a rival kingdom to oppose
the tyranny of sin and Satan, that He will create in the hearts of a chosen
seed an enmity against evil, so that they shall fight against it, and with many
a struggle and pain shall overcome the prince of darkness. The Divine Spirit
has abundantly achieved this plan and purpose of the Lord, combating the fallen
angel by a glorious man: making man to be Satan¡¦s foe and conqueror.
2. Then comes the second prophecy, which has also turned into a
fact, namely, the coming of the champion. The seed of the woman by promise is
to champion the cause, and oppose the dragon. That seed is the Lord Jesus
Christ. The conflict our glorious Lord continues in His seed. We preach Christ
crucified, and every sermon shakes the gates of hell. We bring sinners to Jesus
by the Spirit¡¦s power, and every convert is a stone torn down from the wall of
Satan¡¦s mighty castle.
3. The third fact which comes out in the text, though not quite in
that order, is that our Champion¡¦s heel should be bruised. Do you need that I
explain this? You know how all His life long His heel, that is, His lower part,
His human nature, was perpetually being made to suffer. He carried our
sicknesses and sorrows. But the bruising came mainly when both in body and in
mind His whole human nature was made to agonize; when His soul was exceeding
sorrowful even unto death, and His enemies pierced His hands and His feet, and
He endured the shame and pain of death by crucifixion. Before the throne He
looks like a lamb that has been slain, but in the power of an endless life He
liveth unto God.
4. Then comes the fourth fact, namely, that while His heel was being
bruised, He was to braise the serpent¡¦s head. By His sufferings Christ has
overthrown Satan, by the heel that was bruised He has trodden upon the head
which devised the bruising.
II. Let us now
view over EXPERIENCE AS IT TALLIES WITH THESE FACTS. He means to save us, and
how does He work to that end?
1. The first thing He does is, He comes to us in mercy, and puts
enmity between us and the serpent. That is the very first work of grace. You
began to hate sin, and you groaned under it as under a galling yoke; more and
more it burdened you, you could not bear it, you hated the very thought of it.
So it was with you: is it so now? Is there still enmity between you and the
serpent? Indeed you are more and mere the sworn enemies of evil, and you
willingly acknowledge it.
2. Then came the Champion, that is to say, ¡§Christ was formed in you
the hope of glory.¡¨ You heard of Him and you understood the truth about Him,
and it seemed a wonderful thing that He should be your substitute and stand in
your room and place and stead, and bear your sin and all its curse and
punishment, and that He should give His righteousness, yea, and His very self,
to you that you might be saved.
3. Next, do you recollect how you were led to see the bruising of
Christ¡¦s heel and to stand in wonder and observe what the enmity of the serpent
had wrought in Him? Did you not begin to feel the bruised heel yourself? Did
not sin torment you? Did not the very thought of it vex you? Did not your own
heart become a plague to you? Did not Satan begin to tempt you? Did he not
inject blasphemous thoughts, and urge you on to desperate measures; did he not
teach you to doubt the existence of God, and the mercy of God, and the
possibility of your salvation, and so on? This was his nibbling at your heel.
He is at his old tricks still. He worries whom he can¡¦t devour with a malicious
joy.
4. But, brethren, do you know something of the other fact, namely,
that we conquer, for the serpent¡¦s head is broken in us? How say you? Is not
the power and dominion of sin broken in you? Do you not feel that you cannot
sin because you are born of God? Some sins which were masters of you once, do
not trouble you now. Oftentimes the Lord also grants us to know what it is to
overcome temptation, and so to break the head of the fiend. I ought to add that
every time any one of us is made useful in saving souls we do as it were repeat
the bruising of the serpent¡¦s head. In all deliverances and victories you
overcome, and prove the promise true--¡§Thou shall tread upon the lion and
adder: the young lion and the dragon shall thou trample under feet. Because he
hath set his love upon Me, therefore will I deliver him: I will set him on
high, because he hath known My name.¡¨
III. Let us speak
awhile upon THE ENCOURAGEMENT which our text and the context yields to us; for
it seems to me to abound.
1. I want you, brethren, to exercise faith in the promise and be
comforted. The text evidently encouraged Adam very much. Adam acted in faith
upon what God said, for we read, ¡§And Adam called his wife¡¦s name Eve (or
Life); because she was the mother of all living¡¨ (Genesis 3:20). She was not a mother at
all, but as the life was to come through her by virtue of the promised seed,
Adam marks his full conviction of the truth of the promise though at the time
the woman had borne no children.
2. Notice by way of further encouragement that we may regard our
reception of Christ¡¦s righteousness as an instalment of the final overthrow of
the devil.
3. Next, by way of encouragement in pursuing the Christian life, I
would say to young people, expect to be assailed. If you have fallen into
trouble through being a Christian be encouraged by it; do not at all regret or
fear it, but rejoice ye in that day, and leap for joy, for this is the constant
token of the covenant.
4. Still further encouragement comes from this. Your suffering as a
Christian is not brought upon you for your own sake; ye are partners with the
great SEED of the woman, ye are confederates with Christ. You must not think
the devil cares much about you; the battle is against Christ in you. I have
heard of a woman who was condemned to death in the Marian days, and before her
time came to be burned a child was born to her, and she cried out in her
sorrow. A wicked adversary, who stood by, said, ¡§How will you bear to die for
your religion if you make such ado?¡¨ ¡§Ah,¡¨ she said, ¡§Now I suffer in my own
person as a woman, but then I shall not suffer, but Christ in me.¡¨ Nor were
these idle words, for she bore her martyrdom with exemplary patience, and rose
in her chariot of fire in holy triumph to heaven. If Christ be in you, nothing
will dismay you, but you will overcome the world, the flesh, and the devil by
faith.
5. Last of all, let us resist the devil always with this belief,
that he has received a broken head. I am inclined to think that Luther¡¦s way of
laughing at the devil was a very good one, for he is worthy of shame and
everlasting contempt. Luther once threw an inkstand at his head when he was
tempting him very sorely, and though the act itself appears absurd enough, yet
it was a true type of what that great Reformer was all his life long, for the
books he wrote were truly a flinging of the inkstand at the head of the fiend.
That is what we have to do: we are to resist him by all means. (C. H.
Spurgeon.)
The curse of Satan including a blessing to man
There are four things here intimated which are each worthy of
notice--
1. The ruin of Satan¡¦s cause was to be accomplished by one in human
nature. This must have been not a little mortifying to his pride. If he must
fall, and could have had his choice as to the mode, he might rather have wished
to have been crushed by the immediate hand of God: for however terrible that
hand might be, it would be less humiliating than to be subdued by one of a
nature inferior to his own. The human nature especially appears to have become
odious in his eyes. It is possible that the rejoicings of eternal wisdom over
man was known in heaven, and first excited his envy; and that his attempt to
ruin the human race was an act of revenge. If so, there was a peculiar fitness
that from man should proceed his overthrow.
2. It was to be accomplished by the seed of the woman. This would be
more humiliating still. Satan had made use of her to accomplish his purposes,
and God would defeat his schemes through the same medium: and by how much he
had despised and abused her, in making her the instrument of drawing her
husband aside, by so much would he be mortified in being overcome by one of her
descendents.
3. The victory should be obtained not only by the Messiah Himself,
but by all His adherents, blow if it were mortifying for Satan to be overcome
by the Messiah Himself, considered as the seed of the woman, how much more when
in addition to this every individual believer shall be made to come near, and
as it were set his feet upon the neck of his enemy?
4. Finally: though it should be a long war, and the cause of the
serpent would often be successful, yet in the end it should be utterly fumed.
The ¡§head¡¨ is the seat of life, which the ¡§heel¡¨ is not: by this language
therefore is intimated, that the life of Christ¡¦s cause should not be affected
by any part of Satan¡¦s opposition; but that the life of Satan¡¦s cause should be
that of Christ. (A. Fuller.)
Blessings through Messiah
Through the promised Messiah a great many things pertaining to the
curse are not only counteracted, but become blessings. Under His glorious
reign, ¡§the earth shall yield its increase, and God, our own God, delight in
blessing us.¡¨ And while its fruitfulness is withheld, it has a merciful
tendency to stop the progress of sin: for if the whole earth were like the
plains of Sodom in fruitfulness, which are compared to the garden of God, its
inhabitants would be as Sodom and Gomorrah in wickedness. The necessity of hard
labour too in obtaining a subsistence, which is the lot of the far greater part
of mankind, tends more than a little, by separating men from each other, and
depressing their spirits, to restrain them from the excesses of evil. All the
afflictions of the present life contain in them a motive to look upwards for a
better portion: and death itself is a monitor to warn them to prepare to meet
their God. These are things suited to a sinful world: and where they are
sanctified, as they are to believers in Christ, they become real blessings. To
them they are but light afflictions, and last but for a moment; and while they
do last, ¡§work for them a far more exceeding and eternal weight of glory.¡¨ To
them, in short, death itself is introductory to everlasting life. (A.
Fuller.)
It shall bruise thy head,
and thou shalt bruise his heel
Bruising the head of evil; or, the mission of Christianity
That there were two grand opposing moral forces at work in the
world, ¡§the seed of the woman and the seed of the serpent,¡¨ is manifest from
the following conceptions:--
1. The universal beliefs of mankind. All nations believe in two
antagonistic principles.
2. The phenomena of the moral world. The thoughts, actions, and
conduct of men are so radically different that they must be referred to two
distinct moral forces.
3. The experience of good men.
4. The declaration of the Bible. Now in this conflict, whilst error
and evil only strike at the mere ¡§heel¡¨ of truth and goodness, truth and
goodness strike right at the ¡§head.¡¨ Look at this idea in three aspects:--
I. AS A
CHARACTERISTIC OF CHRISTIANITY. Evil has a ¡§head¡¨ and its ¡§head¡¨ is not in
theories, or institutions, or outward conduct; but in the moral feelings. In
the liken and dislikes, the sympathies and antipathies of the heart. Now it is
against this ¡§head¡¨ of evil, that Christianity, as a system of reform, directs
its blows. It does not seek to lop off the branches from the mighty upas, but
to destroy its roots. It does not strike at the mere forms of murder, adultery,
and theft; but at their spirit, anger, lust, and covetousness. This its
characteristic.
II. AS A TEST OF
INDIVIDUAL CHRISTIANITY. Unless Christianity has bruised the very ¡§head¡¨ of
evil within us it has done nothing to the purpose.
1. It may bruise certain erroneous ideas, and yet be of no service
to you.
2. It may bruise certain wrong habits, and yet be of no real service
to you.
III. AS A GUIDE IN
PROPAGATING CHRISTIANITY. The great failure of the Church in its
world-reforming mission may be traced to the wrong direction of its efforts. (Homilist.)
God¡¦s great patience, not withstanding man¡¦s provocations
Suppose a man should come into a curious artificer¡¦s shop, and
there with one blow dash in pieces such a piece of art as had cost many years¡¦
study and pains in the contriving thereof. How could he bear with it? How would
he take on to see the workmanship of his hands so rashly, so wilfully
destroyed? He could not but take it ill and be much troubled thereat. Thus it
is that as soon as God had set up and perfected the frame of the world, sin
gave a shrewd shake to all; it unpinned the frame, and had like to have pulled
all in pieces again; nay, had it not been for the promise of Christ, all this
goodly frame had been reduced to its primitive nothingness again. Man by his
sin had pulled down all about his ears, but God, in mercy, keeps it up; man by
his sin provokes God, but God, in mercy, passeth by all affronts whatsoever.
Oh, the wonderful mercy--oh, the omnipotent patience of God! (J. Spencer.)
The first promise
The first promise (Genesis 3:15) is like the first small
spring or head of a great river, which the farther it runs the bigger it grows
by the accession of more waters to it. Or like the sun in the heavens, which
the higher it mounts the more bright and glorious the day still grows. (J.
Flavel.)
First things
What delight there is to us in first things! The first primrose
pushing through the clods telling of winter gone, and summer on the way: the
first view of the sea in its wondrous expanse of power: the first sense of
peace that came by a view of Christ as Saviour. A certain authoress who became
very famous, speaks of the exquisite sense of delight she felt when she began
her first literary work in the reviewing of books: the opening of the first
parcel was as the ¡§bursting of a new world¡¨ on her eyes. (H. O. Mackey.)
The gospel preached in paradise
The words are considerable--
1. For the person who speaketh them, the Lord God Himself, who was
the first preacher of the gospel in paradise. The draught and plot was in His
bosom long before, but now it cometh out of His mouth.
2. For the occasion when they were spoken. When God hath been but
newly provoked and offended by sin, and man, from His creature and subject, was
become His enemy and rebel, the offended God comes with a promise in His mouth.
Adam could look for nothing but that God should repeat to him the whole
beadroll of curses wherein he had involved himself, but God maketh known the
great design of His grace. Once more, the Lord God was now cursing the serpent,
and in the midst of the curses promiseth the great blessing of the Messiah.
Thus doth God ¡§in wrath remember mercy¡¨ (Habakkuk 3:2). Yea, man¡¦s sentence was
not yet pronounced. The Lord God had examined him (verse 8-10), but before the
doom there breaketh out a promise of mercy. Thus mercy gets the start of
justice, and triumpheth and rejoiceth over it in our behalf: ¡§Mercy rejoiceth
against judgment¡¨ (James 2:13).
3. They are considerable for their matter, for they intimate a
victory over Satan, and that in the nature which was foiled so lately. In the
former part of the verse you have the combat; in the text the success.
(a) What the seed of the woman doth against the serpent, ¡§He shall
bruise thy head¡¨;
(b) What the serpent doth against the seed of the woman, ¡§Thou shalt
bruise his heel.¡¨
(c) There is something common to both; for the word bruise is used
promiscuously both of the serpent and the seed of the woman. In this war, as
usually in all others, there are wounds given on both sides; the devil bruiseth
Christ, and Christ bruiseth Satan.
(d) There is a disparity of the event, ¡§He shall bruise thy head,¡¨
and ¡§Thou shalt bruise his heel¡¨; where there is a plain allusion to treading
upon a serpent. Wounds on the head are deadly to serpents, but wounds on the
body are not so grievous or dangerous; and a serpent trod upon, seeketh to do
all the mischief it can to the foot by which it is crushed. The wound given to
the head is mortal, but the wound given to the heel may be healed. The seed of
the woman may be cured, but Satan¡¦s power cannot be restored. The devil cannot
reach to the head, but the heel only, which is far from any vital part. (1st.)
For the first clause, ¡§It shall bruise thy head.¡¨ The seed of the woman crushed
the serpent¡¦s head, whereby is meant the overthrow and destruction of his power
and works (John 12:31; 1 John 3:8). The head being bruised,
strength and life is perished. (2nd.) For the other clause, ¡§Thou shalt
bruise his heel.¡¨
Where--
I. That Jesus
Christ is the seed of the woman. That He is one of her seed is past doubt,
since He was born of the Virgin, a daughter of Eve. That He is ¡§The seed,¡¨ the
most eminent of all the stock, appeareth by the dignity of His Person, God made
flesh (John 1:14; 1 Timothy 3:16). As also by His
miraculous conception (Luke 1:35; Matthew 1:23). Now, if you ask what
necessity there was that the conqueror should be the seed of the woman, because
the flesh of Christ is the bread of life, and the food of our faith? I shall a
little insist upon the conveniency and agreeableness of it.
1. That thereby He might be made under the law, which was given to
the whole nature of man (Galatians 4:4).
2. That He might in the same nature suffer the penalty and curse of
the law, as well as fulfil the duty of it, and so make satisfaction for our
sins, which as God He could not do. He was ¡§made sin for us¡¨ (2 Corinthians 5:21), and was ¡§made a
curse for us¡¨ (Galatians 3:13; Philippians 2:8). ¡§He became obedient to
death, even the death of the cross.¡¨
3. That in the same nature which was foiled He might conquer Satan.
4. That He might take compassion of our infirmities, having
experimented them in His own person (Hebrews 2:17-18).
5. That He might take possession of heaven for us in our nature (John 14:2-3).
6. That after He had been a sacrifice for sin, and conquered death
by His resurrection, He might also triumph over the devil, and lead captivity
captive, and give gifts to men in the very act of His ascension into heaven Ephesians 4:8).
II. That Christ is
at enmity with Satan, and hath entered into the conflict with him.
1. We must state the enmity between Christ and His confederates, and
Satan and his instruments.
2. The enmity being such between the seeds, Christ sets upon His
business to destroy Satan¡¦s power and works.
III. That in this
conflict His heel was wounded, bitten, or bruised by the serpent.
1. Certain it is that Christ was bruised in the enterprise; which
showeth how much we should value our salvation, since it costs so dear as the
precious blood of the Son of God Incarnate (1 Peter 1:18-19).
2. But how was He bruised by the serpent? Certainly on the one hand
Christ¡¦s sufferings were the effects of man¡¦s sin and God¡¦s hatred against sin
and His governing justice; for it is said, ¡§It pleased the Father to bruise Isaiah 53:10). Unless it had pleased the
Lord to bruise Him, Satan could never have bruised Him. On the Other side, they
were also the effects of the malice and rage of the devil and his instruments,
who was now with the sword¡¦s point and closing stroke with Christ, and doing
the worst he could against Him. In His whole life He endured many outward
troubles from Satan¡¦s instruments; for all His life long He was a man of
sorrows, wounded and bruised by Satan and his instruments (John 8:44). But the closing stroke was at
last; then did the serpent most eminently bruise His heel. When Judas contrived
the plot, it is said, the devil entered into him (Luke 22:3). When the high priest¡¦s
servants came to take Him, He telleth them, ¡§This is your hour, and the power
of darkness¡¨ (Luke 22:53). The power of darkness at
length did prevail so far as to cause His shameful death; this was their day.
3. It was only His heel that was bruised. It could go no further;
for though His bodily life was taken away, yet His head and mediatory power was
not touched (Acts 2:36). Again, His bodily life was
taken away but for a while. God would not leave His soul in the grave (Psalms 16:10). Once more, though Christ
was bruised, yet He was not conquered. So for Christians, He may divers ways
wound and afflict us in our outward interests, but the inner man is safe (2 Corinthians 4:16).
IV. Though
Christ¡¦s heel was bruised in the conflict, yet it endeth in Satan¡¦s final
overthrow; for his head was crushed, which noteth the subversion of his power
and kingdom. To explain this, we must consider--
1. What is the power of Satan.
2. How far Satan was destroyed by Christ. First: What is the power
of Satan? It lieth in sin. And Christ destroyed him, as He ¡§made an end of sin,
and brought in everlasting righteousness, and made reconciliation for
iniquities¡¨ (Daniel 9:24). Secondly: How far was Satan
destroyed or his head crushed?
1. Negatively.
(1) Non ratione essentiae, not to take away his life
and being. No; there is a devil still, and shall be, even when the whole work
of Christ¡¦s redemption is finished (Revelation 20:10; Matthew 25:41). Then eternal judgment is
executed on the head of the wicked state.
(2) Non ratione malitiae, not in regard of malice;
for the enmity ever continueth between the two seeds, and Satan will be doing
though it be always to loss, ¡§The devil sinneth from the beginning¡¨ (1 John 3:8).
Therefore he is not so destroyed as if he did no more desire the
ruin and destruction of men. He is as malicious as ever.
2. Affirmatively, it remaineth that it is ratione potentiae, in
regard of his power. But the question returneth, How far is his power
destroyed? for he still governeth the wicked, and possesseth a great part of
the world. Therefore the devils are called ¡§The rulers of the darkness of this
world¡¨ Ephesians 6:12). He molesteth the godly,
whether considered singly or apart, or in their communities and societies.
Singly and apart he may sometimes trouble them and sorely shake them as wheat
is winnowed in a sieve. ¡§Simon, Simon, behold, Satan hath desired to have you,
that he may sift you as wheat¡¨ (Luke 22:31). And in their communities and
societies. ¡§Many a time have they afflicted me from my youth, may Israel now
say; many a time have they afflicted me from my youth¡¨ (Psalms 129:1-2).
Use 1. Thankfulness
and praise to our Mediator.
1. Satan¡¦s design was to dishonour God by a false representation, as
if envious of man¡¦s happiness (Genesis 3:5). And so to weaken the esteem
of God¡¦s goodness. Now in the work of our redemption God is wonderfully
magnified, and represented as amiable to man; not envying our knowledge and
delight, but promoting it by all means, even with great care and cost (1 John 4:8).
2. To depress the nature of man, that in innocency stood so near
God. Now that the human nature, so depressed and abased by the malicious
suggestions of the devil, should be so elevated and advanced, and be set up far
above the angelical nature, and admitted to dwell with God in a personal union,
oh! let us now cheerfully remember and celebrate this victory of Christ. Our
praise now is a pledge of our everlasting triumph.
Use 2. To exhort us to
make use of Christ¡¦s help for our recovery out of the defection and apostasy of
mankind. Oh! let Satan be crushed in you, and the old carnal nature destroyed.
Use 3. To show us the
nature of Christ¡¦s victory, and wherein it consisteth; not in an exemption from
troubles, nor in a total exemption from sin for the present.
1. Not in an exemption from troubles. No; you must expect conflicts.
Though Satan¡¦s deadly power be taken away, our heel may be crushed.
2. It is not a total exemption from sin. Necessary vital grace is
only absolutely secured; yon shall receive no deadly wound to destroy your
salvation. Use:
4. To animate and encourage Christ¡¦s servants in their war against
Satan¡¦s kingdom, at home and abroad, within and without: ¡§Not to give place to
the devil¡¨ (Ephesians 4:27). Christ whom we serve is
more able to save than Satan is to destroy. (T. Manton, D. D.)
Man¡¦s restoration promised
The promise of the recovery of mankind out of Satan¡¦s bondage, and
from under God¡¦s curse, contains in it these principal heads, all of them
expressed or implied in those few words, being so many grounds of our faith.
1. That God¡¦s promise of grace is every way free, not solicited by
Adam, and much less deserved, as being made unto him now, when he had offended
God in the highest degree, and stood in enmity against Him, and therefore must
needs proceed from God¡¦s free will.
2. That it is certain and infallible, as depending, not upon man¡¦s
will, but upon God¡¦s, who speaks not doubtfully or conditionally, but
positively and peremptorily, that He will do it Himself.
3. That it shall be constant and unchangeable: the inward hatred and
outward wars between Satan and the holy seed shall not cease till they end at
last in Satan¡¦s total and final ruin.
4. That it shall not extend to all the seed of the woman according
to the flesh, but to some that are chosen out of her seed. For some of them
shall join with Satan against their own brethren.
5. The effect of this gracious promise shall be the sanctifying of their
hearts, whom God will save, manifested in the hatred of Satan and all his ways;
which though they had formerly embraced, yet now they should abhor.
6. This work of sanctification shall not be wrought upon them as a
statuary fashions a stone into an image; but God shall make use of their wills
and affections to stir them up and to set them against Satan, as this
word--enmity--necessarily implies.
7. Those affections shall not be smothered and concealed in the
inward motions of the heart, but shall outwardly manifest themselves in serious
endeavours for the opposing of Satan and his power, as the war here mentioned
and intimated by the wounds on both sides, necessarily supposeth.
8. The work of sanctification, though it shall be infallible and
unchangeable, yet shall be imperfect, as is implied in the bruises which the
godly shall receive by Satan¡¦s hand, not only by outward afflictions, but by
inward temptations, which shall wound their souls by drawing them into divers
sins, all implied in that phrase of bruising the heel.
9. Those wounds which they receive at Satan¡¦s hands shall not be
deadly, nor quench the life of grace, which the devil shall not be able to
destroy, as is intimated in that part of the body which shall be wounded, which
is the heel, far enough from any vital part.
10. The author of this work of sanctification shall not be
themselves, but God by His Spirit. For it is He that shall put enmity into
their hearts against Satan and his seed, as the words import.
11. This work of sanctification by the Spirit shall be established by
their union with Christ their Head, with whom they shall be joined into one
body, as is implied when Christ and His members are termed one seed.
12. By virtue of this union the holy seed shall have an interest in
and a title to all that Christ works. For so, in effect, Christ¡¦s victory over
Satan is called their victory, when it is said the seed of the woman shall
bruise the serpent¡¦s head, that is, Christ and His members shall do it.
13. For the making way to this union and communion between Christ and
His members, He shall take on Him the very nature of man, so that He shall
truly and properly be called the seed of the woman. (J. White, M. A.)
Lessons
1. Let us mark how God
proceeds in His inquiries after sin. He first traces it out step by step,
tracks it in all its windings, ere He utters one word of judgment. His dealings
hitherto had been with Adam, as the head of creation. Therefore He speaks first
to him. Then from Adam sin is traced to the woman, then from the woman to the
serpent. By this process it was brought solemnly before the conscience of the
transgressors, that they might see what they had done. Even in the order of
judgment, how careful to mark His sense of the different kinds of criminality!
Such is a specimen of the way in which He will judge the world in
righteousness!
2. Let us mark the circumstances in which the sentence was given. It
was given in the hearing of our parents. It was not specially directed to them.
They were but hearers. Yet the scene was designed for them. This curse on the
serpent was spoken in their ears, because ¡§it contained in it God¡¦s purpose of
grace towards them.¡¨
3. Let us mark how God hated that which Satan had done. ¡§Because
thou hast done this,¡¨ are the words of awful preface to the sentence. God had
no pleasure in the snare or the ruin it had wrought. His words are the
expression of deep displeasure against him who had done the horrid deed, and at
the deed which had been done. And let us not forget how much of that which
Satan has since then been doomed to suffer, as well as of that which be shall
hereafter suffer, has its origin here. His sin, by means of which he succeeded
in casting man out of Eden, shall be the sin by which he himself shall be cast
wholly out of earth, to deceive the nations no more.
4. In undoing the evil God begins at its source. The drying up of
the stream will not do; the source must be reached. Sin was the real enemy, and
love to the sinner must proceed at once against this enemy, not resting till it
is utterly destroyed.
5. God shows that Satan shall not be allowed to triumph. His victory
is only temporary and partial. God is taking the sinner¡¦s side; and this is the
assurance that Satan¡¦s victory shall be reversed!
6. God Himself undertakes man¡¦s cause. It is not, ¡§there shall be
enmity¡¨; but ¡§I will put¡¨ it. God Himself will now proceed to work for man. The
serpent¡¦s malice and success have but drawn forth the deeper love and more
direct interposition in man¡¦s behalf.
7. God promises a seed to the woman. All that this implied she could
not know at the time. But it is evidently declared that she was not to die
immediately. The salvation was to come from God, and yet it was to come through
man.
8. God is to put enmity between the serpent and the woman, and
between the serpent¡¦s seed and the woman¡¦s seed.
9. There is not only to be enmity, but conflict. That these two
parties should keep aloof from each other was not enough. There must be more
than this. There must be alienation and hatred; nay, there must be warfare, and
that of the most desperate kind. Satan and the Church must ever be at open
warfare.
The world and the Church must ever be foes to each other.
1. The bruising of the heel of the woman¡¦s seed. It is not the
woman¡¦s heel that is to be bruised, but the heel of her seed; neither is it the
woman that is to bruise the serpent¡¦s head, but her seed--¡§it shall bruise thy
head, and thou shalt bruise his heel.¡¨ It was an inferior part that was to be
wounded, not a vital one. Yet still there was to be a wound. The serpent¡¦s seed
was to have a temporary triumph, and this was fulfilled when Jesus hung on the
cross. Then the heel was bruised. Then Satan seemed to conquer. That was the
hour and power of darkness. Then ¡§He was wounded for our transgressions, He was
bruised for our iniquities.¡¨ Then that wound was given which defeated him who
gave it, and began our victory.
2. The bruising of the serpent¡¦s head. It was his most vital as well
as his most honourable part that was to be bruised. An intimation this of utter
defeat and ruin. He has received many a stroke. His deadly wound was given upon
the cross, in that very stroke by which he bruised the heel of the woman¡¦s
seed. So that from that moment our victory was secure, But the final blow is
reserved for the Lord¡¦s second coming. Then it is that the great dragon, that
old serpent, is to be bound in chains, and shut up in the abyss. (H. Bonar,
D. D.)
The remedy
Near the manchaneel, which grows in the forests of the West
Indies, and which gives forth a juice of deadly poisonous nature, grows a fig,
the sap of which, if applied in time, is a remedy for the diseases produced by
the manchaneel. God places the gospel of grace alongside the sentence of death.
(W. Adamson.)
Verse 16
In sorrow thou shalt bring forth children
Motherhood a blessing and an education
I.
IN
MATERNITY A WOMAN COMPLETES HER NATURE. Every sorrow of body or soul is made
into a new thread in the web of affection which she weaves round the life of
the child for whom she suffers.
II. SHE HAS
ANOTHER BLESSING IN A CERTAIN EASE IN LOSING SELF. Men find it less natural to
be unselfish. The mother almost spontaneously drops off the robe of self.
III. HER SORROW OF
MATERNITY BRINGS A BLESSING TO THE WORLD. What silent, forceful lessons of the
blessed life has motherhood given to the world!
IV. THIS SORROW
HAS BEEN AN EDUCATION TO THE WORLD. The great thought of Christianity is that
only through sacrifice of self can life be given to others, or life be realized
by the giver. Motherhood permits woman to live her life in another life. It is
the likest thing to God¡¦s life.
V. THE SORROW OF
MATERNITY IS A PROPHECY. Her joy in self-surrender for another life, and her
better life so won is the joy in which the whole world shall he when, leaping
from the womb of the past, it will break into the perfect life--born again, not
of corruptible seed, but of incorruptible, by the word of God which liveth and
abideth forever. (Stopford A. Brooke, M. A.)
Observations
I. ALL THE
AFFLICTIONS OF CHRIST¡¦S MEMBERS ARE DISPENSED UNTO THEM UNDER THE COVENANT OF
GRACE.
II. THOUGH GOD
HAVE THROUGH CHRIST REMITTED TO HIS CHILDREN THE SENTENCE OF DEATH, YET HE HATH
NOT FREED THEM FROM THE AFFLICTIONS OF THIS LIFE.
III. ALL THE
AFFLICTIONS THAT GOD LAYS UPON HIS CHILDREN IN THIS LIFE HAVE MIXED WITH THEIR
BITTERNESS SOME SWEETNESS OF MERCY. As there is some mixture of mercy with the
bitterness of the afflictions of this life, so is there a mixture of bitterness
with the blessings of this life. It is the wife¡¦s duty to be subject to the
will and direction of her husband. The subjection of the wife to the husband
must be, not only in outward obedience to his commands, but besides in the
inward affection of the heart.
1. It is a duty to be performed to God, who will be served, not only
with the outward man, but with the heart (Colossians 3:22-23).
2. Else the subjection must needs be burdensome, and the services
done therein like that of Zipporah in circumcising her child (Exodus 4:25). (J. White, M. A.)
The sentence on the woman
His sentence on the woman is, in part, a reversal of the first
blessing, ¡§Multiply and replenish the earth.¡¨ God¡¦s blessing alone went out at
first with the command to multiply, but now sortie drops of the curse are to be
infused into it in remembrance of sin. The race was still to go on increasing;
but henceforth it was to be in sorrow. The very perpetuation of the species was
to be accompanied with marks of the displeasure of God. The dark cloud of
sorrow was to take up its station above each man as he came into the world.
And, kindred to these pangs of her corporeal frame, are the other varied
sorrows which overshadow her lot--the weakness, the dependence, the fear, the
rising and sinking of heart, the bitterness of disappointed hope, the wounds of
unrequited affection--all these, as drops of the sad cup now put into her
hands, woman has, from the beginning, been made to taste. The sentence falls on
her specially as woman, not as one with the man, and part of the human race,
but as woman. The things which mark her out as woman are the things which the
sentence selects, It is as the mother and as the wife that she is to feel the
weight of the sentence now pronounced. A mother¡¦s pangs (which otherwise would
have been unknown); a wife¡¦s dependence (which, in all save Christian
countries, is utter degradation); sorrow, not joy, in that appointed process
through which the promised seed is to be born into the world; inferiority,
instead of equality, in that relationship in reference to which it had been
said by her husband, ¡§bone of my bone, and flesh of my flesh¡¨; not henceforth
the husband ¡§cleaving to the wife,¡¨ as at the first (Genesis 2:24), but the wife cleaving to
the husband, and the husband ruling over the wife. Such are the sad results of
sin! (H. Bonar, D. D.)
Woman¡¦s subjection to man
The subjection of the woman to the man and his rule over her was a
just check of that bold taking upon her, both to talk so much with the serpent
and also to do as he bade her, without any privity and knowledge of her
husband. And it is as much as if God should have said to her: Because thou
tookest so much upon thee without advice of thy husband, hereafter thy desire
shall be subject unto him, and he shall rule over thee. Yet this authority of
the man may not embolden him any way to wrong his wife, but teacheth him rather
what manner of man he ought to be--namely, such an one as for gravity, wisdom,
advice, and all government is able to direct her in all things to a good
course. And her subjection should admonish her of her weakness and need of
direction, and so abate all pride and conceit of herself, and work true honour
in her heart toward him whom God hath made stronger than herself and given
gifts to direct her by. This, I say, this authority in the man and subjection
in the woman should effect. But alas, many men are rather to be ruled than to
rule, and many women fitter to rule than to be ruled of such unruly husbands.
On the other side, many men for ability most fit and able to rule, yet for
pride in the heart, where subjection should be, shall have no leave to rule. So
fit we sometimes to the order appointed of Almighty God. Amendment is good on
both sides, for fear of His rod, whose order we break. (Bishop Babington.)
Verse 17
Cursed is the ground for thy sake
A curse which proves a blessing
This was almost the first curse revealed to us as pronounced by
God, and yet it is almost the first blessing.
I. AT FIRST SIGHT
WE ARE NOT PREPARED TO ADMIT THAT LABOUR IS A BLESSING. We shrink from the
misery of task work which must be got through when we are least fitted to carry
it on; the very word ¡§repose¡¨ suggests all that is most coveted by men. It was
a true instinct which led the old mythologist to invent the fable of Sisyphus
and his stone, and to see in that punishment an image of horrible torture.
Labour which is only laborious is and always must be grievous to endure.
II. ON ALL THE
SONS OF ADAM THERE IS AN ABSOLUTE NECESSITY OF LABOUR IMPOSED. We may recognize
the necessity and submit to it with gratitude, and then we find in it every
hour a blessing; or we may rebel against it, and then we turn it as far as we
can into a curse. The sweetness of leisure consists in the change from our
ordinary employments, not in a cessation of all employment.
III. LYING SIDE BY
SIDE WITH THE BLESSING OF LABOUR THERE IS ALSO A CURSE--¡§Thorns also and
thistles,¡¨ etc. Work is grievous and irksome when unfruitful--when, after much
toil, there is nothing to show. But let us be sure that if the work is done for
God¡¦s glory, and in His name, the fruit will spring up in His time. (A.
Jessopp, D. D.)
Need of toil
The ground is our first lesson book, Notice--
1. A man does not cultivate the land by waving his hand majestically
over it. The land says, ¡§If you want anything out of me you must work for it. I
answer labour, I respond to industry, I reply to the importunity of toil.¡¨ That
is the great law of social progress.
2. The ground does not obey the dashing and angry passions of any
man. The green field does not turn white, though you curse over it till you
foam again at the mouth. We cannot compel nature to keep pace with our
impatience; man cannot hasten the wheel of the seasons; he cannot drive nature
out of its calm and solemn movement; his own fields keep him at bay.
3. Then I see God stooping and writing with His finger on the
ground, and when He erects Himself and withdraws, behold the Bible He has
written. ¡§Behold the husbandman waiteth for the precious fruit of the earth,
and hath long patience for it, until he receive the early and the latter rain¡¨;
¡§Be not deceived, God is not mocked, for whatsoever a man soweth that shall he
also reap.¡¨ See the earth inscribed with terms like these, and learn from the
land how to live.
4. Spiritual cultivation, like the culture of the land, cannot be
hastened. You cannot extemporise moral greatness; it is a slow growth.
5. Spiritual cultivation is sometimes very hard. Circumstances are
heavily against us; we are not placed in favourable localities, or under very
gracious conditions. Let us be thankful to God if, though faint, we are still
pursuing. (J. Parker, D. D.)
A curse, yet a blessing
I. The text
suggests some of the mysteries by which we are surrounded. There is
II. The text
supplies a solution by which these mysteries are brought into reconciliation
with right views of the nature and character of the Eternal. Out of man¡¦s evil
and man¡¦s transgression God contrives blessing. Sorrow in itself is an apparent
evil; as God manages it, it is the harbinger of joy. It was the curse, but it
also brings the blessing. There is hardness and difficulty in toil, but in
occupation God has given us enjoyment. It keeps the mind and heart in active
and energetic power. Even the curse of sin becomes in God¡¦s hands a blessing.
There is no brighter happiness for man than the sense of being forgiven. (A.
Boyd.)
The curse on the ground for man¡¦s sake
The king is punished by a curse upon his kingdom in addition to
the personal woe falling on himself, just as Pharaoh was cursed in the plagues
inflicted on his people. The ground, out of which he was taken, is cursed on
his account, as if all pertaining to him had become evil. It is not he that
suffers on account of his connection with the soil, but it is the soil that
suffers on account of its connection with him, affording proof that it is not
from matter that evil flows into spirit, but that it is from spirit that evil
flows into matter. That soil from which he had sprung, that soil which God had
just been strewing with verdure and flowers, that soil whose fruitfulness had
produced the tree whose beauty and desirableness had been the woman¡¦s
beguilement and his own ruin, that soil must now be scourged and sterilized on
his account; as if God had thus addressed him: ¡§I can no longer trust thee with
a fruitful soil, nor allow the blessing with which I have blessed the earth to
abide upon it; thou art to remain here for a season, but it shall not be the
same earth; in mercy I will still leave it such an earth as thou canst inherit,
not a wilderness nor a chaos as at first, but still with enough of gloom and
desolation and barrenness to remind thee of thy sin, to say to thee
continually, O man, thou hast ruined the earth over which I had set thee as
king.¡¨
1. The earth is to bring forth the thorn and the thistle. Whether
these existed before we do not undertake to say, nor whether they are given
here merely as the representatives of all noxious plants or weeds, nor whether
the object of the curse, in so far as they were concerned, was to turn them
into abortions, which they really are. Taking the words as they lie before us,
we find that the essence of the curse Was the multiplication of these prickly
abortions till they should become noxious to man and beast and herb of the
field; mere nuisances on the face of the ground. Elsewhere in Scripture they
are referred to as calamities. As the effects of judgments Job refers to them (Job 31:40), and Jeremiah (Jeremiah 12:13). As the true offspring of
a barren soil the apostle speaks of them (Hebrews 6:8). As injurious to all around
our Lord Himself alludes to them Matthew 13:7-22). And it is evident that
all these passages connect themselves with the original curse, and are to be
interpreted by a reference to it. They are tokens of God¡¦s original displeasure
against man¡¦s sin, so that the sight of them should recall us to this awful
scene in Eden, and make us feel how truly God hates sin, and how impossible it
is for Him to change in His hatred of it.
2. Man is to eat the herb of the field. Originally, the fruit of the
various trees was to have been man¡¦s food; the ¡§herb¡¨ was for the lower creation,
if not exclusively, at least chiefly. But now he is degraded. He is still, of
course, to eat fruit, but in this he is to be restricted. Whether it were that,
the earth being less productive in fruit, he must betake himself to inferior
sustenance; or whether it might also be from a change in bodily constitution,
requiring something else than fruit, we cannot say. The sentence is, ¡§Thou
shalt eat the herb of the field, not the pleasant fruits of paradise.¡¨
3. He is to eat in sorrow. There was to be no glad feasting, but a
bitter eating, or, if there might be feasting, it should be like Israel¡¦s,
¡§with bitter herbs¡¨--the sweet and the bitter mingling.
4. He is to eat in toil--to wring a stinted subsistence out of the
reluctant earth with sore labour and weariness. He cannot live but in a way
which reminds him of his primal sin. Each day he hears the original sentence
ringing in his ears. And yet all this hard toil serves barely to sustain a
¡§dying life; ¡§ and even that only for a little, until he return to the dust.
This is the end of his earthly toil!
5. He is to die. Grace does not remit the whole penalty. It leaves a
fragment behind it in pain, weakness, sickness, death, though at the same time
it extracts blessing out of all these relics of the curse. Besides, in thus
leaving men subject to death, it leaves open the door by which the great
Deliverer was to go in and rob the spoiler of his prey. By death is death to be
destroyed. Man must die! He came from the dust, and he must return to it. (H.
Bonar, D. D.)
The first transgression condemned
I. THE CRIME
PROVED. The judge condemns the criminal¡¦s conduct in several particulars.
1. His listening and yielding to temptation.
2. His neglect of God¡¦s Word.
3. His open, positive transgression of a known law.
II. THE SENTENCE
PRONOUNCED.
1. Deprivation of all the fruits and pleasures of Eden.
2. Toil.
3. Disappointment.
4. Sorrow.
5. Increasing infirmity.
6. Death.
7. Justice is tempered with mercy.
Let the subject teach us--
1. A lesson of humility. We are the degenerate children of such a
parent.
2. A lesson of caution.
3. A lesson of encouragement. Respited, we may recover our Eden, by
means of ¡§the second Adam, the Lord from heaven.¡¨ Contrast--the first involving
himself and us in guilt, pollution, and misery--the second the reverse of this
(Romans 5:12-21). (Sketches of Sermons.)
Observations
I. THE CURSE, AS
WELL AS THE BLESSING UPON ALL CREATURES, PROCEEDS FROM THE WILL AND DECREE OF
GOD ALONE.
1. It can be no otherwise, seeing in Him all things consist (Colossians 1:17), and have their being (Acts 17:28).
2. And it is fit it should be so, that all men might fear before Him
Jeremiah 5:24), depend on Him (Jeremiah 14:22), and praise Him Psalms 107:32-34).
3. And it is every way best for us, who know that God judgeth
righteously Psalms 67:4), and that those that fear
Him shall want no good thing Psalms 84:1).
II. IT IS OUR OWN
SIN THAT BRINGS THE CURSE OF GOD UPON ALL THAT WE ENJOY.
1. God¡¦s mercies are over all His works (Psalms 145:9), and His hand in itself is
not shortened (Isaiah 59:1), neither is there anything
that He hates but sin, or for sin (Psalms 5:4-5).
2. And it is fit that God should so show His detestation of sin, by
manifesting His wrath every way against such as provoke Him thereby, as He did
in the destruction of Sodom and Gomorrah, and upon His own land Deuteronomy 29:23; Deuteronomy 29:25).
III. THE GREATEST
OF ALL CREATURES ARE UNDER GOD¡¦S COMMAND
1. They are all creatures (Jeremiah 14:22), even the work of His
hand Job 34:19).
2. He could not otherwise be an absolute Lord over all (Psalms 103:19) if any creature were out
of His command.
IV. THE CURSE OF
GOD UPON THE CREATURES IS A PART OF MAN¡¦S PUNISHMENT.
1. We have interest in them, so that their destruction is our loss.
2. Our subsistence is by them, so that to lose them, is to lose the
means by which our lives should be supported.
V. MAN¡¦S LIFE IN
THIS WORLD IS A LIFE OF PAIN AND SORROW.
1. To make us the more sensible of sin, by our daily tasting the
bitter fruits of it.
2. To move to a holy delight, and earnest seeking after things that
are spiritual, the ways whereof are pleasant and the paths peace (Pr Psalms 119:165).
VI. THE SHORT
PLEASURE OF SIN DRAWS AFTER IT A LONG AND LASTING PUNISHMENT.
VII. MAN¡¦S FOOD IS
OUT OF THE EARTH. (J. White, M. A.)
Weeds
It is the law of nature that plants should be diffused as widely
as possible wherever the circumstances are favourable for their growth and
welfare. For this purpose they are provided with the most admirable
contrivances to maintain their own existence, and to propagate the species. But
man interferes with this law in his processes of gardening and horticulture.
His object is to cultivate beautiful or useful plants within enclosures, from
which all other plants are excluded, and where an artificial soil and climate
have been prepared. He wishes to separate from the struggle of the elements,
and from the competition of other species, certain kinds of flowers or
vegetables which are good for food or pleasant to the eye. In this he is only partially
successful, for into the plot of ground which he has set apart from the waste
common of nature a large number of plants intrude; and with them he has to
maintain a constant warfare. These plants are known by the common name of
weeds, a term which, curious enough, is etymologically connected with Wodan or
Odin, the great god of the northern mythology, to whose worship in former ages,
in this country, our Wednesday, or Odinsday, was specially dedicated. Any plant
may become a weed by being accidentally found in a situation where its presence
is not desired; but true weeds form a peculiar and distinct class. They are at
once recognized by their mean and ragged appearance; their stems and foliage
being neither fleshy nor leathery, but of a soft, flaccid description, and by
the absence in most of them of conspicuous or beautiful blossoms. A look of
vagabondage seems to characterize most of the members of the order, which at
once stamps them as belonging to a pariah class. In the vegetable kingdom they
are what gipsies are in the human world, and the same mystery surrounds them
which is connected with that remarkable race. Like the gipsies they are
essentially intruders and foreigners; never the native children of the soil on
which they flourish. They may have come from long or short distances, but they
have always been translated. There is no country where they are not found, and
everywhere they have to encounter the prejudices which the popular mind
invariably entertains against foreigners. There is one peculiarity about weeds
which is very remarkable, viz., that they only appear on ground which, either
by cultivation or for some other purpose, has been disturbed by man. They are
never found truly wild, in woods or hills, or uncultivated wastes far away from
human dwellings. They never grow on virgin soil, where human beings bare never
been. No weeds exist in those parts of the earth that are uninhabited, or where
man is only a passing visitant. The Arctic and Antarctic regions are destitute
of them; and above certain limits on mountain ranges they have no
representatives. To every thoughtful mind the questions must occur, ¡§Have the
plants we call weeds always been weeds? If not, what is their native country?
How did they come into connection with man, and into dependence upon his
labours?¡¨ No satisfactory answer can be given to these questions. As a class
there can be no doubt that weeds belong to the most recent flora of the globe.
Their luxuriant and flaccid look indicates their modern origin; for the plants
of the older geological ages are characterized by dry leathery leaves, and a
general physiognomy like that of the existing flora of Australia. Indeed, the
flora of Europe during the Eocene period bears a close resemblance to that of
Australia at the present day; so that in paying a visit to our southern colony,
we are transporting ourselves back to the far-off ages when our own country had
a climate and vegetation almost identical. The flora of Australia is the oldest
flora at present existing on our globe. Our weeds came upon the scene long
subsequent to this Australian or Eocene vegetation. In our own country they
form part of the Germanic flora which overspread our low grounds after the
passing away of the last glacial epoch, driving before them to the mountain
tops the Alpine and Arctic plants, suited to a severer climate, which
previously had covered the whole of Europe. They came from Western Asia and
Northern Africa. They made their appearance in company with the beautiful and
fruitful flora that is specially associated with the arrival of man, and spread
from the same region which is supposed to be the cradle of the human race. In
this way they are co-related with the Scripture account of the fall of man.
¡§Cursed is the ground for thy sake; thorns and thistles shall it bring forth to
thee,¡¨ was the sentence pronounced by God upon man¡¦s sin. We are not to suppose
from this circumstance that these noxious plants were specially created then
and there for the express purpose of carrying out the punishment of man. They
were previously in existence, though they may be said to belong very specially
to the human epoch; but since that mournful event they have received a new
significance, and are bound up with man in a new moral relation. Most of our
weeds possess all the characteristics of a desert flora; special adaptations to
a dry soil and arid climate. And the reason why they find a congenial home in
our gardens and cultivated fields is because the soil of such places is made
artificially like the natural soil of their native country. Our fields and
gardens are divested of all unnecessary vegetation, and drained of all
superfluous moisture, and thus are possessed of the dry, warm, exposed soil, to
which the provisions for drought with which weeds are specially furnished are
admirably adapted, and where in consequence they luxuriate and overcome other
plants less specially endowed. They follow in the train of man, and show a
remarkable predilection for his haunts, become domesticated under his care, not
merely because of the abundance of the nitrogenous and calcareous substances to
be found in the vicinity of human dwellings and in manured fields and gardens,
but chiefly because he provides them with the dry soil and climate in which
they can best grow. It is an essential qualification of a weed that it should
grow and spread with great rapidity. For this purpose it is endowed with
marvellous contrivances in the way of buds and seeds. A very large number of
our weeds, such as the thistle, groundsel, dandelion, colts-foot, scabious,
daisy, ragwort, are composite flowers. The apparently single blossom is in
reality a colony of separate blossoms, compressed by the obliteration of their
floral stems around one central axis. In most of our weeds the floral parts are
small and inconspicuous. The reproductive act is so arranged as to economise
material and to exhaust the vital force as little as possible, and the organs
concerned in it are reduced to the simplest forms consistent with efficiency.
Most of the species can be fertilized by the wind, which is always available,
or by the help of insects that have a wide range of distribution and are
abundant everywhere. In consequence of this floral economy, the vegetative
system acquires a greater predominance in this class of plants than in almost
any other, so that the life of the individual is carefully preserved even amid
the most untoward conditions. A weed, by reason of the strength of its
vegetative system, is able to stand extremes of heat and cold, and to recover
from the roughest usage. It will hold on to life in circumstances which would
prove fatal to most other plants; and in this way it can abide the most
favourable time for the development of its blossoms and seeds. Nay, it can
propagate itself as well without blossoms as with them. Many of our weeds form
long creeping stems, giving off at every joint buds which will produce perfect
plants, and greatly extend the area which they occupy. That weeds belong to the
most recent and specialized flora of the world is evident from their wide
distribution and wonderful powers of colonization. In our own country they
number about two hundred and thirty, and constitute about a seventh part of our
native flora. We are constantly receiving accessions from the continent, along with
the seeds of our cultivated plants. In company with the wheat and barley that
can be cultivated in India down to the tropic zone, because they can be sowed
and reaped during the coldest quarter of the year, have been introduced a crowd
of the common annual weeds of our country, such as the shepherd¡¦s purse, the
chickweed, the spurge, and the corn-pimpernel, which also run through the cycle
of their lives in the winter quarter. Half the weeds of American agriculture
have been imported from Europe; and of the 2,100 flowering plants of the
Northern United States, 320 are European. Australia and New Zealand have sent
us no weeds, and America only a very few. The solution of this mystery, as Dr.
Seemann clearly proves, is not to be found in any consideration of climate,
soil, or circumstances. It is a question of race. The present flora of the
United States and of Australia is older than the Germanic flora which now
constitutes the principal vegetation of Europe. It is very similar to, if not
absolutely identical with, that of Europe during the Miocene and Eocene epochs.
America and Australia have not yet arrived at the degree of floral development
to which Europe has attained; consequently plants coming to our country from
Australia and America would not come as colonists, with a new part to play in
it, but as survivors of an older flora whose cycle of existence had ages ago
run out there. Our system of the rotation of crops is based upon the fact that
the soil which has borne one kind of harvest will not produce the same next
year, but requires another kind of crop to be grown on it. And Nature in her
wilds carefully observes the same law. Whatever our weeds were in the original
state, they are now like the corn which man sows in the same field with them,
endowed with habits so long acquired that they will part with their life sooner
than abandon them. The original wild plant of the corn--if there ever was such
a thing, and this admits of grave doubts--from which our corn was developed,
may have been able to propagate and extend itself freely independent of man;
but we know that without man¡¦s agency, the corn, as it is now modified, would
perish. It does not grow of its own accord, or by the natural dispersion and
germination of its seed. Left to itself, it would quickly disappear and become
extinct. The one condition of its permanency in the world, of its growth in
quantities sufficient for man¡¦s food, is that it be sown by man in ground
carefully prepared beforehand to receive it. The same rule would appear to hold
good in regard to the weeds which, in spite of himself, he cultivates along
with it, and whose persistent presence makes the cultivation of the soil so
difficult to him. We know them only in an artificial condition as abnormal
forms of original wild types; and as such as they are incapable of continuing
themselves without man¡¦s help. Left to grow in soil that has reverted to its
original wild condition, they would soon be overpowered by the surrounding
vegetation, the grasses and mosses, and in a shorter or longer space of time
they would inevitably disappear. I have seen many ruins of dwellings in upland
glens from which the nettles and all the weeds that once grew in the field and
garden plot have utterly vanished, leaving only a dense thicket of bracken, or
a lovely smooth carpet of greensward, to indicate among the heather that man
had once inhabited the place. We are bound, therefore, to believe that so long
as man cultivates the ground, so long will these weeds make their appearance,
and in striking correlation with the primeval curse, compel him in the sweat of
his face to eat his bread. When he ceases to till the ground, they will cease
to grow in it. (H. Macmillan, LL. D.)
Consequences of the Fall
The world was made for man, and man for God. The upper link gave
way, and all that depended on it fell. Man rebelled, and carried away from its
allegiance a subject world. (W. Arnot.)
The Fall robbed man of his glory
The harp of Eden, alas! is broken. Unstrung and mute an exiled
race have hung it on the willows; and Ichabod stands written now in the furrows
of man¡¦s guilty forehead, and on the wreck of his ruined estate. Some things
remain unaffected by the blight of sin, as God made them for Himself; the
flowers have lost neither their bloom nor fragrance; the rose smells as sweet
as it did when bathed in the dews of paradise, and seas and seasons, obedient
to their original impulse, roll on as of old to their Maker¡¦s glory. But from
man, alas! how is the glory departed? Look at his body when the light of the
eye is quenched, and the countenance is changed, and the noble form is
festering in corruption--mouldering into the dust of death. Or, change still
more hideous, look at the soul! The spirit of piety dead, the mind under a dark
eclipse, hatred to God rankling in that once loving heart, it retains but some
vestiges of its original grandeur, just enough, like the beautiful tracery and
noble arches of a ruined pile, to make us feel what glory once was there, and
now is gone. (T. Guthrie, D. D.)
Testimony to man¡¦s Fall
No man that takes a view of his own dark and blinded mind, his
slow and dull apprehension, his uncertain staggering judgment, roving
conjectures, feeble and mistaken reasonings about matters that concern him
most; ill inclinations, propension to what is unlawful to him and destructive,
aversion to his truest interests and best good, irresolution, drowsy sloth,
exorbitant and ravenous appetites and desires, impotent and self-vexing
passions, can think human nature, in him, is in its primitive integrity, and as
pure as when it first issued from its high and most pure original. (J. Howe.)
The doctrine of the Fall, commended to man' reason
The two great systems of nature and revelation are sometimes
supposed to clash--to be opposed to each other; as if the revealings of the one
were inconsistent with the discoveries of the other; as if they were two
volumes, of which the principles and details of one were opposed to the
principles and details of the other. The truth of this matter seems to be, that
revelation differs from nature only in this, that revelation pours a broader
and a clearer light upon the mysteries of creation. When we look forth upon the
face of nature in the dim and shadowy twilight of morning, and when again we
look forth upon the same scene in the bright and unclouded splendour of noon,
there is no actual change in the landscape; the mountains have not changed
their place, the forests have not changed their trees, the rivers have not
changed their course; the only difference is, that the splendour of noon has
flung a brighter and a clearer light than the grey mists of the morning. We are
too often met with high panegyrics upon the qualities and the powers of man,
and we are told in every variety of language of the lofty virtues of man--of
the dignity of human nature--of the towering intellect, the refined feeling,
and the virtuous heart of man; and we are told of all this, as if his powers
had never been impaired, or as if his intellect had never been shattered, or as
if his virtues had never been blighted, or his heart been corrupted, or his
feelings debased, and his whole nature become the wreck and ruin of what it
once had been. The line of argument, along which we shall endeavour to conduct
you, shall go to prove that this great principle of revelation is also a
principle of nature; and that though it lies unexplained in the pages of
natural religion, it is explained and accounted for in the pages of revealed
religion. We shall consider the subject, first, in reference to the world, and
then in reference to man.
1. And first we argue, that nature is ever presenting to us
evidences of the Fall, and that those evidences discover themselves to us in
the present aspect of our world. It is very true, that as the eye wanders
throughout all the departments of nature, it can trace the evidences of the
love and the benevolence of the great Creator. In the language of the apostle,
¡§He gives rain from heaven and fruitful seasons, filling our hearts with food
and gladness.¡¨ And not only this, but we find that the smallest flower of the
field has all that is required for its existence and its loveliness, as much as
the stateliest tree of the forest; and the minutest insect of creation has all
that enables it to fulfil the ends of its being, as much as the mightiest and
the noblest in the animal world. But in the midst of all this living and
breathing evidence, he will discover evidences of an opposite character; he
will discover evidences of the going forth of wrath--that some evil has
befallen our world; and he will discover that the evidences of Divine
benevolence are not more palpable than these evidences of Divine wrath. We
allude not now to the poverty, the wretchedness, the helplessness, the
diseases, the deaths, that press and crush the family of man; but we allude to
those physical phenomena, that are everywhere discoverable throughout all the
fields of creation. If there be lands where all is beauty and fertility, there
are also lands whore all is waste and sterility. If there be climates where all
is balmy and delicious and calm, there are also climates where all is darkened
with clouds and disturbed by storms. There are wide regions of our globe, so
enwrapped in the mantle of eternal snows, and so defended by vast icy barriers,
that like the very battlements of nature, they resist the foot of man. There
are wide regions of our globe, even in the most delicious climes, where the
stateliest trees of the forest and the loveliest flowers of the field and the
richest fruits of the ground grow spontaneously with a strange luxuriance,
where yet at the same time the fatal vapours and the envenomed atmosphere
preclude the presence of man, as effectually as the angel with the flaming
sword precluded him at the gate of paradise. And while these characteristics
are discernible throughout the face of creation, there are at the same time
mighty and tremendous agents of evil, called into existence by the Creator and
sent abroad into our world; agents more destructive than the angel of the
Passover that slew the firstborn of Egypt; and more terrible than the angel of
destruction that smote the host of Sennacherib. If the going forth of these
angels from heaven is to be regarded as a going forth of wrath from the
Creator, what shall we think of the spirit of the simeon, that from time to
time has lifted the sands of the African deserts, and has borne them onward
like the waves of the sea, till the stateliest cities of Egypt and the most
gigantic architecture the world has ever seen, lie even to this hour buried deep,
deep, within their bosom? What shall we think of the spirit of the volcano,
pouring forth rivers of burning lava and clouds of smoking dust, enwrapping
whole regions in terrific conflagration, and, as in Italy, beautiful Italy,
burying cities with all their miserable inhabitants? What shall we think of the
spirit of the earthquake by which whole districts have been wasted, mighty
nations submerged beneath the waves, stately cities sunk into ruins, and whole
continents ¡§frighted from their propriety¡¨? But where nature is thus silent,
revelation speaks. Where the volume of nature closes, the volume of revelation
opens. Nature reveals to us the fact that our world is a fallen and a ruined
world; revelation gives the explanation of that fact: that in consequence of
sin our world has fallen under the curse of its Creator, that it has been a
bright and a beautiful and a happy world, but that in consequence of sin a
curse was uttered, ¡§Cursed is the ground for thy sake, in sorrow shalt thou eat
of it all the days of thy life,¡¨ and that from henceforth a darkening destiny
has been enchained to our planet. Wrath has gone forth against it; and our once
beautiful world has become a fallen world.
2. But, as we intimated at the commencement, this argument may be
carried further, and may be applied to the moral condition of man, quite as
conclusively as to his physical condition. Or perhaps, to speak more correctly,
it may be applied to the present condition of man, quite as conclusively as to
the present condition of the world in which he lives. The destiny of man is a
destiny of trouble. The experience of every man justifies the statement of the
patriarch, that ¡§man is born to trouble, as the sparks fly upward.¡¨ It is the
belief of the heathen; it is the creed of the Christian; it is the record of
the historian; it is the maxim of the philosopher; it is the song of the poet.
We will not believe--we cannot believe, that a God of benevolence and love, a
God who must delight Himself in the comforts and not in the sorrows, in the
happiness and not in the miseries of His creatures, originally created man for
so melancholy a doom. And the same remark will apply to his moral condition.
There are in the heart of every man the workings of evil passions, the
strugglings of carnal tendencies, the violence of feelings that are not good:
licentiousness of thought, the constant resistance to the empire of holiness,
the striving of the flesh against the spirit. There are the anger, the malice,
the hatred, the revenge, the covetousness, the ambition, the wars, the
bloodshed, that characterize the whole history of man, so that it is little
else than a history of the wars and the bloodshed that ambition and pride and
revenge and every foul and hateful passion have called into existence. We will
not believe--we cannot believe--that a God of benevolence and love, a God of
holiness and of peace, could have originally created man in this state, or
planted in his heart unholy passions like these. This sad condition of man is a
fact that may be read in the pages of natural religion; but the explanation of
the fact, and the causes of this sad condition, are a mystery in natural
religion. But it is here that revelation interposes and resolves the mystery,
Natural religion, like the astrologers of Chaldea, could not read the
mysterious handwriting on the wall: but revealed religion, like the prophet of
the Lord, reads and interprets the writing. The words of the Creator, as
addressed to Adam, were--¡§In sorrow shalt thou eat of it all the days of thy life¡¨;
and again--¡§In the sweat of thy face shalt thou eat bread¡¨; and again, to the
woman--¡§In sorrow thou shalt bring forth children.¡¨ (M. H. Seymour, M. A.)
Natural evidence of the curse
I. If this
sentence was executed upon man and the earth, without all doubt it may at this
day be distinguished; therefore let us inquire in the first place whether there
are any signs of a ¡§curse upon the ground¡¨? Towards the latter end of the fifth
chapter of Genesis we read, that when a son was born to Lamech, he called his
name Noah, which signifies comfort, because he was to ¡§comfort them concerning
their work, and toil of their hands, because of the ground which the Lord had
cursed.¡¨ Lamech knew, therefore, that a curse had been pronounced upon the
ground, for the transgression of Adam; and he knew also, either by tradition,
or the spirit of prophecy, that it should take place more fully in the days of
Noah, whose favour and acceptance with God should give comfort to men, and
render more tolerable that toil and labour which should be the necessary
consequence of this curse upon the ground; which, therefore, was brought upon
the earth by the general deluge. When the wickedness and violence of the human
race had wearied out the patience and long suffering of God, and obliged His
justice to inflict the punishment which had been threatened, He declared in His
revelation to Noah that He would destroy man with the earth. St. Peter also
confirms the same, where he takes occasion to inform ungodly men, that the
¡§world which then was, being overflowed with water, perished.¡¨ Whence it
appears that the flood should, and actually did, amount to a destruction of the
earth, of which destruction and the manner of it, the earth in all parts has so
many signs at this day, that a man endued with eyesight, understanding, and a
very little experience, cannot choose but to see and acknowledge it.
II. A second
consequence of the Fall, as it stands in the words of the text is, Sorrow to
man in the eating of the fruit of the ground. And here it may be useful to
observe how the punishment of man is suited to the nature of his crime. His
first and great act of disobedience was eating of the fruit of the forbidden
tree; and it was surely just and proper that he who had eaten in sin should
thenceforth eat in sorrow. We are indeed upon terms with our Creator quite
different from the lilies of the field, or the fowls of the air: they are now
as He made them at first, but we are not so; and hence it comes to pass that
labour and travel is a law of universal obligation, and that ¡§If any man will
not work neither should he eat.¡¨
III. The third part
of the sentence pronounced upon man¡¦s disobedience, is the prevailing of thorns
and thistles upon the ground. If the powers and properties of these two sorts
of vegetables be well considered, it will soon appear how well they are fitted
to propagate a curse, by increasing the trouble and labour we are obliged to
bestow in the cultivation of the earth. For these are much more strong and
fruitful than such herbs and grain as are of the greatest use; and they are
more apt to disperse themselves abroad and overrun the ground. With respect to
thistles in particular, we shall discover a very plain reason for this, if we
compare their seeds with the seeds of wheat. For the grain of wheat ought to be
lodged at some little depth in the earth, to which it cannot easily reach
without human assistance. It can only be shed, and fall down from the ear upon
the surface of the ground, where it would be exposed, and ready to be devoured
by the birds of the air, or the vermin of the earth, or perhaps lie till it
rotted and perished with rain and frost for want of being covered with earth.
But the seeds of thistles presently strike down roots in the earth wherever
they happen to light, and need no such care and assistance. Then again the
grains of wheat are naked and heavy, and can fall only as a dead weight at the
foot of the plant which bore them, without being able to stir any farther, and
shift themselves to a place fit for their reception and growth. But the case is
much otherwise with the seeds of thistles. These are small and light, and are
furnished with a fine downy plume, which serves them as wings, by means of
which they are borne up and wafted about from place to place by every breath of
wind, till they are transplanted to every corner of the field where the parent
thistle grew, insomuch that when this plant is ripe, and its seeds hanging
loose and disposed to fall off, it is common to see large fields covered all
over with them, after any little wind. Nor ought it to be passed over that
there is a great difference in the multiplication of these two kinds of seed.
Some sorts of thistles bear thirty, some fifty, and some upwards of a hundred
heads, with a hundred (and in some kinds several hundred) seeds in each of the
heads. And if a moderate reckoning be made, and we suppose all the seeds to
take rightly, grow up and fructify, then one single plant would produce at the
first crop above twenty thousand: which succeeding in like manner, would bring
a second crop of several hundreds of millions; an increase so enormous as can
hardly be imagined: and it is plain that a few crops more, if not hindered by
some means, but carried regularly on, would in a very short time stock the whole
globe of the earth in such a manner as scarcely to leave room for anything
else. But some thistles have other ways of planting and spreading themselves,
besides that of propagating by their seeds. The common way-thistle, as it is
called, besides its innumerable seeds, all winged and prepared for flight, hath
its roots spreading to great lengths, and sending up suckers or new plants on
every side of it. In a little while these, if suffered to continue, send up
others, and they more, without tale or end. So that by this method only, one
plant will overrun a vast tract of land in a very short time, suppressing,
stifling, and destroying all other good and useful herbage. Besides, it is not
every soil that is fit for the nourishment of wheat, and scarcely any will
produce it for more than two or three years together, without great expense
being bestowed on its cultivation: whereas there is hardly any ground or soil
whatsoever, high or low, hill, valley, or plain, where thistles will not take
and flourish for ages together. Having said so much upon thistles, I may be
shorter in my remarks upon thorns; the rather because a great deal of what has
been offered concerning the former is as true of the latter; which grow in
almost every kind of soil, running on and increasing of themselves, and endued
with the same worthless nature and mischievous qualities. For a proof of this
we need only look upon the bramble, which occurs everywhere, and throws itself
about without measure. The berries it bears are innumerable, and each of them
contains a large mass of seeds. The roots push forward under ground, and the
branches and suckers running on to great lengths, trail upon the ground, and
send down fresh roots out of their sides; by which means they are diffused
about, and multiplied without bounds. But as to thorns, the chief example we
have is in that species which is known by the name of the gorse or furze. This
is the vilest and most mischievous shrub upon the face of the earth. It will
let nothing thrive or prosper, or so much as grow near it. It is so beset with
prickles, that it is hardly possible to approach it in any way without hurt:
and so fruitful withal, that for almost half the year it is covered or rather
loaded with flowers, all of which go off into pods, charged with seeds. It
shoots forth stubborn roots far and near, from which other young plants are
growing up: these send up others as fast as the mother plant, so that we need
the less wonder to see this noxious thorn so plentifully abounding, and such
large tracts of land wholly covered and overrun by it. Other thorns are of so
hard and stubborn a nature as to render it exceedingly difficult, and always
impracticable without great labour and expense and patience, ever wholly to
extirpate and clear the ground of them. If these things are duly reflected
upon, it must be allowed that the sentence upon Adam, ¡§Cursed is the ground for
thy sake; in sorrow shalt thou eat of it, thorns also and thistles shall it
bring forth to thee,¡¨ was effectually put in execution; and that not only upon
him, but more especially upon us, his posterity to the end of the world. When
we think of this curse upon the ground, we should also remember that it extends
to our own heart, which, since the Fall, is by nature barren and unprofitable. It
is a soil in which every ill weed will take root and spread itself. There the
thorns of worldly care, and the thistles of worldly vanity, will grow and
flourish. As the husbandman watches his land, so should the Christian search
and examine his heart, that he may cast out of it all those unprofitable weeds
and roots of bitterness which will naturally get possession of it. If this work
is rightly performed, the soil will be ready for the good seed of the word of
God, which will spring up and prosper under the influence of Divine grace, as
the corn groweth by a blessing of rain and sunshine from the heaven above. (W.
Jones. M. A.)
Thorns the curse of Adam and the crown of Christ
Nature is a mirror in which we behold both the skill and character
of the Divine Artificer; but the reflected image--owing to the peculiarity of
the material, or of the angle of vision--is not always a true one. In every
part of creation we find examples of wasted energy and frustrated design;
foundations laid, but the building never completed; the skeleton formed, but
never clothed with living flesh; an unceasing production of means that are
never used, embryos that are never vivified, germs that are never developed. We
cannot, however, in such things, measure the Divine proceedings by our human
standards; for, taking a larger view of the subject, we find that the
imperfection of particular parts is necessary for the perfection of the whole
scheme, and all instances of failure are made to work together for the general
good. It is to this tendency of nature to overflow its banks, to attempt more
than she can execute, to begin more than she can finish, that we owe our own
daily bread. For if the corn plant produced only a sufficient number of seeds
barely to perpetuate the species, there would be no annual miracle of the
multiplication of the loaves; and man, always at the point of starvation, could
neither replenish and subdue the earth, nor accomplish any of the great
purposes of his existence. Thorns are among the most striking examples of
failure on the part of nature to reach an ideal perfection. They are not
essential organs, perfect parts, but in every case altered or abortive
structures. They are formed in two different ways.
When the hairs that occur on the stem of a plant are enlarged and
hardened, they form rigid opaque conical processes such as those of the rose
and the bramble. The so-called thorns of these plants are not, however, true
thorns, but prickles, for they have only a superficial origin, being produced
by the epidermis only, and having no connection with the woody tissue. They may
be easily separated from the stem, without leaving any mark or laceration
behind. True thorns or spines, on the contrary, have a deeper origin and cannot
be so removed. They are not compound hardened hairs, but abnormal conditions of
buds and branches. A branch, owing to poverty of soil, or unfavourable
circumstances, does not develop itself; it produces no twigs or leaves; it
therefore assumes the spinous or thorny form, terminating in a more or less
pointed extremity, as in the common hawthorn. In some cases, as in the sloe, we
see the transformation going on at different stages; some branches bearing
leaves on their lower portions and terminating in spines. A bud by some means
or other becomes abortive; there is a deficiency of nutriment to stimulate its
growth; it does not develop into blossom and fruit. Its growing point,
therefore, is hardened; its scaly envelopes are consolidated into woody fibre,
and the whole bud becomes a sharp thorn. Leaves are also occasionally arrested
in their development and changed into thorns, as in the stipules of Robinia, of
the common barberry, and of several species of acacia. The middle nerve of the
leaf in a few instances absorbs to itself all the parenchyma or green cellular
substance, and therefore hardens into a thorn; and in the holly all the veins
of the leaves become spiny. In all these cases thorns are not necessary, but
accidental appendages, growths arrested and transformed by unfavourable circumstances;
and nature, by the law of compensation, converts them into means of defence to
the plants on which they are produced--not very effective defences in most
instances, but still analogous to the spines of the hedgehog and the quills of
the porcupine, and typical of the plan according to which nature supplies some
method of preservation to every living thing that is liable to be injured. By
cultivation many thorny plants may be deprived of their spines. The apple, the
pear, and the plum tree, in a wild state are thickly covered with thorns; but
when reared in the shelter of the garden, and stimulated by all the elements
most favourable for their full development, they lose these thorns, which
become changed into leafy branches, and blossoming and fruit-bearing buds. In
this way man acquires the rights assigned to him by God, and nature yields to
him the pledges of his sovereignty, and reaches her own ideal of beauty and
perfection by his means. But when, on the other hand, he ceases to dress and
keep the garden, nature regains her former supremacy, and brings back the
cultivated plants to a wilder and more disordered condition than at first. A
garden abandoned to neglect, owing to the absence or the carelessness of the
owner, presents a drearier spectacle than the untamed wilderness; everything
bursting out into rank luxuriance; stems originally smooth covered with
prickles, and buds that would have burst into blossoms changed into thorns. It
is a remarkable circumstance that whenever man cultivates nature, and then
abandons her to her own unaided energies, the result is far worse than if he
had never attempted to improve her at all. No country in the world, now that it
has been so long let out of cultivation, has such a variety and abundance of
thorny plants, as the once-favoured heritage of God¡¦s people, the land flowing
with milk and honey. Travellers call the Holy Land ¡§a land of thorns.¡¨ This
tendency of nature to produce a greater variety of thorny plants in ground let
out of cultivation, as illustrated by the present vegetation of Palestine,
throws considerable light upon the curse pronounced upon Adam when he had
sinned: ¡§Cursed is the ground for thy sake; thorns also and thistles shall it
bring forth to thee.¡¨ Many individuals believe that we have in this curse the
origin of thorns and thistles--that they were previously altogether unknown in
the economy of nature. It is customary to picture Eden as a paradise of
immaculate loveliness, in which everything was perfect, and all the objects of
nature harmonized with the holiness and happiness of our first parents. The
ground yielded only beautiful flowers and fruitful trees--every plant reached
the highest ideal of form, colour, and usefulness of which it was capable.
Preachers and poets in all ages have made the most of this beautiful
conception. It is not, however, Scripture or scientific truth, but human fancy.
Nowhere in the singularly measured and reticent account given in Genesis of
man¡¦s first home do we find anything, if rightly interpreted, that encourages
us to form such an ideal picture of it. It was admirably adapted to man¡¦s
condition, but it was not in all respects ideally perfect. The vegetation that
came fresh from God¡¦s hand, and bore the impress of His seal that it was all
very good, was created for death and reproduction; for it was called into being
as ¡§the herb yielding seed, and the fruit tree bearing fruit, whose seed was in
itself.¡¨ We must remember, too, that it was before and not after the Fall that
Adam was put into the garden to ¡§dress and keep it.¡¨ The very fact that such a
process of dressing and keeping was necessary, indicates in the clearest manner
that nature was not at first ideally perfect. The skill and toil of man called
in, presuppose that there were luxuriant growths to be pruned, tendencies of
vegetation to be checked or stimulated, weeds to be extirpated, tender flowers
to be trained and nursed, and fruits to be more richly developed. The primeval
blessing consisted in replenishing the earth and subduing it; and in no other
way could man subdue the earth than by cultivating it. But the process of
cultivation of necessity implies the existence of thorns and weeds. For in
cultivating any spot we have to contend against the great law of nature which
spreads every plant as widely as its constitution will permit. What then, we
may ask, is implied in the language of the curse, ¡§Thorns also and thistles
shall it bring forth to thee¡¨? The Hebrew form of the curse implies, not that a
new thing should happen, but that an old thing should be intensified and
exhibited in new relations. Just as the rainbow, which was formerly a mere
natural phenomenon, became after the flood the symbol of the great world
covenant; just as death, which during all the long ages of geology had been a
mere phase of life, the termination of existence, became after the Fall the
most bitter and poisonous fruit of sin: so thorns, which in the innocent Eden
were the effects of a law of vegetation, became significant intimations of
man¡¦s deteriorated condition. It is in relation to man, solely, that we are to
look at the curse; for though the production of briers and thorn-bearing plants
may add to man¡¦s labour and distress, it supplies food and enjoyment for
multitudes of inferior creatures, and especially birds and insects. Man, in
Eden, was placed in the most favourable circumstances. It was a garden
specially prepared by God Himself for his habitation, and stocked with all that
he could reasonably require. It was to be a pattern after which his own efforts
in improving the world were to be modelled--a coign of vantage, a select and
blessed centre, from which he was by degrees to subdue the wild prodigality of
nature, and make of the earth an extended paradise. And, therefore, though the
native tendencies of vegetation were not altogether eradicated, they were so
far restrained that the dressing and keeping of the garden furnished him with
healthful employment for all his powers of body and mind, and conferred upon
him the dignity of developing the perfection, which potentially, though not
actually, existed in nature, and thus becoming a fellow worker with God. But
when excluded from Eden, he had to encounter, with powers greatly weakened by
sin, the full, merciless force of nature¡¦s untamed energies; energies, too, excited
into greater opposition against him by his own efforts to subdue them. For, as
I have already said, the very process of cultivation, while it removes the
thorns and briers of the soil, will, if it be given up, produce a greater
variety and luxuriance of thorns and thistles than the ground originally
produced. The very fertility imparted to the soil would, if allowed to nourish
its native vegetation, result in a greater rankness of useless growth. And
therefore the tiller of the ground must never relax his efforts. I believe that
the thorns and briers thus introduced in connection with the human epoch, but
before the Fall, were anticipative consequences, prophetic symbols of that
Fall. We err greatly, if we suppose that sin came into the world unexpectedly--produced
a sudden shock and dislocation throughout nature, and took God as it were by
surprise--that the atonement was a Divine after thought to remedy a defect in
God¡¦s creative foresight and natural law. He who sees the end from the
beginning, knew that such a mournful moral lapse would happen--that Creation
would fall with its king and high priest, and had therefore made preparations
for it, not only, in the plans of heaven, but also in the objects and
arrangements of earth. There are many things in the scheme of nature which have
a reference to the fact of sin before it became a fact; which remind us
unmistakeably that God, in fitting up this world to be the habitation of a
moral being who should fall through sin, and be restored through suffering, had
filled it with types and symbols of that fall and that restoration. When God
said to Adam, ¡§Cursed is the ground for thy sake; thorns also and thistles
shall it bring forth to thee,¡¨ He acted according to a plan uniformly pursued
by Him in all His subsequent dispensations and dealings with men; by which in
gracious condescension to our two-fold nature, and to the carnal and spiritual
classes of mankind, He associated the natural with the spiritual, gave the
outward sign of the inward spiritual truth. He set the field of nature with
types of degeneracy and arrested growth, which should symbolize to man the
consequences upon his own nature of his own sin. What then are the thorns,
looking at them in this typical aspect, produced by the sinful, accursed soil
of man¡¦s heart and life?
1. Labour is one of the thorns of the curse. ¡§All things,¡¨ says the
wise man, ¡§are full of labour.¡¨ Without it life cannot be maintained.
Unremitting labour from day to day and from year to year--except in the case of
a few races into whose lap nature pours, almost unsolicited, her prodigal
stores, and who therefore continue children in body and mind all their
lives--is the condition upon which we receive our daily bread. Much of this
labour is indeed healthy. In work alone is health and life; and it is for work
that God has created faculties. But how much of it, nevertheless, is terrible
drudgery, effectually hindering the development of the higher faculties of the
mind and soul, wearisome effort, vanity, and vexation of spirit! How much of
failure is there in it, of disproportion between desires and results! How much
of it is like rolling the fabled stone of Sisyphus up the steep hill only to
roll down again immediately--like weaving ropes of sand! How often does the
heart despair amid the unprofitableness of all its labour under the sun! We
plough our fields and sow our seed; but instead of a bountiful harvest to
reward us, too often comes up a crop of thorns and thistles, to wound the
toiling hand and pierce the aching brow.
2. Then there is the thorn of pain--the darkest mystery of life.
Some maintain that pain exists by necessity, that it has its root in the
essential order of the world. It is the thorn that guards the rose of
pleasure--the sting that protects the honey of life. But ask any martyr to
physical suffering if that explanation satisfies him. Why, if the purpose of
pain is a purely benevolent one, should it be so excessive? Why should it rend
and rack the frame with agony? Why should it last so long? Methinks, if pain
were meant merely to warn us of the presence of evil, and guard us against it,
that a much less degree and a shorter duration of it would suffice. The Bible,
and the Bible alone, tells us the cause and the origin of it. It tells us that
it is nothing else than a witness for sin--the thorn which man¡¦s body, weakened
and palsied by sin, produces. Man feels in his body the physical consequences
of the death which his soul has died. He has the thorn in the flesh, the
messenger of Satan to buffet him, that he may be reminded continually of his
sin and mortality, and be induced to walk softly all the days of his life.
3. Then there is the thorn of sorrow. Every branch of the human tree
may be arrested and transformed by some casualty into a thorn of sorrow. The
staff of friendship upon which we lean may break and pierce the hand. The bud
of love which we cherish in our heart, and feed with the life blood of our
affections, may be blighted by the chill of death, and become a thorn to wound
us grievously. That civilization which has lessened physical troubles, has
rendered us more susceptible to mental ones; and side by side with its manifold
sources of enjoyment, are opened up manifold sources of suffering. And why is
all this? Why is man, so highly cultivated, the possessor of such vast
resources of science and art, still born to trouble as the sparks fly upward?
There is no possible way of accounting for it save by the primeval curse: ¡§In
sorrow shalt thou eat of it all the days of thy life.¡¨
4. And lastly, as the climax of all life¡¦s evils, is death, the
prospect and the endurance of it, from both of which our whole nature,
originally made in the image of God, and destined to live forever, revolts with
the utmost abhorrence. Such are the thorns which man¡¦s nature, under the
withering, distorting curse of sin, produces. Cursed is the ground within, as
well as the ground without, for man¡¦s sake; and in labour, in pain, in sorrow,
and in death, does he eat of its fruit. From all these thorns Jesus came to
deliver us. The second Adam in the poverty of His condition has recovered for
us all that the first Adam in the plenitude of his blessings lost. The Roman
soldiers platted a crown of thorns and put it upon the head of Jesus; but they
little knew the significance of the act. Upon the august brow of man¡¦s Surety
and Substitute was thus placed in symbol, what was done in spiritual reality, a
chaplet woven of those very thorns which the ground, cursed for man¡¦s sake,
produced. None of these thorns grew in the sacred soil of Jesus¡¦ heart. But He
who knew no sin was made sin for us. He was wounded for our transgressions, and
bruised for our iniquities. He could, no doubt, by the exercise of His almighty
power, remove the thorns of man¡¦s life. He who created the world by a word, had
only to command, and it should be done. But not in this way could the
necessities of the case be met. It was no mere arbitrary power that called the
thorns into existence; it was justice and judgment: and, therefore, mere
arbitrary power could not eradicate them; it required mercy and truth. And
mercy and truth could be reconciled with justice and judgment only by the
obedience and sacrifice of the Son of God. Jesus had, therefore, to wear the
thorns which man¡¦s sin had developed, in order that man might enjoy the
peaceful fruits of righteousness which Christ¡¦s atonement had produced. And
what is the result? By wearing these thorns He has blunted them, plucked them
out of our path, out of our heart, out of our life. By enduring them He
conquered them. The crown of pain became the crown of triumph; and the
submission to ignominy and suffering became the assertion and establishment of
a sovereignty over every form of suffering. Evil is now a vanquished power.
Every woe bears upon it the inscription ¡§overcome.¡¨ He bore the thorny crown of
labour, and labour is now a sacred thing, a precious discipline, a merciful
education. It is the lowest step of the ladder by which man ascends the Edenic
height from which he fell. He wore the thorny crown of pain, and pain is now
robbed of the element that exasperates our nature against it. By His own
example He teaches us that we must be made perfect through suffering; and
knowing this, we do not feel pain to be less, but we feel a strength and a
patience which enable us to rise superior to it. As the Prince of sufferers, He
wore the thorny crown of sorrow, and He has made, in the experience of His
afflicted ones, that abortive thorn to produce the blossom of holiness and the
fruit of righteousness. Sorrow is no more to the Christian the curse of Adam,
but the cross of Christ. It is the crown and badge of his royal dignity, the
proof of Divine sonship. And, lastly, He wore the thorny crown of death; and
therefore He says, ¡§If a man keep My sayings, he shall not see death.¡¨ He has
indeed to pass through the state, but the bitterness of death for him is past.
He has only to finish his course with joy; to fall asleep in Jesus; to depart
and be with Christ, which is far better. (H. Macmillan, LL. D.)
A lesson from the ground
¡§If my horse, if my ox, if my dog, do not do as I want them to
do,¡¨ says the angry man, ¡§I make them,¡¨ and then with his blood boiling hot he
goes out into the fields and he can do nothing! The ground says, ¡§If you want
to do anything with me you must do it with hopeful patience; I am a school in
which men learn the meaning of patient industry, patient hopefulness. I never
answer the anger of a fool or the passion of a demented man. I rest.¡¨ We cannot
compel nature to keep pace with our impatience; man cannot hasten the wheel of
the seasons; man cannot drive nature out of its calm and solemn movement; his
own fields keep him at bay. He would like to get on faster, faster--it would
please him to have three wheat harvests every year, it would delight him to
have an orchard stripping on the first day of every month. He makes his dog go
out when he likes--his own trees put out their branches without him and mock
his fury. Nature says, ¡§I must have my long holiday¡¨; nature says, ¡§I must have
my long, long sleep.¡¨ Without recreation and rest, man¡¦s life would not be
solidly and productively developed; he may be lashed and scourged and
overdriven and maddened, but broad, massive, enduring growth he never can
realize unless he operates upon the law of steady slowness. Such is the great
lesson of nature. We sometimes think we could improve the arrangements of
Providence in this matter of the ground. A man standing in his wheat field is
apt to feel that it would be an exceedingly admirable arrangement if he could
have another crop of wheat within the year. He thinks it could be managed: he
takes up the roots out of the earth and he says, ¡§This will never do; why, I
have lost my year herein--now I will command the ground to bring forth another
crop,¡¨ and this agricultural Canute, having waved his hand over the fields, is
answered with silence. That must be your law of progress. There is the very
great temptation to hasten to be rich. I see a man in yonder corner, not half
so able as I am, never had half the education I have had, and by a lucky swing
of the hand he makes ten thousand pounds, and I am labouring at my mill, or at
my counter, or in my field, and am getting very little--and very slowly. I look
in the other corner and see exactly such another man, and he, too, by a lucky
twist of the hand, makes ten thousand a year; and I never make one, by long,
patient, steady work. I know what I will do; I¡¦ll put off this old labourer¡¦s
coat, and buy a new fine one, and go and join these men and do as they do, and
I will have a hundred thousand pounds in a month, and horses and carriages and
estates, and I will not go at this slow snail pace any longer--why should I? I
go--and I fail, as I deserve to do. Society never could be built upon the
action of such men as have now been described. They may be doing nothing
dishonourable, they may be acting in a very proper way, there are no laws that
have not exceptions attached to them--I broadly acknowledge the honourableness
of many exceptions to this law of land like slowness of cultivation and growth,
but the solid everlasting law of human life is labour, patience, expenditure,
hopefulness, little to little, a step at a time, line upon line, and if you
trifle with that law you will bring yourself into a state of intellectual
unhealthiness, into a condition of moral exaggeration, and you will labour upon
wrong principles, and reach, by rapid strides, unhappy conclusions. (J.
Parker, D. D.)
Spiritual cultivation
So it is in spiritual cultivation--you cannot grow a character in
a week. There are some long thin stalks that you can buy in a garden market for
about a shilling a dozen, and you put up these, and say, ¡§Do grow, if you
please; do get up, and do broaden yourselves and make something like a garden
about us,¡¨ and the long thin stalks, spindle shanks, look at you, and cannot be
hastened, though you mock them with their leanness, and scourge them with your
unruly tongue. Look at those grand old cedars and oaks and wide-spreading
chestnuts. Why are they so noble? Because they are so old. They have been
rocked by a hundred wintry nurses, blessed by a thousand summer visitants, and
they express the result of the long processes. They have told their tale to
fifty winters, caught the blessing of fifty summers, waved musically in the
storm, guested the birds of the air, and all the while have been striking their
roots deeper and deeper, farther and farther into the rich soil. So must it be
with human character; you cannot extemporise moral greatness, it is a slow
growth. Money cannot take the place of time; time is an element in the
development and sublimising of character; time stands alone and cannot be
compounded for by all the wealth in all the gold mines of creation. This
spiritual cultivation not only cannot be hastened, but sometimes it is very
hard. As a general rule, indeed, it is very difficult; it is not easy to grow
in grace. Some of us live too near the smoke ever to be very great trees, or
even very fruitful bushes. Circumstances are heavily against us; we are not
placed in favourable localities or under very gracious conditions. The house is
small, the income is little, the children are many and noisy, the demands upon
time and attention and patience are incessant, health is not very good and
cheerful, the temperament is a little despondent and very susceptible to
injurious influences, and how to grow in Christ Jesus under such circumstances
as these, the Saviour Himself only knows. Be thankful to God, therefore, that
the bruised reed is not broken, that though you are faint, still you are
pursuing, that though you are very weak in the limb and cannot run hard in this
uphill race, your eyes are fixed in the right quarter; and the fixing and
sparkling of your eye has a meaning which God¡¦s heart knows well. (J.
Parker, D. D.)
Observations
I. THORNS AND
THISTLES, AND ALL UNPROFITABLE WEEDS, ARE THE EFFECT OF GOD¡¦S CURSE UPON MAN
FOR SIN.
1. Seeing all creatures are His servants, as David calls them (Psalms 119:91), He can bring them up, and
plant them where He pleaseth, who doth whatsoever He will in heaven and earth (Psalms 135:6).
2. Neither can God in respect to His own honour, do less injustice
than to withhold His blessing from the creatures, that should be for our
service, as we withhold from Him our service of obedience, which we owe Him by
our covenant.
II. AS WE ARE MORE
OR LESS SERVICEABLE UNTO GOD, SO WE MAY EXPECT THAT THE CREATURE SHALL BE MORE
OR LESS SERVICEABLE UNTO US.
1. God¡¦s blessing upon the creatures, is that only by which they are
made useful unto us. Now God in justice can do no less than recompense all men
according to their deeds (Isaiah 59:17-18; Psalms 62:12), and that not only in that
great day of judgment, but even at present, and in outward things, that men may
see and acknowledge it, as Psalms 58:11.
2. Neither is there a means more effectual to prevail with men in
general, to walk in a course of obedience, than when they find all the creatures
against them in a course of rebellion.
III. GOD MAKES GOOD
HIS PROMISES, BY WHICH HE HATH ENGAGED HIMSELF UNTO US, THOUGH WE FAIL IN OUR
COVENANT BY WHICH WE ARE ENGAGED UNTO HIM. See Psalms 78:37-38; Psalms 89:32-34; 2 Timothy 2:13. Reason--
1. God¡¦s promises are founded upon His own goodness and truth which
cannot fail (Psalms 119:89-90; Psalms 119:160).
2. God knew beforehand what we are, even before He engaged Himself
unto us (see Psalms 103:13-14).
3. And if He should take advantage of every forfeiture, He must
necessarily undo His children, who trespass daily against Him.
4. And hath therefore given His Son Christ to take away our sins; if
we hold fast the covenant, and do not wickedly depart from it though we fail
many ways (1 John 2:1-2).
IV. THOUGH GOD
WHEN HE PARDONS OUR SIN, RESTORES US HIS BLESSINGS WHICH WE FORFEITED THEREBY,
YET WE ENJOY THEM WITH SOME DIMINUTION AND ABATEMENT. (J. White, M. A.)
In the sweat of thy face
shalt thou eat bread
The ordinance of toil
I. THE NECESSITY
OF TOIL IS AT FIRST CONNECTED WITH TRANSGRESSION. Like death, the child of sin.
Yet there is blessing in toil to him who can get up into the higher regions,
and see how out of the wry extremity of human pain and endurance God can bring
forth fruits which shall be rich and fair throughout eternity.
II. CONSIDER WHAT
IS THE FUNDAMENTAL PRINCIPLE OF THIS ORDINANCE OF TOIL.
1. Toil is ordained to restore man to a true and living relation
with the whole system of things around him. On this sentence of labour God
bases all His culture of our spirits; by this He keeps alive the desire and the
hope of deliverance.
2. Toil is ordained to draw forth the full unfolding of the whole
power and possibility of man¡¦s being, with a view to the system of things before
him, the world of his eternal citizenship, his perfect and developed life. Be
sure that it is the last strain that drags out the most precious fibre of
faculty, or trains the organs to the keenest perception, the most complete
expansion, the most perfect preparation for the higher work and joy of life. (J.
B. Brown, B. A.)
Labour an earthward pilgrimage
I. LOOK AT THE
HOPELESSNESS OF MEN¡¦S LABOUR ON THE EARTH.
1. It cannot revoke the sentence of death.
2. It is degrading because of its necessarily sordid aims and
occupations.
3. It is itself a living, lingering death.
II. THINE OF THE
ULTIMATE PURPOSE OF THIS SORROW, SUFFERING, AND HOPELESSNESS.
1. To convince men of the fruitlessness of the life he had chosen.
2. To show him his need of the mercy of God, and prepare him to
receive it. (St. J. A. Frere.)
Observations
I. MAN¡¦S
EMPLOYMENT IN THIS LIFE IS IN WEARISOME AND PAINFUL LABOURS.
1. The curse that is laid upon the earth for sin, by which without
hard labour it yields no fruits for the sustaining of man¡¦s life.
2. The Lord hath so appointed it for man¡¦s good.
First, this reproves all idle slothful persons living without
callings, or idle in their callings, or in unprofitable callings. Secondly, and
should stir us up to diligence in such employments as we are called unto.
1. In obedience to God¡¦s command.
2. And as therein serving God, and not men (Ephesians 6:7).
3. And being profitable (Proverbs 14:23) to ourselves (Proverbs 10:4) and others (Proverbs 21:5).
4. And thereby procuring us a just title to what we possess (2 Thessalonians 3:12). Only--
II. THERE IS
PROFIT IN ALL THE DUTIES WHICH GOD ENJOINS US.
1. God who is in Himself all-sufficient and perfectly blessed,
neither needs, nor can be profited by any creature.
2. Neither is it for His honour that His service should be
unprofitable, as wicked men unjustly slander Him (Job 21:15).
3. Neither could His servants have otherwise any encouragement to go
on in His service with cheerfulness, which God requires (Deuteronomy 28:47) and delights in (2 Corinthians 9:7).
III. WHATSOEVER WE
UNDERTAKE IN OBEDIENCE TO GOD¡¦S COMMANDMENT SHALL NOT WANT EFFECT.
1. That God is able to give success, and by His blessing to prosper
men¡¦s endeavours, no man can deny.
2. That it concerns Him in point of honour to prosper that which He
commands, is as clear as the former.
3. It is needful to be so, lest otherwise men should be discouraged
in His service, if they should labour therein without bringing anything to
effect.
IV. GOD¡¦S
SANCTIONS ARE CERTAIN, AS WELL OF JUDGMENT AS OF MERCY.
1. Both the threats of judgment, as well as the promises of mercy,
are founded on the same grounds of God¡¦s truth, and immutability, and power.
2. And have the same scope, the honouring of God in the
manifestation as well of His justice as of His mercy, giving to every man
according to his deeds (see Psalms 58:11; Isaiah 59:18-19).
V. THOUGH GOD
HATH FREED HIS CHILDREN FROM ETERNAL DEATH, YET HE HATH LEFT THEM AS WELL AS
OTHERS, UNDER THE SENTENCE OF TEMPORAL DEATH.
1. That by it they might be put in mind of sin that brought death
upon them Romans 5:12).
2. They have no harm by death, which is at present but a sleep,
wherein they rest from their labours (Isaiah 53:2), and which severs them not
from Christ (1 Thessalonians 4:14), through whom
it is sanctified to them (see 1 Corinthians 15:55), and is made an
entrance into life Revelation 14:13), and hurts not the
body, which shall be raised up in 1 Corinthians 15:42-43).
VI. MEN¡¦S BODIES
ARE BASE EVERY WAY, BOTH IN THEIR ORIGINAL, IN THEIR PRESENT CONDITION, AND IN
THEIR DISSOLUTION.
1. To humble us (Genesis 18:27).
2. To magnify God¡¦s mercy, in abasing Himself to look on such vile
wretches (see Psalms 113:6-8), to give His Son for
them, to advance dust and ashes to such a glorious condition, as the apostle
describes (Corinthians 15:42, 43, 49).
3. To move us to long for heaven (see 2 Corinthians 5:1-2).
VII. THE DISPOSING
OF MAN¡¦S LIFE IS IN GOD¡¦S HAND. Which God challengeth to Himself (Deuteronomy 32:39). David acknowledgeth Psalms 31:15). Daniel testifies to
Belshazzar (Daniel 5:23), and is clearly manifested
by all experience (Psalms 104:29); so that it is not in the
power of men to cut it off at their pleasure (1 Kings 19:1-21; Daniel 3:27; Daniel 6:22), though God use them to that
end sometimes as His executioners (Psalms 17:13-14).
VIII. THOUGH DEATH
BE CERTAIN TO ALL MEN, YET THE TIME OF DEATH IS UNCERTAIN.
1. That men might not be hardened in sin, as usually they are when
judgment is deferred (Ecclesiastes 8:11), but walk in fear, as
being not assured of life for one moment of an hour.
2. To be assured of the term of life would not profit us any way.
IX. THE JUDGMENTS
OF GOD ARE JUST AND EQUAL, ALL OF THEM IN ALL THINGS.
1. He cannot wrong His own creatures, no more than the potter can
the clay; nay, much less.
2. His nature will not suffer Him to do otherwise; He that is God
must necessarily do good (Psalms 119:68); out of the Lord¡¦s mouth
proceed not good and evil (Lamentations 3:38).
3. Nor the respect to His own honour, magnified as well in His
justice Psalms 64:8-9), as in His mercy and
truth.
4. It would otherwise discourage His own servants (see Matthew 25:24-25), as the opinion of
God¡¦s favouring of the wicked and afflicting His own servants, had almost
discouraged David (Psalms 73:13-14). (J. White, M. A.)
The curse and the blessing of labour
I. The universal
necessity of labour. The earth no longer produces fruit independently of
labour.
II. The fact,
asserted in the text, that labour is a curse. It is part of our punishment for
the Fall that it should be so.
III. The manner in
which we may lighten this curse, and cause it to be borne. We may not escape
from it; but it may be lightened by--
1. Religion--personal, practical, and real.
2. The cultivation of knowledge.
3. The maintenance of good health.
4. The practice of economy. (J. Maskell.)
The penal clauses
Then come the penal clauses, and it is wonderful how the curse is
tempered with mercy, so much so indeed that it is difficult to tell whether
there is not more blessing than cursing in the sentence. The seed of the woman
is to be mighty enough to crush the serpent; and the ground is to be difficult
of tillage for man¡¦s sake. Hard agriculture is a blessing. To get harvests for
nothing would be a pitiless curse indeed. To be sentenced to ¡§hard labour¡¨ is
really a blessing to great criminals; it breaks in upon the moodiness that
would become despair; it taxes invention; it keeps the blood moving; it rouses
energy. Many a man has been made by the very hardness of his task. But terrible
are the words--¡§unto dust shalt thou return.¡¨ According to these words it is
plainly stated that man was to be exactly what he was before he was made at
all--he was to be dead dust, by reason of his sin. Whether any way of escape
can be found out remains to be seen. The law is plain; whether mercy can modify
it will be revealed as we proceed in the wondrous story. Perhaps there may yet
be made a Man within a man, a Spirit within a body, a Son within a slave. That
would be glorious, surely! Night has fallen upon the guilty pair, but in the
night there are stars, large, bright, like tender eyes shining through the
darkness--perhaps these stars will lead on to a manger, a Child, a Saviour! (J.
Parker, D. D.)
The curse in labour
The curse in labour is the excess of it: labour itself is
enjoyment. You will find that the horse feels it enjoyment to put forth its
strength; and so man felt it enjoyment to put forth his energies in rearing the
flowers that God had planted in the midst of Eden. The curse is not labour, but
the excess of labour. It is a very absurd notion that prevails, that labour is
a sort of mean thing: it is a most honourable thing; it was a feature of Adam
in his innocent and Eden state; and the poorest labourer is just as honourable
as the greatest noble, if he be a Christian. We must not estimate men as we do
the cinnamon tree, the whole of whose value is in its bark, but by the heart
that beats beneath, and the intellect that thinks, and the life that shines out
in obedience to the will of God. (J. Cunningham, D. D.)
Labour a blessing to man
Man is condemned to eat his bread in the sweater his brow. He is
doomed to procure it with labour and fatigue. But what would he have become,
had he not been subjected to that salutary labour, which distracts his thoughts
from himself, occupies his mind, mortifies his passions, and puts a certain restraint
upon the corruption which dwells within him? A prey to his own reflections,
master of his own life, and burdened with the weight of his days, he would have
become the sport of his passions, and have plunged into every species of
iniquity which a corrupt imagination could have invented. The punishment of
sin, to a certain extent, deprives him of the power and opportunity of doing
evil, in spite of himself, and sometimes becomes, in the hands of God, the
means of bringing him to salvation. And what dissatisfaction, what weariness,
what an insupportable feeling of emptiness must continually have attended an
idle and useless existence! On the contrary, what a source of enjoyment and
satisfaction, what a means of developing and perfecting his faculties does he
now find in a life consecrated to useful labour! Blessed be God! Blessed be God
for the thunders of His justice! Blessed be God for His curse denounced against
sin! (L. Bonnet.)
Labour necessary to success
Turner, the great painter, was once asked the secret of his
success. He replied, ¡§I have no secret but hard work.¡¨
Labour the best seasoning
Dionysius the tyrant, at an entertainment given to him by the
Lacedaemonians, expressed some disgust at their black broth. ¡§No wonder,¡¨ said
one of them, ¡§for it wants seasoning.¡¨ ¡§What seasoning?¡¨ asked the tyrant.
¡§Labour,¡¨ replied the citizen, ¡§joined with hunger and thirst.¡¨
Eminence and labour
When we read the lives of distinguished men in any department, we
find them almost always celebrated for the amount of labour they could perform.
Demosthenes, Julius Caesar, Henry of France, Lord Bacon, Sir Isaac Newton,
Franklin, Washington, Napoleon, different as they were in their intellectual
and moral qualities, were all renowned as hard workers. We read hove many days
they could support the fatigues of a march; how early they rose; how late they
watched; how many hours they spent in the field, in the cabinet, in the court;
how many secretaries they kept employed; in short, how hard they worked. (Everett.)
The idealization of labour
The conception of labour as the creative intention, or ¡§end¡¨ of
human nature, is a comparatively late one, due to revelation or to philosophic
reflection upon an already lengthened experience. And the feelings of persons
born in these later ages of the world are not to be taken as an infallible
guide as to what may have been the primitive instinct, the motive that impelled
to human activity and invention. Carlyle, for instance, in a letter to his
mother, when he was at the commencement of his career (1821), asks the striking
question, ¡§Why do we fret and murmur and toil, and consume ourselves for
objects so transient and frail? Is it that the soul, living here as in her
prison house, strives after something boundless like herself, and finding it
nowhere, still renews the search? Surely we are fearfully and wonderfully
made!¡¨ Now, as the process of idealization in respect of the aims of labour is
closely connected with the sense of its influence upon temporal well-being, we
cannot be far wrong in concluding that it is largely due to the experience of
the advantages it secures. Work is the most direct and certain avenue to the
satisfaction of bodily wants, to the acquisition of wealth, and to the social
consideration and general influence that attend the possession of wealth. Upon
the industrial energy of its people a city or a nation in the main builds its
prosperity and its political power. Another source of dignity and consideration
consists in the tendency labour reveals to enlarge the scope and the
possibilities of life. In this respect it meets and fosters the growing,
expanding faculties of our nature. To the young it opens up many a vista for
vague longings and ambitions; and the great centres of industry are invested
with a romantic, indefinite fascination, because of the careers they hold
forth. Not only the legitimacy, but the social consideration of trades,
professions, and occupations, is determined by their perceived tendency to
promote civilization. Were it not for this criterion the secondary products of
human skill and effort would go to the wall. So much of their value, their
worth, is relative only to the circumstances and culture of their owners, that
it would otherwise be all but impossible to appraise them. When the day¡¦s task
is seen to be a Divine appointment Psalms 104:23) equally with birth and
death, then shall a man rejoice in it, and labour on ¡§as in the great
Taskmaster¡¦s eye,¡¨ looking diligently the meanwhile for the message it may
enshrine, the glimpse of higher things it is sure to give, and waiting
patiently for the last, the sure reward. In the great book manifold histories
and teachings set forth for us the ideals of labour, and the commonest
occupation is seen to have some spiritual significance. The diligence and faith
of the husbandman, the daring quest of the miner (Job 28:1-28), the far venture of
the mariner, the thoroughness of the builder, the care and compassion of the
shepherd, are all given in illustration of the qualities and duties of our
heavenly service. But not until that service itself is, according to our gifts
and adaptation, revealed as our individual vocation, is the idealization of
labour perfected.¡¨
That is a new day, the dawn of a new life to the boy, when he has
taken himself out of the routine of the child, and resolved to be something in
lessons, or play, or conduct; and the thrill with which the young man puts his
hand on his earnest life work tingles yet along the very nerves of age. It
makes us almost a giant to feel the birth throe of a living purpose. The
lioness reproached because she gave but one at a birth, replied, ¡¥Yes, but that
a lion.¡¦ And the one lion purpose born to a man, to grow into the one thing of
life, is a birth to be proud of and never forgotten. After it we are never the
same. It has lifted out of old conditions, limitations; it has put a new spirit
in us, as the new inspiration towards a broader life, the quick play of whose
pulses, vibrating through the whole man, impels us to thought and deed . . . It
is a proud, a solemn, a sublime moment that sees the soul register its purpose
and write it as with imperishable letters, ¡¥This one thing I do, come weal,
come woe, come ban of man or shock of time, come sorrow and distress and loss,
though I stand alone, here I stand, this I do¡¦; and the life of slow, earnest,
arduous toil that follows partakes of the grandeur of the birth.¡¨ (Homiletic
Magazine.)
Man, labour, sorrow
Look into the country fields, there you see toiling at the plough
and scythe; look into the waters, there you see tugging at oars and cables;
look into the city, there you see a throng of cares, and hear sorrowful
complaints of bad times and the decay of trade; look into studies, and there
you see paleness and infirmities, and fixed eyes; look into the court, and
there are defeated hopes, envyings, underminings, and tedious attendance. All
things are full of labour, and labour is full of sorrow; and these two are
inseparably joined with the miserable life of man. (Timothy Rogers.)
Fallen man
In some respects manifestly made for a sphere higher than he
fills, he appears to us like a creature of the air which a cruel hand has
stripped of its silken wings. How painfully he resembles this hapless object
which has just fallen on the pages of a book that we read by the candle on an
autumn evening! It retains the wish, but has lost the power, to fly. Allured by
the taper¡¦s glare, it has brushed the flame, and, dropping with a heavy fall,
now crawls wingless across the leaf, and seeks the finger of mercy to end its
misery. Compare man with any of the other creatures, and how directly we come
to the conclusion that he is not, nor can be, the same creature with which God
crowned the glorious work of creation. (T. Guthrie, D. D.)
Man fallen
No man in his senses will venture to assert that man is today just
as man originally was. He is a dismantled fane, a broken shrine, still lingering
about him some gleams of the departed glory sufficient to give an idea of what
he once was, and probably left as faint prophecy of what he will again be. But
notwithstanding this, man is a changed, and fallen, and degenerate creature.
Nothing we know explains this seemingly inexplicable phenomenon, except the
Word of God, which tells us that man sinned, and fell, and has become what we
now find him. The gold, in the language of a prophet, is become dim, and the
crown is fallen from his head. He has exchanged the beautiful, the fertile, the
happy Eden which earth once was, for the desert and the bleak and blasted
condition in which we now find it. He must now water it with the tears of his
weeping eyes, and fertilize it with the sweat of his aching brow, in order to
gather bread from it. This was a penal and just retribution, and yet it
embosomed the hope of an ultimate and sure deliverance. (Dr. Cumming.)
Man damaged
If you should see a house with its gable ends in ruins, with its
broken pillars lying in heaped-up confusion on the ground, half covered up with
trailing weeds and moss, you would not hesitate to say, ¡§This building has
suffered damage at some time; it was not like this when it came from the hand
of the builder.¡¨ I say this of man. His is not in a normal condition. (Hepworth.)
Mercy in the curse
We are inclined to believe that it was not wholly in anger and in
righteous severity that God made the cursing of the ground the punishment of
Adam. We think it will not be difficult to show that the Almighty was
consulting for the good of His creatures when He thus made labour their
inevitable lot. We need not limit our remarks to the single case of
agriculture; for we may safely affirm that there is nothing which is worth
man¡¦s attainment which he can attain without labour.
I. Now there is,
perhaps, an universal consent upon one proposition--that idleness is the
fruitful source of every kind of vice; and it follows from this that the
placing it in a man¡¦s power to be idle--supplying him, that is, with the means
of subsistence without extracting from him any labour--is simply to expose him
to the greatest possible peril, and almost ensuring his moral degeneracy. We
know that there are fine and frequent exceptions to this statement, and that
many whose circumstances preclude all necessity of toiling for a livelihood
carve out for themselves paths of honourable industry, and are as assiduous in
labour as if compelled to it by their wants. There is evidently a repressing
power in abundance, and a stimulating power in penury; the one tending to
produce dwarfishness of intellect and mental feebleness, the other to elicit
every energy and intellectual greatness. We will not say that the battle for
subsistence has not borne hard on genius, and kept down the loftiness of its
aspirings; but we are assured that the cases are of immeasurably more frequent
occurrence in which the man has been indebted to the straitness of his
circumstances for the expansion of his mental powers. I wish no son of mine to
be exempt from the sentence, ¡§In the sweat of thy face shalt thou eat bread.¡¨
And the family which we regard as left in the best condition when death removes
its head is, not the family for whom there is a fine landed estate or an ample
funded property, but the family which has been thoroughly educated in the
principles of religion, and trained to habits of piety and industry, and in
which there is just as much wealth as may preserve from want those members who
cannot labour for themselves, and start the others in professions which open a
broad field for unwearied diligence. We would yet further observe, before
quitting this portion of our subject, that after all God did not so much remove
fruitfulness from the soil as make the development of that fruitfulness dependent
on industry. The earth has yielded sufficiency for its ever-multiplying
population, as though the power of supply grew with the demand; nor has it only
yielded a bare sufficiency, but has been so generous in its productions, that
one man by his tillage may raise bread for hundreds. This is amongst the most
beautiful and wonderful of the arrangements of Providence. Why can one amongst
us be a clergyman, a second a lawyer, a third a merchant, a fourth a tradesman?
Only because, notwithstanding the curse, there is still such fertility in the
ground, that more corn is produced than suffices for those by whom the ground
is cultivated. The whole advance of civilization is dependent on a power in the
earth of furnishing more food than those who till it can consume. A people who
are always on the border of starvation must be manifestly a people always on
the border of barbarism; and just as manifestly a people must be always on the
border of starvation if every individual can only wrench from the ground enough
for himself. Thus, when we come to examine into and trace the actual facts of
the case, the mercy of the dispensation exceeds immeasurably the judgement.
II. We propose, in
the second place, to examine WHETHER THERE BE ANY INTIMATION IN SCRIPTURE THAT
THE SENTENCE ON ADAM WAS DESIGNED TO BREATHE MERCY AS WELL AS JUDGMENT. We are
disposed to agree with those who consider that the revelation of the great
scheme of redemption was contemporaneous with human transgression. We believe
that, as soon as man fell, notices were graciously given of a deliverance to be
effected in the fulness of time. It is hardly to be supposed that Adam would be
left in ignorance of what he was so much concerned to know; and the early
institution of sacrifices seem sufficient to show that he was taught a religion
adapted to his circumstances. But the question now before us is, whether any
intimations of redemption were contained in the sentence under review, and
whether our common father, as he listened to the words which declared the earth
cursed for his sake, might have gathered consolation from the disastrous
announcement. There is one reason why we think this probable, though we may not
be able to give distinct proof. Our reason is drawn from the prophecy which
Lamech uttered on the birth of his son Noah: ¡§This same shall comfort us
concerning our work and toil of our hands, because of the ground which the Lord
hath cursed.¡¨ And therefore did he call his son Noah, which signifies rest, to
mark that he connected him with deliverance and respite from that curse which
sin had brought on the ground. But in what way was Noah thus connected? How
could Noah comfort Lamech in reference to the ground which God had cursed? Some
suppose the reference to be to instruments of agriculture which Noah would
invent after the flood, and which would much diminish human labour; but this
could hardly be said to be a comfort to Lamech, who died before the flood: and
we may fairly doubt whether a prediction, having reference only to the
invention of a few tools, would have been recorded for the instruction of all
after-generations. But Noah, as the builder of the ark, and the raiser of the
new world, when the old had pertained in the deluge, was eminently a type of
Christ Jesus, in whose Church alone is safety, and at whose bidding new heavens
and a new earth will succeed to those scathed by the baptism of fire. And as an
illustrious type of the Redeemer, though we knew not in what other capacity,
Noah might console Lamech and his cotemporaries; for the restoration after the
deluge, in which they had no personal interest, might be a figure to them of
the restitution of all things, when the curse was to be finally removed, and
those who had rode out the deluge receive an everlasting benediction. Thus it
would seem highly probable, from the tenour of Lamech¡¦s prediction, that he had
been made acquainted with the respects in which his son Noah would typify
Christ, and that therefore he had been taught to regard the curse on the ground
as only temporary, imposed for wise ends, till the manifestation of the
Redeemer, under whose sceptre ¡§the desert should rejoice and blossom as the
rose.¡¨ And if so much were revealed to Lamech, it cannot be an over-bold
supposition that the same information was imparted to Adam. Thus may our first
parent, compelled to till the earth on which rested the curse of its Creator,
have known that there were blessings in store, and that, though he and his
children must dig the ground in the sweat of their face, there would fall on it
sweat ¡§like great drops of blood,¡¨ having virtue to remove the oppressive
malediction. It must have been bitter for him to hear of the thorn and the
thistle; but he may have learnt how thorns would be woven into a crown, and
placed round the forehead of One who should be as the lost tree of life to a
dying creation. The curse upon the ground may have been regarded by him as a
perpetual memorial of the fatal transgression and the promised salvation,
reminding him of the sterility of his own heart, and what toil it would cost
the Redeemer to reclaim that heart, and make it bring forth the fruits of
righteousness; telling him while pursuing his daily task what internal
husbandry was needful, and whose arm alone could break up the fallow ground.
And thus Adam may have been comforted, as Lamech was comforted, by the Noah who
was to bring rest to wearied humanity; and it may have been in hope as well as
in contrition, in thankfulness as well as in sorrow, that he carried with him
this sentence on his banishment from paradise--¡§Cursed is the ground for thy
sake; in sorrow shalt thou eat of it all the days of thy life.¡¨ (H. Melvill,
B. D.)
Dust thou art and unto
dust shalt thou return.--
Man¡¦s nature and destiny
I. THE FRAILTY OF
OUR NATURE.
1. Its origin. However glorious our Maker, however exquisite the
human body, God made that body of the dust of the earth.
2. Its liability to injury. No sooner born than fierce diseases wait
to attack us. If not destroyed--injured--accidents. All the elements attack us.
3. Its tendency to dissolution. Behold the ravages of time. Human
life has its spring, summer, autumn, and winter (Psalms 103:14-15; Psalms 90:5-6; Psalms 39:4-5).
II. THE CERTAINTY
OF OUR END.
1. We are born to die. Our first breath is so much of nature
exhausted. The first hour we live is an approach to death.
2. The perpetual exit of mortals confirms it.
3. God hath decreed it.
4. Learn rightly to estimate life. (Sketches of Sermons.)
Man¡¦s origin and doom
I. MAN¡¦S ORIGIN.
1. How wonderful.
2. How humbling.
II. MAN¡¦S DOOM.
1. Inevitable.
2. Just.
3. Partial.
4. Temporary. (W. Wythe.)
The fearfulness of death
I. Men know not
that they shall die, even though they confess it with their lips almost daily.
If we consider what death is, we see that men who know its approach will act in
all things as in the fear of it. There is no more startling paradox in the
wonders of our nature than this, that men in general are thoughtless about
death. When our own turn comes, and there is no escape, then, for the first
time, we really believe in death.
II. Death is a
fearful thing, because of the great change that it implies in all our being.
Life is that power by which we act, and think, and love, and intend, and hope.
And suppose that all our energies have been wasted on things that cannot follow
us into the grave, then how can we conceive of any life at all beyond this?
When we know that we must die, we feel about for something in us that shall not
perish, some thread of continuity to knit our present and future life into one;
and if we have never lived for God, never realized the difference between
treasures of earth and treasures of heaven, we find nothing that shall assure
us of that other life. We start back in horror from a grave so dark and so
profound.
III. If these two
terrors were all, some at least would not fear to die, would even court death
as a repose. But there is yet another terror. Death means judgment. To die is
to meet God. You tremble because you stand before a Judge of infinite power,
whose wrath no man can resist; before a Judge of infinite wisdom, who shall
call back your acts out of the distant past and lay bare the secret thoughts of
your spirit.
IV. Accept the
salvation purchased for you with Christ¡¦s passion; then death cannot come
suddenly upon you, for the thought of it will have sobered all your days. The
day of account will still be terrible, but the belief that you are reconciled
to God through the blood of Jesus will sustain you. (Archbishop Thomson.)
The frailty of human nature
The words do plainly show God¡¦s offence and displeasure upon
occasion of Adam¡¦s miscarriage; and are in themselves partly declaratory and
convictive, partly minatory and instructive.
1. They are declaratory and convictive. What! thou that art but
dust, that so lately received thy being from God, not to listen to Him, but to
follow thy own will, and rebel against the law of thy Sovereign? So they are
declaratory and convictive.
2. They are minatory, and consequently instructive. For when God
threatens, His meaning is, that we should repent, and turn to Him Jeremiah 18:7). But to come to the words
themselves, ¡§Dust thou art.¡¨ Of this I shall give you an account in two
particulars.
1. The meanness of it. For dust is a thing of little or no
perfection, nor of any esteem, account, and value. Dust we are, every day
sweeping away, as the refuse, as that of which there is no use. Dust, the
ultimate term of all corruption and putrefaction. Dust--you cannot resolve a
thing into anything of less entity and being. Yet all of man is not here to be
understood, but only his worser part.
2. ¡§Dust thou art,¡¨ which respects the weakness of this bodily
estate. For dust can make no resistance. It may offend us, but it is of itself
so light and empty that it is scattered up and down of every wind, as it is
said Psalms 18:42). Who can defend himself
against the arrow that flieth by day, or the pestilence that walketh in
darkness, or the plague that destroyeth by noonday? Neither is this all, but we
have a principle that tends to corruption and putrefaction within us. To which
also let us add the violence that we are exposed to from abroad, either by the
contagion of others or from the force and violence of those that can overpower
us. For we are so weak, that if any man despise God and the laws, he may soon
be master of our lives. For all that they can do is but to inflict punishment
upon the transgressor. But that will make us no satisfaction nor restitution.
When we are assaulted by any sickness, then we are sensible of this our
weakness; and we cry out with Job, ¡§What is my strength, the strength of a
stone, or my flesh of brass¡¨ (Job 21:23). Though, when our bones are
full of marrow, we put the thoughts of sickness far from us, yet so it often
falleth out that ¡§One dieth in his full strength, being in all ease and
prosperity,¡¨ as Job speaketh (21:23). Furthermore, what are we when bodily pain
approach? So weak and frail are we, that we are not able to hold up our heads;
and if to all this we shall have the sense of guilt upon our consciences, our
condition will be intolerable.
Now for application.
1. It is a ground of humility. If it be so, that ¡§Dust we are, and
unto dust we must return,¡¨ it is fit that we know it so to be; and that upon
three accounts.
2. It is matter of satisfaction to us to know that we are but dust;
and that lies here, that God doth not look for much from us, but
accordingly--not more than He did at first make us. He knows that we were
finite and fallible; and therefore, as the Psalmist saith, God ¡§considers our
frame, He remembereth that we are dust¡¨ (Psalms 103:14), and makes allowance
accordingly.
3. It is matter of great thankfulness to God that He doth so much
consider such worms as we are; that He hath regard to us, that are but dust;
and that He hath such patience with us, who are so inconsiderable, that He
might bring us to repentance; and that He doth graciously accept from us any
motion towards Him, or any good purpose, and that He is so ready to promote it.
4. This will give us an account of the folly and madness of those
men who neglect themselves. We are dust. If there be not the remedy of culture
and education to tame the wildness and exorbitancy of man, he will grow savage,
wild, and ungovernable, unless the established government of reason shall be set
up in his soul. Wherefore, let our great care and daily employment be to refine
our spirits, by entertaining the principles of religion; and to inform our
understandings, and to regulate our lives, by holding ourselves constantly to
the measures of nature, reason, and religion. (B. Whichcote, D. D.)
The rationale of man¡¦s corporeal life and dissolution
I. WHY MAN WAS TO
HAVE A BRIEF EMBODIED LIFE. How was this arrangement likely to affect his
ultimate spiritual well-being?
1. Man¡¦s earthly life is his probation period. The opportunity of
choice exists while soul and body are joined, but no longer. Death is the
beginning of destiny.
2. A probation-period, to be just, satisfactory, merciful, must--
3. The body is a valuable agent in the accomplishment of this
design.
II. WHY MAN, AFTER
HAVING SPENT HIS PROBATION PERIOD IN THE BODY, HAD TO SUFFER PHYSICAL DEATH.
1. Death in relation to the saved--
2. Death in relation to the lost. A wicked spirit disembodied seems
the most miserable, pitiable thing in God¡¦s universe; like a man suddenly
expelled from a brilliant and warm room, to shiver naked in the cold and
darkness of a winter night--a night, too, that shall know no dawn, and to the
fierce blast of which no stupor can ever render the wretched outcast insensible!
(Homilist.)
The frailty of human nature
I. THE FRAILTY OF
OUR NATURE. This may be inferred from--
1. Its origin: dust.
2. Its liability to injury.
3. Its tendency to dissolution.
II. THE CERTAINTY
OF OUR END.
1. We are born to die.
2. The perpetual exit of mortals confirms this.
3. God has decreed and declared it.
III. THE GREAT
BUSINESS OF LIFE.
1. To know and serve God.
2. To seek and obtain salvation.
3. We should always be living in reference to death and eternity. (Sketches
of Sermons.)
Dust of death
Dust may be raised for a little while into a tiny cloud, and may
seem considerable while held up by the wind that raises it; but when the force
of that is spent, it falls again, and returns to the earth out of which it was
raised. Such a thing is man; man is but a parcel of dust, and must return to
his earth. Thus, as Pascal exclaims, what a chimera is man! What a confused
chaos! And after death, of his body it may be said that it is the gold setting
left after the extraction of the diamond which it held--a setting, alas! which
soon gives cause in its putrescence for the apostrophe: How is the gold become
dim! How is the most fine gold changed! Yet ¡§there is hope in thine end,¡¨ O
Christian gold, however dimmed. There is a ¡§resurgam¡¨ for thy dust, O child of
God! (W. Adamson.)
Verse 20
Adam called his wife¡¦s name live
Man¡¦s undying hope
Consider that aspect of this terrible calamity which is afforded
us in the action of Adam.
It is clear that he understood what was involved in the act he had just
committed. Scarcely are the words uttered by God, ¡§In the sweat of thy face
shalt thou eat bread,¡¨ etc., than he seems to turn to his wife and say, ¡§Eve,
the mother, the living one; because she is mother of all living.¡¨ There is no
defiance here. It is not because the man refused to accept the judgment of God,
not because he refused to submit to the doom. He did not refuse, he did not set
himself up against God. He caught the tenderness of the Divine voice even as it
pronounced the judgment. He saw the gleam of grace in the darkness of the doom.
It is then that he turned to his wife and said, ¡§Eve, the living one.¡¨ ¡§Her
seed shall bruise the serpent¡¦s head; shall yet triumph over the evil power
that has almost destroyed her; and though this day we die, beyond is a life
eternal, for she is the mother of all that shall live.¡¨ How true this is to
human nature! It is illustrated, it is constantly illustrated, in the experience
through which we pass. Who has not known it?--Men turning back to their wives
in the hour of trouble. Man, suddenly stripped of his glory and possessions,
stands amongst the wreck of all his life; that moment, with a fresh trust, he
puts his hand in his wife¡¦s and says, ¡§Well, the future is still before us, we
shall not lose hope.¡¨ ¡§Eve, the living one. Mother of all that live.¡¨ Is there
not, in the first place, a recognition of the dignity of the woman? Her name is
not mentioned before. She is simply ¡§the woman¡¨; the other side of human
nature--the man and the woman. Adam had his name, the general name of humanity
centring in him. But when the loss comes, woman takes her place. She is no
longer woman only, she is ¡§Eve.¡¨ She is herself. Bound by a closer tie than
ever to her husband, but with a dignity of her own. And is it not also the
assertion of the dignity of motherhood? What is woman¡¦s highest dignity? To be
the mother of men. She had been the wife of man before, but a wife is not
perfected until she is a mother. And so she receives her name when she is
recognized as mother. It is also the immediate acceptance on the part of Adam
of the promise of God. God has confirmed his earthly nature. ¡§Earth thou art.¡¨
God had also declared that there was to be a continuance of the race by
reference to immediate hope. ¡§I will greatly multiply thy sorrow and thy
conception.¡¨ But had there not been before this these words: ¡§I shall put
enmity between thee and the woman, and between thy seed and her seed; it shall
bruise thy head and thou shaft bruise his heel¡¨? Then came the judgment upon
the man, and yet, the moment the judgment is uttered, he calls his wife ¡§Eve.¡¨
He sees the promise that is contained in the motherhood, and in the conflict of
the seed and the serpent. He seals with his own word the promise of God. The
chief subject of our consideration, however, is the aspect in which Adam seemed
to regard his wife, ¡§mother of all living!¡¨ As we speak the word, there rises
before us the vast multitude of the human race! The mother of all living--all
who shall live! All in the past--all now--all in the future! Mother of all
living! How the generations move along the road of life in the great march of
mankind--like a river rolling swift with ever broadening stream into the vast
ocean of eternity! Wave after wave rolls up and breaks upon the shore of time
from the exhaustless tide of life! The life that is around us, in our own city.
Multiply these teeming millions by all the cities of the world, or all the ages
of human existence, and think of them all gathered up within this woman¡¦s name.
Has our first father been prophetic? Did he, for a moment, see down the vistas
of centuries, the masses of humanity enfolded in the motherhood of Eve? Then
the thought would come that all these living ones would die. You remember the
story of Darius, who, when he reviewed those mighty hosts that followed his
standard when he marched to the invasion of Greece, was observed to weep. The
squadrons were there, their arms all flashing in the sun, and round about them
in the outlying regions the multitudes of followers that attend an army.
Magnificent battle array! Vast concourse of men all obedient to his will, and
yet the monarch weeps! ¡§Why weepest thou, O king?¡¨ ¡§I weep because in one hundred
years not one of this great host will be alive.¡¨ And many feel as felt the king
when they contemplate a crowd. When the people are out upon a gala day, and
from some high window we look down upon them, a strange melancholy creeps into
the heart. When we visit foreign lands, and passing from city to city behold
everywhere human life teeming in countless millions, a sense of awe comes over
the spirit, and a sense of sorrow. And yet, I am not quite sure that this is
right. I would rather catch the gleams of light that the eye of Adam saw
shining in the promise of God. I would rather hear the words of cheer of our
first father when he gathers up the hope of humanity within his soul, and
though the judgment had been only a moment uttered, called her who stood beside
him--Eve, because she was the mother of all living, and seals his acceptance of
the promise and the hope, in the name he gave to his wife. And man generally
has been true to this Divine instinct of the Father. The hope of human life has
been unquenchable. Read history, and you will find that no misfortune has
daunted men. They remain always hopeful. In the increase of poverty, in the
presence of disaster, after war, accidents, oppression, life reasserts itself,
and in that up-springing of life, mankind declares its hope. You never can
crush it out. Today, the victorious foe may spread desolation over the homes of
people whom they destroy, but let the tide of war roll back, and hope will
return, and the very battlefield will grow green with harvest promise, and the
streets down which the destroying legions thundered, echo with the voice of the
children at their play. You cannot crush out life, you cannot destroy man¡¦s
hope in himself. This name of ¡§Eve,¡¨ the ¡§mother of all living,¡¨ is only the
hope that sprang to being in Adam¡¦s breast, and which, since that moment, has
never died from human hearts. Hence it seems to me that human nature is a
perpetual gospel. Life is full of evangel. The very vastness and fulness of
humanity are the large letters in which God¡¦s promise and Adam¡¦s interpretation
of it, are written out that all may read. (L. D. Bevan, D. D.)
Observations
I. GOD LEAVES NOT
HIS CHILDREN WITHOUT MEANS TO SUPPORT THEM IN THEIR WORST CONDITION.
II. THE GRACE
WHICH GOD ESPECIALLY WORKS AND PRESERVES IN HIS CHILDREN¡¦S HEARTS, IS FAITH.
III. GOD¡¦S PROMISES
MUST BE EMBRACED BY FAITH, AS REAL PERFORMANCES.
IV. A GODLY MAN
MUST BE CAREFUL TO PRESERVE MEMORIALS OF GREAT MERCIES. To this end God
ordained the Sabbath, and divers other festivals, as likewise did the Church in
imitation of Him (Esther 9:20-21; Esther 9:27-28); for the same end they
gave names to the places where those mercies were performed (1 Samuel 7:12; 2 Chronicles 20:26). Upon the same
ground God appoints a pot of manna to be kept in the tabernacle, to remind
posterity of that miraculous feeding of their fathers with bread from heaven (Exodus 16:33).
V. IT IS FIT IN
GIVING NAMES, TO MAKE CHOICE OF SUCH AS MAY GIVE US WITHAL SOMETHING FOR OUR
INSTRUCTION. Of this God Himself gives us a precedent, in changing Abraham¡¦s
and Sarah¡¦s name (Genesis 17:5; Genesis 17:15), and Jacob¡¦s (Genesis 32:28), in giving Solomon his
name (1 Chronicles 21:9), and the name of
Jesus to our Saviour (Matthew 1:21), which holy persons have
followed (Genesis 21:3; Genesis 21:6; Genesis 29:32). Reason
1. We need all helps, to mind us either of God¡¦s mercies, and acts
of His providence, or of our own duties; which God Himself implied, in causing
His people to write the commandments on the posts and gates of their houses (Deuteronomy 11:20), and to make fringes
to their garments, to put them in mind of them (Numbers 15:38-39).
2. And there is no readier means to mind us of such things than our
names, which we have daily in our mouths and memories. (J. White, M. A.)
Eve habited by Adam
The fact that it was not God but Adam that gave the name to Eve
teaches us much. Why did not God give Eve her name, as He had done to Adam? God
did not allow Adam to name himself, even in his innocence; yet now in his fall
He permits him to name the woman, nay, sanctions his so doing. This was for
such reasons as the following--
1. To show His grace. What grace, what tender love is displayed in
allowing man to give a name to his wife--and such a name--Eve--LIFE!
2. To show that Adam was not to be deprived of his headship. He was
still to be ¡§head of the woman,¡¨ even in his fall, and as such he names her.
3. To show, that though Adam had so cruelly flung blame upon her
before God, yet no estrangement had followed. She was still bone of his bone.
They had been companions in guilt, they were to be companions in sorrow, and
they were fellow heirs of the hope just held out to them. Thus they were
reunited in new bonds of mingled sadness and joy.
4. To show the direction in which Adam¡¦s thoughts were running, that
from this manifestation of the current of his thoughts we might learn how the
promise had taken hold of him. This verse gives us unequivocal insight into the
state of Adam¡¦s feelings. It exhibits him to us as one who understood,
believed, prized, rested on the Divine promise which he had just heard. He
stands before us as a believing man; and we might say of him, ¡§By faith Adam
called his wife¡¦s name Eve.¡¨ (H. Bonar, D. D.)
Coats of skins
Man clothed by God
The whole mystery of justification is wrapped up in the details of
this story.
I. We have the
fact as in a parable that MAN IS UTTERLY IMPOTENT TO BRING TO PASS ANY
SATISFYING RIGHTEOUSNESS OF HIS OWN. He can see his shame, but he cannot
effectually cover or conceal it. The garments of our own righteousness are fig
leaves all, and we shall prove them such. Let God once call to us, and we shall
find how little all these devices of our own can do for us. We shall stand
shivering, naked and ashamed, before Him.
II. While we thus
learn that man cannot clothe himself, we learn also that GOD UNDERTAKES TO
CLOTHE HIM. As elsewhere He has said in word, ¡§I am the Lord that healeth
thee,¡¨ so here He says in act, ¡§I am the Lord that clotheth thee.¡¨ He can yet
devise a way by which His banished shall return to Him.
III. We note in
this Scripture that the clothing which God found for Adam could only have been
obtained AT THE COST OF A LIFE, and that the life of one unguilty, of one who
had no share or part in the sin which made the providing of it needful. We have
here the first institution of sacrifice; God Himself is the Institutor. It is a
type and shadow, a prelude and prophecy of the crowning sacrifice on Calvary.
IV. Are not the
LESSONS which we may draw from all this plain and palpable enough?
1. There is no robe of our own righteousness which can cover us and
conceal our shame.
2. That righteousness which we have not in ourselves we must be
content and thankful to receive at the hands of God.
3. Not Christ by His life, but by His life and death, and mainly by
His death, supplies these garments for our spirit¡¦s need. (Archbishop
Trench.)
Man clothed by God
I come, then, to the conclusion that these vestments which the
Lord God provided for our first parents, are emblematic of nothing less than
the sacrifice and righteousness of Christ. But there might be a second object
in thus arraying our first parents in coats of skin; and that was, to keep
alive in their minds the sentence of death, which would be ultimately executed
upon them. The dying struggles of the poor animals, whose skins they were to
appropriate to themselves, could not fail to remind them of their own deserts;
but then this feeling might be too soon effaced; it was essential, therefore,
to their continuance in humility, that they should carry with them wherever
they went a memorial that death was come into the world--a death which was the
effect of sin, a death to which they must at last submit. And sadly they must
have gazed upon the throes of every slaughtered creature, as they beheld the
fate to which they were hastening themselves. Yet there was a wonderful
provision made for securing both the glory of God and the comfort of His
creatures. Death was the fruit of sin, sin was the work of Satan; and I may say
concerning the honour of the Creator, that Satan may not triumph as a
destroyer, it was so ordained that the first things which died should be
emblematical of the death of Christ, by whom death itself should be virtually
abolished. (F. J. Stainforth, M. A.)
Sin and civilization
I. The clothing
of the first man and woman in skins of beasts, is in the first place,
symbolical of the dominance of that nature which is the sole possession of the
beast. In the beast, there is only a life, which informs the body for the
purpose of bodily ends. In the man there is a spirit, which informs the body
through the soul, for the ultimate ends of the higher and spiritual life. The
body of the beast is for itself. The body of the man is for the spirit. It is
the spirit¡¦s instrument. But, by sin, man had set body against spirit, over
spirit. Man had chosen the material instead of the spiritual.
II. It was, also,
the insistence of God upon the propriety of the shame, which had prompted them
to cover themselves with clothes. It is as if God had said: ¡§You are right; the
material body which you have put on over the spiritual--conceal it! You have
set it in the forefront; put it in the rear. Cover it! hide it!¡¨
III. It is,
besides, the symbol of the conflict between the higher and lower, which makes
up the whole of man¡¦s moral discipline.
IV. But there was
still another meaning in this clothing of skins, for it is to be noted that
while Adam and Eve covered themselves with leaves God makes coats of skins and
clothed them. Were it only for the purpose of symbolism, they might have worn
these clothes of leaves. Why must these coats of skins have been made for them?
I shall not raise here questions as to man¡¦s relation to the animals in his
innocent state. Naturally, by physical constitution, man is a flesh-eating
animal, and I cannot accept the opinion, that till his sin, he was fed only by
the food of the garden. But, at last, the narrative brings out a striking
distinction between the demand made on man¡¦s powers, when innocent, and that
which was made upon him after the Fall. In the garden all seemed spontaneously
easy. He had only to put forth his hand, and take the food, the fruit. It was
simple work--gathering a few leaves: fastening them together and making a
covering. But now, there is the further difficulty of securing the skins of
beasts. These must supply their coverings; they will have to be captured,
killed, and the skins prepared. There may be some relation here to sacrifice as
well as to food. At least the idea is suggested of man coming into relation to
the animal world. The creatures must be caught and trained, and fed, and slain.
Now this is the elementary fact of all material civilization. Man¡¦s first victory
over the world is over the animals. Man makes his first step in culture in
conquering the brutes. The domesticity of the lower world, and the dominance of
the human race over the animal, is the first step in progress. It is, then,
with no fanciful interpretation that I base upon this passage some thoughts
concerning the progress of humanity in material civilization, as related to the
Fall. Man¡¦s fallen condition has certainly borne in some way upon his material
development. I am anxious to show that in God¡¦s mercy the Fall has been the
condition of a greater rising.
1. The historic proof of this doctrine. If you review the history of
civilization and the physical progress of man, you will find that it has been
rendered in a large degree possible by sin, and, we may almost say that, had it
not been for sin, man could not have advanced to the degree, or in the manner,
in which that advance has been made. We do not say that material development
necessarily accompanies a sinful condition of humanity. This is disproved by
the fact that the highest form of material civilization has been pressed into
service of the highest moral and spiritual life, and the further fact that the
noblest instances of culture have been found to manifest the most distinguished
virtues. Still, the general relation of religious and material well-being has
been such as to suggest, what we think the incident of our text indicates, that
the presence of sin in our human nature has been the condition upon which God
has made the development of man¡¦s external good to be dependent. Had it not
been for sin, we had not been so wise, or so wealthy, or strong, nor smitten
with so many passions--not summoned to such weary conflicts; but also, and by
reason of these, not such masters of an external world of use and ornament, of
beauty and grace.
2. That which is shown in this historical review is also seen in the
nature of the case. Let us restate the position we are endeavouring to sustain.
Out of the Fall God has caused to issue man¡¦s material well-being. We have
seen, that the essence of the first sin consisted in the elevation of the
physical nature into the supreme regard. Thereupon God thrust man out into a
world which demanded his energy to conquer its hostile forces, and to bring it
into subservience to his will. Civilization is the result of the assertions of
man¡¦s physical needs, and the endeavour on the part of man to compel the
physical world to supply those needs. When, in the person of his first parents,
he set the body above the spirit, then he lost his natural condition. Now, he
must win back this material empire; he must overcome everything, himself
included. Nothing submits freely, spontaneously. His nature, especially his
physical nature, becomes imperative, he hungers, he thirsts; his passions are
imperious, and yet there is no response from the things about him. In Eden,
hunger would have been immediately satisfied, thirst immediately assuaged. I
doubt if ever there was hunger or thirst. All the emotions of the soul would
have been in complete rhythm and harmony, and the spirit, and the soul, and the
body, would have been in perpetual melody of goodness and innocence. But now he
must set himself to contrive. He has to contend. He must become an artist. He
must call in the aid of his fellows. He must unite with others, and here is the
source of organization, development of art, the inventions of science, the
formation of political arrangement, the submission of the governed, the rule of
the king. All must be produced to content the cravings of that nature which has
been aroused and will be satisfied. There is no government among the angels,
except the immediate government of God. There can be no art among beings who
are not created at once in fellowship with the Divine, and yet part of the
material world about them. Government and art are the result of the fact that
this lower nature of ours has been lifted into supremacy. They are the means of
supplying its desires; the answer to its emphatic claim. But, moreover, the
lower nature thus aroused, heightened, intensified, must again be brought under
the control of the higher nature. If that does not result, there will be
confusion, chaos, death. The body has been made prominent, brought forth; it
must be set back, hidden. God taught man this lesson first, when He made coats
of skins and clothed him. Hence there follows not only the development of the
physical, but the subjugation of this physical to the spiritual. CONCLUSION:
1. Are we not taught here the lesson, which no age more than our own
has needed, that a civilization which is chiefly materialistic must have in it
the gravest perils?
2. And will not these thoughts help us to understand the meaning of
the perplexed and changeful condition through which the development of the race
has moved? Is it some strange and malicious spirit that has driven man to
struggle with the beasts, and compelled him to the arduous conflict, often
renewed, with the hard outer world? Not at all. It is the will of God, wise and
loving, which would thus cover his nakedness and Jet once more the brutal
nature in its proper place of retirement and subjection. Every race decay and
national decline is only part of the discipline of man. It is a long struggle
to regain the proper relation of spirit and body. But it is the Divine will.
3. It shows us, too, the need of a Divine help for the undoing of
the evil man has brought upon himself, and which the clothes of his own
invention will not supply. The man had already clothed himself with leaves. But
man found hiding of shame to be not enough. A devil brought the sin, and a God
must make its covering. Man¡¦s leaf garment is a poor defence against the cold,
hard world into which he is driven. God therefore gives him clothes of skins.
And so ever He is ready to supply that remedy, that salvation which man must
find or perish, but which no man can himself secure.
4. And so, finally, I learn by these words to fill all things with
the evangel which God proclaims in the very utterance of doom. Some men go
everywhere only to find a Divine law and a Divine condemnation. Wherever I turn
I see written up God¡¦s gospel. I know no human story which is not a comment
upon grace. I know no voice, even though it comes from the deeps of hell, which
is not an echo of the pity of our God. (L. D.Bevan, D. D.)
Lessons
1. In the midst of death
God¡¦s thoughts have been to direct sinners unto life.
2. God¡¦s thoughts are not only to give life but to reveal it in His
own way.
3. God¡¦s goodness prevented sin from turning all into disorder. He
keeps relations.
4. Grace makes the same instrument be for life, which was for death
(Genesis 3:20).
5. God pitieth His creatures in the nakedness which sin hath made.
6. God makes garments where man makes nakedness.
7. Garments are a covering of nakedness, but a discovery of sin.
8. Raiment should humble and not make men proud. The mischief of sin
is to forget nakedness under fine clothes. It makes nakedness appear fine.
9. Suitable clothing was God¡¦s work for several sexes. For Adam and
his wife. The law afterwards showeth this.
10. Gracious providence puts on clothes upon sinners¡¦ backs. Much of
love (Genesis 3:21). (G. Hughes, B. D.)
Observations
I. THE VERY
CLOTHES THAT WE WEAR ARE GOD¡¦S PROVISION.
II. NECESSARY
PROVISION IS AS MUCH AS WE CAN LOOK FOR AT GOD¡¦S HAND.
III. OUR CLOTHES
FOR THE MOST PART ARE BORROWED FROM OTHER CREATURES.
1. To humble and keep our hearts low, when we consider that we have
nothing but what we borrow, and that of our basest vassals.
2. To move us to take care of the creature, without the help whereof
we must need starve with hunger and cold. (J. White, M. A.)
Verse 22
Behold, the man is become as one of Us, to know good and evil
Man¡¦s gain through loss
I.
Consider
SOME OF THE EFFECTS OF THE FALL, as they are suggested in the statements of
this narrative. You have here, then, four facts. We shall adopt the order of
their logical relation rather than that of the history.
1. The first is man¡¦s moral condition resulting from the Fall. ¡§Man
is become as one of Us, to know good and evil.¡¨
2. The second is the prime original elements of the moral
development of the race. ¡§Unto Adam and his wife did the Lord God make coats of
skins, and clothed them.¡¨ That is the beginning of social life. Humanity naked
is humanity without the possibility of improvement. Clothe man, and he enters
upon the road of progress. Here is the germ of all the arts of culture, of
science, and of social growth.
3. The third is the profound hope, the inextinguishable hope, that
springs within the human heart. ¡§Adam called his wife¡¦s name Eve, because she
was the mother of all living.¡¨ The fulness, the multitudinousness of life
everywhere affords the hope, without which human restoration were not possible.
4. The fourth is the condition of human perfecting which is to be
found in the unalterable past, ¡§He drove out the man; and He placed at the east
of the garden of Eden cherubims, and a flaming sword which turned every way, to
keep the way of the tree of life.¡¨ These are the results of the Fall according
to Scripture. They are of course connected with, though different from, the
guilt which followed sin. That I do not propose to consider particularly,
though the thought of it must underlie all our discussion.
II. Consider the
Word of God in which He declares that ¡§The man has now become like one of Us.¡¨
THE EFFECT OF THE FALL UPON MAN¡¦S MORAL NATURE IS TO MAKE MAN LIKE GOD. These
are striking words. In the moment of a Divine judgment there is also a Divine
declaration of great significance concerning man. ¡§Behold, the man is become as
one of Us.¡¨ The sneer of the serpent first of all introduces us to this
likeness of man to God. ¡§Has God said, You shall surely die?¡¨ ¡§Ye shall not
surely die. For God doth know that in the day ye eat thereof, then your eyes
shall be opened, and ye shall be as gods, knowing good and evil.¡¨ They listened
to Satan, and all they gained was the knowledge of their nakedness. That is all
the serpent can give you. His promise of godlikeness ends in the discovery of
your shame. And yet God takes these words first used by Satan and gives them a
profound meaning. In Satan¡¦s mouth they were a lie. In God¡¦s they are an awful
and yet a gracious truth. Some hold that God used these words ironically, ¡§They
have become like Us.¡¨ The sneer of earth was answered by a sneer from heaven. I
cannot believe it. I cannot believe that in an hour like this God would
reproach. What then is God¡¦s knowledge of good and evil? It must be perfect. He
would not be God if He did not completely know what good and evil were in
nature, in all their results, in all their issues and relations. He knows the
moral consequence of evil. He knows the degradation of the soul that sins. He
knows the wild troop of mischiefs that follow in the train of iniquity. He sees
the end from the beginning, and thus He knows. But in all this knowledge God
has certain elements in His nature which must be remembered when we speak of
God¡¦s knowing. While He knows the good and evil, and knows them completely, He
is at the same time absolutely set for righteousness. Though knowing good and
evil God remains forever God. But God is not only in Himself free from any
attack of evil, He also has complete power over it. He can restrain it, so
limiting its scope and so bending it to the purposes of His holy will, that out
of it He can bring good; and however deep may be the mystery to us, still
evolve a higher good to the universe than it would have known had there been no
evil. Then in all this it must be further noted there is no loss of the Divine
power and vitality. God possesses every fulness of resource and every fulness
of life. These in Him are not affected by the evil which He knows. Indeed,
though we cannot say that He becomes more mighty, more vital by reason of evil,
because that would be to deny the perfection of being to Him in His original
and absolute nature, yet its presence produces a higher manifestation of Divine
power and life than an innocent and unfallen world would otherwise have known.
Such is God¡¦s knowledge of good and evil with some of its relations to other
attributes of the Divine Being. When we turn to that knowledge which man has
gained of the dark and dreary subject, we find that, in a sense, he too knows
evil as God knows it. Sin in itself is an experience, a teaching. Without it
man had never known conditions which now become clear and distinct to him.
Think of the course of temptation, the allurements and enticings of sin, the
hints and suggestions of the tempter! Through what a series of self-revelations
does not the soul tempted to falling pass! How in temptation the unfolding of
the wily nature comes into the clear perception of the tempted one! And then,
when the temptation¡¦s force has fully issued in the sin, what a further
knowledge is gained! What spheres of action, closed to the innocent, are then
opened! What experiences of inner life and circumstances of outward condition
the sin displays! This is the knowledge which sin brings. It is Divine in its
awfulness, its infinite reach. Now are they like gods, knowing good and evil.
But man, like God, is further related to the object of his terrible knowing.
The contrast, however, is noteworthy. The light, lurid and alarming, has burst
upon his mind, and the mephitic vapours which arise from the horrible pit
poison and overcome him. And besides this man¡¦s power is limited. By his sin he
has opened the sluice gates of the flood, and nothing that he can do can close
them, or stay the mad stream that rushes forth and on. This is the power of
every sin. ¡§Like God,¡¨ a word of terrible doom! being like God in the knowledge
we have gained; but we who have gained it, how helpless we stand before the
evils which we ourselves have produced! Another terrible result of sin in its
relation to us, as contrasted with God¡¦s knowledge of it, is that the
continuance of evil is out of all proportion to the continuance of that life
during which alone we can cope with it. God knowing sin, has eternity in which
to deal with it. We knowing it by our sin, even if we attempt to undo it, are
often cut off long before we have begun to stay its mischievous effects: ¡§The
evil that men do lives after them.¡¨ Think of it: your sin overwhelms thousands
yet unborn. It may work out its dread succession of evil long after you have
been forgotten. But remember it is your sin; you called it up, you set it
going. But you are powerless to deal with it. ¡§Like Us.¡¨ Yes, in knowledge.
But, oh! how bitter the thought of the contrast when we still find ourselves to
be Divine in knowledge, but in all else human, and even less than human, by our
sin. And is this our final learning from these words? Must this dark message be
the end of our meditation? It is indeed all that philosophy can give us. The
historian can furnish us no other teaching, the poet sing no other song than
this tragedy of human loss. But, blessed be God! there is another light to
shine upon this awful fact. It is the Son of God who can give to this terrible
dignity into which we rise its true significance, and change it from its
original doom to a blessed evangel. If we have nothing but the record of what
this Word of God has uttered, all we gain is to became like God in knowledge,
and in the rest to be smitten in the very essence of our life. But Christ by
His word, and life, and death, made it possible for us to know the evil and the
good, and to share in the Divine nature in its triumph over the evil, even as
in its knowledge. (L. D. Bevan, D. D.)
The Fall considered as a development
¡§God made man in His own image.¡¨ But the deepest power, the free
power, was yet latent. By a dark act of rebellion he developed it; and the Lord
God testifies that he had thereby become something which the words ¡§as one of
Us¡¨ alone describe. And yet that act was deadly. Man, aiming at the height of
God, fell perilously on the very edge of the abyss. No more awful condition of
life, in point of grandeur and power can be conceived than the words ¡§become as
one of Us¡¨ set forth; and yet the penalty of aiming at it was death. It was a
step out, a step on for man in the unfolding of the latent powers and possibilities
of his being as an embodied spirit; but it brought him within peril and under
the hand of woes and evils, which have made his history one long wail, and his
life one long night. Adam, the child of Eden, made in God¡¦s image, could find
the completeness of his life in Eden. The mould of his being was perfect as an
image; the compass of his powers presented him as the likeness of God in this
material world. Adam, the child of the wilderness, having become by the act of
freedom that which our text describes--having by the actual experiment of what
power might be in him, by the actual unfolding of a life whose character and
ends were expressly self-determined, grown into something which, if grander on
the one hand than the estate in which he was created in the garden, was most
terrible and sorrowful on the other--could find the completeness of his life
alone in Christ and heaven. ¡§God made man in His own image,¡¨ is the original
description of the constitution of man. Then follows the dread history which the
third chapter of the Book of Genesis records; and then it is stated, ¡§Man is as
one of Us, knowing good and evil.¡¨ The words imply, though they do not express,
a growth. Man is said to have grown to something which is in one sense nearer
to God, nearer to the Divine level--and the last clauses of the verse seem to
imply that he was within reachof that which would bring him still nearer to the
level; but, on the other hand, there was a now spot of weakness where he had
become vulnerable to foes, whom in his innocence he might safely have despised;
there was a new element of disorder, which would bring discord and dire
confusion into the harmonious sphere of his powers; there was a new taint of
decay and death which, grand as he might seem to have grown by his experiment
of freedom, would eat like a canker into his godlike constitution, and unless
from Him who made him at the first some renewing, restoring influence should
descend, must lay its proud structure in ruins in the dust. ¡§Ye shall be as
gods,¡¨ was the devil¡¦s promise, ¡§knowing good and evil.¡¨ The text affirms that
there was a truth in it. ¡§Behold, the man is become as one of Us.¡¨ And yet it
was a lie to the heart¡¦s core. None but God could stand on that Divine level.
Man should stand there one day, partaker of the Divine nature. But for the man
who in native, naked, human strength should stand there, there could be no
issue but death. The devil was right as to the development. Man brought himself
into the sphere of higher and more Divine experiences than his life in paradise
could have afforded him. But the devil said nothing about the death. The devil
said to the prodigal, ¡§Wander freely, spend, enjoy; that is life.¡¨ The prodigal
found it, as every sinner finds it, to be death. What life has come out of it
has been born, not of it, but of the strength, the tenderness, the quickening
power of the Father¡¦s redeeming love. Man seems to be so organized inwardly
that his purest joys spring out of his sorrows, his riches grow by his losses,
his laurels bloom in the sphere of his sternest conflicts, his fullest
development is the fruit of his hardest toils, and his noblest becomings of his
most utter sacrifices--while God completes the cycle, and ordains that his
immortal life shall spring out of his death. Thus man is organized. The
question then arises, Is this condition of things the accident of sin? Is this
the full account of it--that man being in a sinful state, God has thus adapted
his mental and moral organization, as the best expedient which the case allows,
with a view to his restoration? Or was this contemplated in his first
constitution and endowment? Was man made, were all his powers ordained, with a
view to this life of toil, struggle, suffering, sacrifice, and Divine
experience? Was man made for it? Was the world made for it? Was heaven made for
it? Is this the one way through which we are bound to believe that the highest
end of God in the constitution of man and of all things is to be gained? And
the answer must be, Yes. Man was made for it. Had he remained in Eden the
highest interest of heaven in man¡¦s career would have been lost; and more would
have been lost, the highest, fullest, most absolute manifestation of God. Him,
redemption alone could fully declare. If man comes forth into full manhood
through that perverse exercise of his freedom, which leaves human nature
suppliant for redemption under peril of imminent death, God, in redeeming man
from the penalties and fruits of that perverseness, reveals Himself most fully
as God. The whole system of things around us seems to me to be constituted with
a view to redemption--which comprehends the discipline and education of souls.
Thewilderness was there waiting, and all the physical order of the world. That
was before man, and was made for man. And it is all set to the same keynote of
struggle, toil, and suffering. There is not a bit of rock or a blade of grass,
there has not been from the creation, which is not a mute memorial of struggle,
wounds, and death. All things travail, not simply because man has sinned, but
because the redemption of the sinner is the work for which ¡§the all¡¨ has been
prepared by the Lord. Redemption is no accident. The need of being a Redeemer
lies deep in the nature of God; and not only was man¡¦s sin foreseen, but all
things were ordered with a view to the great drama of redemption from before
the foundation of the world. But was sin preordained? The sun was ordained to
shine, the moon to embosom and radiate his tempered beams. The flowers were
ordained to bloom, the rain to fertilize, the lightning to scathe, the
whirlwind to uproot and to destroy. Is it part of the Divine plan of creation,
that as the sun shines and the rain descends, some men should blaspheme, and
some rob, hate, and murder? Are these dark shadows of life but the inevitable
attendants of its virtues, brought out into sharpest outline where the light is
clearest--and their necessary foil; or else the stages through which God leads
the development of nascent virtues, purifying them in the crucible of each as they
pass through? To this question the answer of the Bible and of the Church is
¡§No! a thousand times no!¡¨ God has set His witness against this in the picture
of Eden and the history of the Fall, and to this witness the history of sin
adds an emphatic Amen. Man has never been able in the long run to shake off the
horror which sin inspires, as his own hateful and accursed work.
Responsibility, in the fullest sense which that word will bear, is the
broadest, strongest, most insoluble fact in the spiritual history of our race.
¡§God made man upright, but he has sought out many inventions,¡¨ and nothing can
deliver man from the consciousness that the
¡§I¡¨ which has sought them out represents something which, whatever
it may be, distinctly is not God. ¡§Father, I have sinned,¡¨ is the only
confession which reaches the depths of the human consciousness; and the gospel
which demands the confession, and begins its ministry by deepening the
conviction of sin, alone seems to him to be able to undertake the cure. As a matter
of history it is palpably true that the convincing of sin, the inspiring a
horror of sin--a horror which took many grotesque and ghastly forms in the
early Christian centuries--was the first Work of that gospel which was God¡¦s
message to all mankind. The history of conscience, then, I hold to be
conclusive--the profound, universal, unalterable conviction of the moral
consciousness in man, that his sin springs out of an ¡§I¡¨ which is not God; that
his sin is his own, his creature, for which he is as responsible as God is for
the order of the world. Sin then is, and is not God¡¦s creature. The being
capable of sinning is God¡¦s creature. For making him capable of sinning God is
responsible, and there His responsibility, as concerns Adam¡¦s transgression,
ends. For making me as I am, capable of sin, for bringing me into a sinful
world in a body of sinful flesh, God is responsible; not for my sin, that grows
up of myself in me. There are but two solutions possible. Either man must lie
where his sin must sink him, in a deeper depth of shame and anguish than even a
fiend can fathom, or man must rise through Redemption to a higher, Diviner
manhood, and eating of the tree of life in Christ, live before the face of God
forever. The first Adam is by grace abolished; the elder glory is done away by
reason of the glory that excelleth. (J. B. Brown, B. A.)
Verse 24
So He drove out the man
Man¡¦s expulsion from Eden
Expulsion of Adam and Eve from Eden teaches--
I.
THAT
WHEN COMFORTS ARE LIKELY TO BE ABUSED, GOD SENDS MEN FROM THEM. There was
danger lest Adam should put forth his hand and eat of the ¡§tree of life¡¨ and
live forever. The fallen man must not be allowed to eat of the tree of life in
this world. It can only be tasted by him in the resurrection; to live forever
in a frail body would be an unmitigated woe. There are many trees of life in
the world from which God has to drive men, because they are not in a proper
condition to make the designed use of them. Government and law must be
preventive as well as punitive, they must regard the future as well as the
past. It is better for a man to be driven from a mental, moral, or social good
than that he should make a bad use of it. Many a soul has lost its Eden by
making a bad use of good things.
II. THAT IT IS NOT
WELL THAT A SINNER SHOULD LIVE AND RESIDE IN THE HABITATION OF INNOCENCE. Adam
and Eve were out of harmony with the purity and beauty of Eden. Such an
innocent abode would not furnish them with the toil rendered necessary by their
new condition of life. Men ought to have a sympathy with the place in which
they reside. Only pure men should live in Eden. Society should drive out the
impure from its sacred garden. Commerce should expel the dishonest from its
benevolent enclosure. Let the wicked go to their own place in this life. A
wicked soul will be far happier out of Eden than in it. Heaven will only allow
the good to dwell within its wails.
III. THAT SIN
ALWAYS CAUSES MEN TO BE EXPELLED FROM THEIR TRUEST ENJOYMENTS. Sin expels men
from their Edens. It expels from the Eden of a pure and noble manhood. It
drives the monarch from his palace into exile. It exchanges innocence for
shame; plenty for want; the blessing of God into a curse; and fertility into
barrenness. It makes the world into a prison house. It often happens when men
want to gain more than they legitimately can, that they lose that which they
already possess. In trying to become gods, men often lose their Edens. Satan
robs men of their choicest possessions and of their sweetest comforts. This
expulsion was--
1. Deserved.
2. Preventive.
3. Pitiable.
IV. THAT THOUGH
EXPELLED FROM EDEN MAN¡¦S LIFE IS YET BESET WITH BLESSINGS. Though the cherubim
and the flaming sword closed up the way to paradise, Christ had opened a new
and living way into the holy place. Christ is now the ¡§way¡¨ of man--to
purity--to true enjoyment--to heaven. Heaven substitutes one blessing for
another. (J. S. Exell, M. A.)
The plan of redemption exhibited at Eden
I. THE EVENT HERE
RECORDED.
1. The expulsion was not forcible. We may infer from the entire
narrative that Adam had by this time been brought to penitence.
2. Neither are we to suppose that this event occurred merely as a
carrying out of the curse which had been pronounced. The principal reason was,
that access to the tree of life might be barred. By this man was taught the
full consequence of sin.
II. THE
TRANSACTION THAT FOLLOWED.
1. Cherubim (see Ezekiel 1:22; Ezekiel 10:1; Revelation 4:6).
2. Flaming sword, ¡§Turning every way¡¨--literally ¡§back on itself¡¨:
the fire of wrath, kindled by transgression, instead of burning out to consume
man, would turn back and expend itself on ¡§God manifest in the flesh.¡¨
III. THE DESIGN OF
THIS TRANSACTION.
1. To teach the principles of redemption.
2. To keep the divinely appointed way to eternal life in
remembrance.
3. That it might serve as a temple of worship. (Sketches of
Sermons.)
Fallen, yet redeemed
I. MAN¡¦S FALLEN
LIFE.
1. Externally. Condemned to toll and sorrow, no longer fed by sacramental
food of the tree of life, exiled from garden, etc.
2. Internally. Strange and terrible possibilities of sin lurking
within. Two wills, and two men, in each of us.
II. MAN¡¦S REDEEMED
LIFE. In Christ we have--
1. Forgiveness.
2. An emancipated will. (Bishop W. Alexander.)
The irretraceability of human life
Adam could not go back. True of all men. They cannot retrace their
steps.
I. We cannot go
back into the past PERIODS OF LIFE.
II. We cannot go
back into past CONDITIONS OF LIFE.
1. Physical.
2. Social.
3. Mental.
4. Moral. Conclusion:
1. How great is human life.
2. How obvious our duty.
To make the best of the stage in which we find ourselves. Take
care of the Eden, for when we leave it, the ¡§flaming sword¡¨ will render return
impossible. (D. Thomas, D. D.)
Man¡¦s banishment
I. WHENCE DID HE
DRIVE HIM? From Eden.
1. It was a garden of pleasure.
2. A scene of wholesome occupation.
3. A temple of blissful communion. And out of all this he was
driven.
II. WHEREFORE DID
HE DRIVE HIM?
1. The act of man¡¦s disobedience was the ground of this expulsion.
2. This act of disobedience, if properly considered, will be found
to be an act of high demerit and aggravated criminality.
3. The awful indications of Divine displeasure that have followed
this act, plainly demonstrate to every considerate mind what must have been its
malignant nature. ¡§Shall not the Judge of all the earth do right?¡¨
III. WHITHER DID HE
DRIVE HIM? He drove him into this blighted wilderness of our present abode; He
drove him without the precincts of the garden that was formed for him, and in
which he was first placed--He drove out the man--sent him forth to till the
ground, and He ¡§placed at the east of the garden of Eden cherubims, and a
flaming sword which turned every way, to keep the way of the tree of life.¡¨
This world is a wilderness, because--
1. So inferior to Eden.
2. A scene of labour.
3. A scene of vicissitude.
4. A scene of vexation.
IV. WHETHER THERE
IS ANY DOOR OF HOPE AND ESCAPE?
1. It is my delightful task and happiness to announce to you that
the gospel reveals Him who is the second Adam. The first Adam was a figure of
Him that was to come--in Adam all died, in Christ all are made alive. What the
first Adam destroyed, the second Adam repaired.
2. By His perfect obedience, and meritorious sacrifice for sin, He
has actually declared the right and title of reinstatement to this inheritance
in behalf of all His people.
3. Faith in our Lord Jesus Christ is the appointed means of our
personal restoration to God¡¦s favour, and the pleasure and delight of communion
with Him.
4. Regeneration and sanctification are the feet by which we are to
retrace our steps to celestial felicity.
5. There is a blessed certainty in all this--a certainty upon which
you may depend, and upon which you may venture your immortal souls without
scruple or hesitation, and which the second Adam has secured by His all-perfect
obedience, atonement, and death. (G. Clayton, M. A.)
Redemption typically seen at the gate of paradise
I. THE REAL CAUSE
OF MAN¡¦S EXPULSION FROM THE EARTHLY PARADISE (see Genesis 3:22-23).
II. THE SINGULAR
MANIFESTATION THAT NOW SUCCEEDED. It was not a flaming guard of angels that was
placed, but the Shechina, or Divine presence of Him who dwelt between the
cherubim.
III. THE IMPORTANT
AND CONSOLATORY DOCTRINE WHICH THIS APPEARANCE TAUGHT. O cheering object to the
eye of faith! O glorious hope, and balmy consolation to dry the tears of
penitence, and wake the harp of joy! O hallowed spot, where God vouchsafed to
dwell! O blissful seat, where mercy smiled on man. Yes, for there he ¡§looked
and lived¡¨; there he learnt that in due time the sword should awake (that very
sword), and smite the man who was Jehovah¡¦s fellow; should turn from the sinner
upon the surety; and, as was here seen, should be revolvable upon itself! Yes,
and there he first saw the cherubims! now first revealed as the covenanting
three in the mysterious one. Each conditionally bound to their sacred office;
emblems of those great ones, as should hereafter be more particularly unfolded
to the captive prophet, as he mourned and wept for Israel¡¦s sons, beside the
banks of Chebar! Captives of every clime and race! here behold the dispensations
of Providence, and the design of mercy, grace, and peace! Yes, and with the
cheering vision, the very place where it was seen would impart instruction, and
might assuage their grief; for see, like the star of Bethlehem, it appeared in
¡§the East,¡¨ emblematic of another sun than they saw; even the Sun of
Righteousness, who should hereafter arise to heal, to fructify, to irradiate,
guide, and cheer His Church; and who should ¡§keep,¡¨ preserve, and show ¡§the
way¡¨ of everlasting life! Yes, here Christ was preached in type and figure as
¡§the way, the truth, and the life.¡¨ For He whom ¡§the tree of life¡¨ represented,
was still seen as the same source of being and blessedness to their souls; for
though, as has been repeatedly enforced, our first parents could no longer
approach as heretofore, and when clad in innocence, yet the blessings it
prefigured were still preserved, though shown in another, and even in a
superior way. Here, then, was a standing type of redemption; and to this they
did approach; for here profoundest wisdom was discovered, and covenanting mercy
was displayed. And here, too (for where else?), was that presence of the Lord,
from which Cain afterwards departed, while it long continued as the place
before which Abel and every pious worshipper would delight to bring his
sacrifice, to pay his adoration, and to perform his vows. (W. B.Williams, M.
A.)
The closed Eden, the opened heaven
You remember the old legend of Greek mythology, of one to whom,
when he had pleased the gods, they said: ¡§Ask what you will, and we will give
it.¡¨ And he said,¡¨ Give me immortality.¡¨ They did so, and he lived on and on,
and could not die. He had immortality, but it was immortality with mortal woes.
How wretched was his lot! How wearily did he go along his way of weakness and
distress! How he prayed for the revoking of the favour that was only a curse!
The woes of man are such that the only immortal who can bear them must be God.
It is therefore God¡¦s infinite pity and tenderness, that when man had taken of
the tree of knowledge, he is forbidden the tree of life. The very form of the
words is striking. It is an unfinished sentence. God says, ¡§Behold, the man is
become as one of Us, to know good and evil, and now, lest he should put forth
his hand, and take also of the tree of life, and eat, and live forever--¡¨ The
sentence is unfinished. God did not conclude the awful hypothesis. Man had
sinned, and were he now to put out his hand and take of the tree of life and
live forever--the eternal. One drops a veil on that dread scene of sorrow into
which the immortal sinner would be plunged. It is not only judgment that puts
the tree of life beyond man¡¦s reach; it is an act of pitifulness, an act of
divinest grace. The punishment of sin further involved the labour of reducing
the earth by tillage and toil expended upon it to supply man¡¦s need. ¡§He sent
him forth from the garden of Eden to till the ground from whence he was taken.¡¨
He had been put into the garden to keep it. Now he is set to till the earth. Is
there not here also a gracious mitigation of man¡¦s suffering? We find ever the
traces of mercy blended with the righteous indignation of the offended law. The
cloud has always its silver lining. Suppose God had not only permitted the gift
of immortality to remain with man after his sin, but had left him also without
toil. Suppose everything had been ready to his hand, and he needed only to put
out his hand and take the fruit of the garden, the fruit of the tree! No
labour! no death! A world of sin, a world of immortality, and a world without
work. Can you conceive of a more awful judgment than that? Labour is the
mitigation of our woe. Labour is in many cases the cure of the evil. Work will
often wean you from sorrow, which comes from sin. Work, good wholesome
toil--the hand, the brain--will heal the wounds that sin has made. It was not
in wrath, but in pity; it was not with wrath but with grace, that God sent
forth the man to till the ground whence he came God finally pronounces the
sentence that the way of the tree of life was to be kept by a flaming sword.
Man was not willing to go. We will not leave our Eden unless we are driven
forth. God had to drive man out of the garden which he had spoiled, and then
keep the way to the tree of life by the flaming sword and the burning cherubim.
Now, it suggests in the first place that the man had the desire to return upon
his past. If man had not wanted to remain in Eden, he would not have been
driven out at all. If he had not wanted to return, it would not have been kept
by the cherubim. Man always seeks again his past. We always are returning to
it. How we dwell in the reminiscences of life! How we look back upon
childhood¡¦s days with a certain longing! Who has not, again and again, called
up in memory¡¦s affection those who were with us in the years that have
departed? Who is there that would not recall the past? ¡§If I could only begin
life again! If I could only have back those hours I wasted--those childhood¡¦s
impressions I allowed to vanish! When I was a child, how tender the heart--how
quick the conscience--how pure the life! Oh! give it back to me. Let me inherit
the Eden from which I have been driven!¡¨ My friends, it is vain. Eden is
closed. The cherubim are at the gate; them is always the flaming sword to keep
the way of the tree of life. Old friendships! Who would not return to these?
Friends we have lost, whose hearts we have broken--whom we neglected--whom we
injuriously treated--who would not give his right hand to get them back again,
that we might undo the wrong we did, that we might increase the little service
we had rendered? It is impossible! The cherubim are keeping the gate: you
cannot go back. Oh! the lost opportunities of life! Who has used every chance?
Who, even in the things of time and sense, has always been watchful? That golden
hour in life, you only had it once. You had it then, you lost it then. The time
of the flood, the prosperous breeze, the chance that was given you; it is gone.
You look back with regret. The cherubim keep the gate; you cannot go back. The
wasted lives. The injury that cannot be undone. It may be you wrecked forever
the peace of some soul, and in the wreck destroyed your own. Oh! to have had
the day before that fatal hour! Oh! to be able to pause again before that false
step! It is done! it is done! and the tree of life is guarded by the flaming
sword of the cherubim. And this is so, not only with the individual, but with
the entire race. All men look back. It is a poor nation that has no history. It
is a very savage tribe that has no tradition. The men who have forgotten the
golden age are scarcely worthy of the name. All nations recall it. The poets
sing of it, and the philosophers meditate upon it, and all mankind look back
upon it, and still remember the Eden that was lost. When Adam and Eve went out,
they went out with unwilling steps, and ever gazing at the vanished paradise.
Man¡¦s life is a reminiscence. Man¡¦s life is a longing regret. And it
illustrates also the impossibility of return. If that past be so delightful,
let us go back to it. Let us be to friends whom we have lost, what we were once
to them. No, never! The cherubim are there. What were these cherubim? I do not
know. There are many orders of being in the service of God; but whatever they
were, they stand between the departing man and woman, and forever bar the way
of their return. And whatever were the cherubim, the poet is right, that
between us and the past there stands ourselves, our ¡§former selves.¡¨ For what
is it that really stands between us and the past, towards which we would move
if it were possible? What but ourselves? It needs no angel from heaven, no
flaming sword to bar the way. We are our own barriers. It is ourselves who stop
the way to the tree of life. It is our deed. We lost the chance, we threw away
our opportunity, we sacrificed innocence, we destroyed the soul of our friend,
and well-nigh have destroyed our own--
¡§Our
former selves, wielding a two-edged sword.¡¨
Is that all? Are we come to this? Is the promise to the woman, is
the voice of the serpent, is the word to Adam, is the command to labour, all to
be gathered up in this, and is this the end? Combine the longings for return,
combine the obstacles that lie between man and his past, but surely with these
we may blend the ever-recurring tone of the story. Does it not point to another
gospel? Is there no restoration of life in the future? Is God, who has given to
man original life, is He to be stayed in His purpose by human sin? He may have
closed the way back to Eden, because there is another way which shall be opened,
He may have said to Adam, ¡§No step backward to the Eden thou hast lost,¡¨
because every step forward, perpetually forward, would bring him round again to
that Eden into which he would enter. Ah, yes! We must go forward; backward thou
canst not go. Go forward. Is time lost? Time is still ours; and though the past
has vanished, and though the present is slipping from our grasp, the future is
our own. That we still possess. You cannot go back, says God. You have lost
innocence; you cannot be innocent again. But, better than innocent, you can be
sanctified. Is life lost? Has it wholly perished? Yes, wholly. But life lies
beyond. The moment we were born we began to die, and the first cry of the child
is but the prelude to the groan with which the man shall pass away. But he dies
only to live in the nobler life; there alone, in that great future, shall the
restoration be. Eden is closed behind you, but all the world and all the heaven
lie before you. Here is the gospel--the gospel of the barred tree of life, the
guarded Eden, barred and guarded that we may seek the eternal life, the Eden
that our God has given. (L. D. Bevan, D. D.)
Lessons
1. Sin alone puts God upon separating souls from their comforts,
antecedent and consequent.
2. When comforts are like to be abused, God prevents it by sending
them from them.
3. The habitation of innocency is no place for sinners.
4. Jehovah is the disposer of all places and conditions, He puts in
and sends out.
5. A cursed earth is the sinner¡¦s place of correction; or his bride-well,
as we may say.
6. Sin hath brought a sentence for miserable toil on men in this
place.
7. Man¡¦s base original corrupted with sin, fits him for a base
servile condition (Genesis 3:23).
8. God hath actually separated sin from the place of pleasure. From
the first Adam until now, sin is out of paradise.
9. God doth not only throw out sinners from Eden or the place of
pleasure, but keeps them out.
10. God hath His guard of angels to resist sinners, and drive them
from rest.
11. Terrible are the means and active by which God drives off sinners
from their pleasures.
12. No life can be recovered by man in looking to the former means of
life in innocency. Therefore we must to Christ (Genesis 3:24). (G. Hughes, B. D.)
The expulsion--its character and lessons
I. First, it is a
word this OF SOLEMN DIVINE JUDGMENT. ¡§He drove out the man.¡¨ It was a Divine
expulsion from the primeval paradise. Nor was this Divine expulsion one from
the delights merely, the endlessly varied beauties and satisfactions, of that
choicest part of a world which, everywhere, God had Himself pronounced to be
very good. It was this, indeed; and in this judgment of course appeared. But
there was a great deal more of judgment in the expulsion than this. Principally
it was judgment, in that it was the final shutting out of the man, and in him,
as we are too well assured of man, our whole race fallen, from all possibility
of life by the law--by the first covenant of the law.
II. But now, if
there was judgment thus, many ways in the ¡§driving out of the man,¡¨ there was
also GLORIOUS MERCY in it--not simply notwithstanding of it, but in it--mercy
along with the judgment, and divinely rejoicing against the judgment.
1. For, first, what was it but the gracious shutting of him out from
now delusive, vain, and ruinous hopes of life by the way of the law--a thing
this of the very last moment in reference to any possibility of his being saved
by grace.
2. I observe, secondly, that the driving out of the man was rich
mercy, in that it was in effect the shutting of him now also in to Christ, the
one name given under heaven among men fallen whereby we must be saved.
3. But we have not yet reached by any means the full mercy which was
in the driving out of the man. So far we have seen its gracious design and
tendency more doctrinally, as it were, under the grace of the Holy Ghost to
shut out from delusive hopes of life, and shut in to Him who is the eternal
life--the way, and the truth, and the life. And this truly was of unspeakable
importance. How very large a portion of the Bible bears one way or other
towards this double design! It might be said to be the grand scope and drift of
it, doctrinally, from first to last. But then, the text opens up at least
another class of means altogether for effecting the design. For, practically,
what is it that to a very large extent holds us back from Christ, and prevails with
us to leave Him and His salvation neglected and despised? Is it not some dream
of finding a portion, a good, a happiness, in this world--in the lust of the
flesh, or the lust of the eye, or the pride of life--for the sake of which we
are prepared to run the risk of losing our never-dying souls? But now behold
the still further import of the driving out of the man. See how it was just a
kind of summary, in effect, of that whole providential discipline which the
Lord is administering from age to age in our fallen world, in connection with
His Word, towards the same great end of driving us out from our vain delusive
hopes of life and blessedness, on the one side, and shutting us in to the faith
and love and obedience and enjoyment of the Lord Jesus Christ, upon the other.
For observe, first, what it was the Lord drove out the man from. It was from
the paradise of earth, as from a scene now no longer suited to his
state--which, however profitable as well as pleasant before, when all earthly
comforts did but raise his soul in love and thankfulness to God, could now have
proved but a deadly snare to him. Hence, in rich mercy as well as judgment, ¡§He
drove out the man¡¨--as if He should say, Outside that paradise of earth, away
from its delights, now unfit for thee, thou mayest be shut in to desire a
better country, even an heavenly. And just thus it is that the Lord is driving
forth His children still from their Edens of earth, withering their gourds,
teaching them painfully that--
¡§They
build too low who build beneath the skies,¡¨
in driving them out, only shutting them in to Him who is their
alone life, and in whom they are yet to reach a better Eden than the primeval
one. But what, further, did God drive out the man to? To till the ground now by
the hard toil of his hands and the sweat of his brow--¡§In the sweat of thy face
shalt thou eat bread, till thou return unto the ground.¡¨ And, in addition, to
endure many a hardship and profound sorrows--¡§Cursed is the ground for thy
sake, in sorrow shalt thou eat of it all the days of thy life: thorns also and
thistles shall it bring forth to thee.¡¨ And ¡§unto the woman He said, I will
greatly multiply thy sorrow and thy conception; in sorrow thou shalt bring
forth children.¡¨ Ah, it is judgment, indeed, but at least as much, mercy.
¡§Driven out¡¨ thus we are to a lot of toil and sorrow. But it is a lot only the
more in keeping, because sorrowful, with our state here, as at the best
sorrowfully sinful--ever ready we, even after having tasted that the Lord is
gracious, to depart from the living God, and take up our rest here, and put
some idol in the place of God, and worship the creature more than the Creator,
and prefer the things which are seen and temporal to the things unseen and
eternal, How merciful the ¡§driving out of the man¡¨! (C. G. Brown, D. D.)
Paradise shut, guarded, and reopened
I. PARADISE SHUT.
What did man lose when shut out of paradise?
1. He lost the happiness of his external condition.
2. When man was excluded from paradise, he lost, too, the
uprightness and purity of his moral nature.
3. Man then lost his approving conscience.
4. When paradise was lost, intercourse with God was lost.
II. PARADISE
GUARDED. The subject is not unprofitable to us in the present day. Paradise is
guarded, as to you, by all the awful, all the terrible perfections of God; so
that, except by the dispensation which I shall have occasion to mention, if man
is left to himself, it is impossible for him, in any instance, to regain the
favour of God. As for Adam, the verse says, there were flaming swords, and
bands of flaming cherubim, to prevent his entering that state of blessedness
from which he was driven. From the contemplation of God¡¦s perfections, revealed
under aspects so terrific, no sinner can find the least hope of regaining the Divine
favour. Not from any single perfection of the Divine character, or from all His
perfections together, can the transgressor derive the least hope of pardon,
purity, or happiness.
III. PARADISE
REOPENED. The Redeemer appears, removing these guards, and throwing open the
gate of heaven to the tree of life itself. (R. Watson.)
Paradise lost
I. THE PLACE OUT
OF WHICH MAN WAS DRIVEN. Eden, the fairest spot in the new-made world, and
frequently referred to, in the Christian Scriptures, as an emblem of that paradise
which God has planted in the skies.
1. Every object which it contained, was intended and calculated to
afford him the sweetest gratification, and to remind him of the benevolence and
holiness of his great Creator.
2. This garden was not merely a place of residence and
contemplation, but also of wholesome and pleasurable employment.
3. ¡§And the Lord God said, It is not good that the man should be
alone; I will make a help meet for him. And the Lord God caused a deep sleep to
fall upon Adam, and he slept.¡¨ And it was during that ¡§deep sleep,¡¨ that she
passed through his side, and smiled upon his slumbers, who was destined, when
he woke, to be to him another paradise, far beyond the first in beauty and in
loveliness.
4. But the crowning joy of paradise was the presence and the
friendship of Jehovah. It was a temple, illumined and blessed with the Divine
glory, as well as a fruitful and a fragrant garden. There God descended, not as
afterward on Mount Sinai, amidst tempest, and fire, and frowning clouds, but
with all His glories softened, so that man might see His face, and feel safe
and happy in His society.
II. THE REASON WHY
HE WAS DRIVEN OUT. The sole reason was his disobedience to God.
1. The law which he transgressed had been distinctly and authoritatively
declared to him.
2. The law which he transgressed was peculiarly adapted to his
condition. He was allowed to pursue the knowledge of good in all its varieties,
but he was prohibited from seeking an acquaintance with any degree of evil.
3. The law which he transgressed was enforced by most powerful
motives. God, who had graciously given him existence, had provided ample and
various supplies of food for his necessities and for his gratification, to all
of which he had free access, so that every temptation arising from scarcity, or
even from want of variety, was utterly prevented by his bountiful Creator. As
obedience was his duty, he had been divinely created with a disposition to
obey, and with a capacity to increase his happiness and his spiritual strength
by obedience, so that he was in no danger from any deficiency of moral ability.
His Almighty Creator was always at hand, ready to assist him whenever
temptation offered, and to furnish him with grace to help in time of need,
whenever he requested it, so that he might successfully wrestle even with
¡§principalities and powers.¡¨ He had the means and the prospect of increasing
and confirming every holy principle, and of rendering himself less and less
liable to fall, by resisting temptation when it appeared, and by making God his
refuge whenever he was exposed to danger.
III. THE CONDITION,
IN WHICH HE WAS PLACED BY HIS EXPULSION.
1. He was driven out of the garden to spend the remainder of his
days amidst the condemned and uncultivated parts of the earth.
2. He was driven out in a state of depravity and guilt, and exposed
to all their awful consequences.
3. He was driven out accompanied with the promise of a Redeemer. The
time when this promise was given, as well as the promise itself, affords an
interesting evidence that, in the midst of wrath, the Lord remembers mercy; for
it was repeated whilst He was pronouncing sentence upon the serpent, and before
He had pronounced the sentence upon man. (J. Alexander.)
Observations
I. GOD OFTENTIMES
WITHHOLDS FROM US, OR DEPRIVES US OF MANY BLESSINGS FOR OUR GOOD.
II. WHEN MEN HAVE
ONCE BROKEN OUT INTO ONE SIN, THEY ARE IN DANGER TO FALL INTO ANY OTHER.
III. GOD, AS HE
ALWAYS FORESEES, SO OFTENTIMES HE PREVENTS MEN¡¦S FALLING INTO SIN.
IV. THE SUREST WAY
TO PREVENT MAN¡¦S FALLING INTO SIN, IS TO BE FAR FROM THE ALLUREMENTS THAT MIGHT
ENTICE HIM UNTO SIN.
V. MEN ARE
NATURALLY APT TO THINK THEMSELVES SAFE IN THE PERFORMANCE OF OUTWARD ACTS OF
HOLY DUTIES.
VI. GOD CANNOT
ENDURE THE DEFILING OF HIS ORDINANCES BY SUCH AS HAVE NO RIGHT TO THEM. (J.
White, M. A.)
Observations
I. THERE IS NO
BLESSING SO FIRMLY ASSURED UNTO US, WHEREOF SIN MAY NOT DEPRIVE US.
II. MEN¡¦S
DWELLINGS AND EMPLOYMENTS ARE BOTH ASSIGNED BY GOD.
III. GOD EVERYWHERE
LEAVES REMEMBRANCES, TO MIND US WHAT AND HOW BASE WE ARE. (J. White, M. A.)
Observations
I. GOD¡¦S
JUDGMENTS ARE NOT TO BE PASSED OVER SLIGHTLY, BUT TO BE CONSIDERED SERIOUSLY,
AND OBSERVED AND REMEMBERED CAREFULLY.
II. GOD LOVES TO
LEAVE MONUMENTS, BOTH OF HIS MERCIES AND JUDGMENTS, FOR THE JUSTIFYING OF
HIMSELF, AND THE CONVINCING OF MEN OF THEIR UNWORTHY CONDUCT TOWARDS HIM.
III. IN SEARCHING
INTO GOD¡¦S JUDGMENTS, OUR SPECIAL CARE MUST BE TO OBSERVE THE PRECEDENTS AND
CAUSE OF THEM.
IV. THE REST OF
GOD¡¦S SERVANTS HAVE NEED OF THE TERRORS OF HIS JUDGMENTS TO RESTRAIN THEM FROM
SIN.
V. IT IS A GREAT
HELP TO BE INFORMED BY SENSE OF THOSE THINGS THAT ARE TO WORK EFFECTUALLY UPON
OUR HEARTS.
VI. THE ANGELS
THEMSELVES ARE MINISTERING SPIRITS FOR THE GOOD OF THE SAINTS.
VII. THERE IS NO
MEANS TO ESCAPE THE HAND OF GOD¡¦S JUSTICE, IF MEN WALK ON IN A COURSE OF
REBELLION AGAINST HIM. (J. White, M. A.)
Man¡¦s banishment
There is unspeakable mercy here in every respect for the erring
race. The present life in the flesh was now tainted with sin and impregnated
with the seeds of the curse, about to spring forth into an awful growth of
moral and physical evil. It is not worth preserving for itself. It is not in
any way desirable that such a dark confusion of life and death in one nature should
be perpetuated. Hence there is mercy as well as judgment in the exclusion of
man from that tree which could have only continued the carnal, earthly,
sensual, and even devilish state of his being. Let it remain for a season until
it be seen whether the seed of spiritual life will come to birth and growth,
and then let death come and put a final end to the old man. But still farther,
God does not annihilate the garden or its tree of life. Annihilation does not
seem to be His way. It is not the way of that Omniscient One who sees the end
from the beginning, of that infinite wisdom that can devise and create a
self-working, self-adjusting universe of things and events. On the other hand.
He sets His cherubim to keep the way of the tree of life. This paradise, then,
and its tree of life are in safe keeping. They are in reserve for those who
will become entitled to them after an intervening period of trial and victory,
and they will reappear in all their pristine glory, and in all their beautiful
adaptedness to the high-born and newborn perfection of man. The slough of that
serpent nature which has been infused into man will fall off, at least from the
chosen number, who take refuge in the mercy of God; and in all the freshness
and freedom of a heaven-born nature will they enter into all the originally
congenial enjoyments that were shadowed forth in their pristine bloom in that
first scene of human bliss. (Prof. J. G. Murphy.)
The banishment
Behold man exiled from Eden! Behold the most heart-rending
banishment that was ever denounced against any of the human race! We understand
your grief and your tears, O unhappy beings, whom an inexorable arrest of the
law snatches from all the endearments of a beloved land, where the hours of
childhood have been spent, from all the joys of a family and friends tenderly
beloved, from all the indescribable charms of the place where you learned to
feel and to love, and removes you to some inhospitable clime, where the
severest privations are the least of your evils, and where you languish, rather
than love. But what are your afflictions, compared with those of our first
father, when he went out of Eden at the voice of his Judge, to wander with his
unhappy companion in the desert countries of an accursed earth! O delights of
Eden, life of innocence and love, blissful retreats where the Lord revealed
Himself to the soul, where everything was ravishing beauty without, and harmony
and peace within, favours of Gods happiness of His love and of His presence;
you are lost forever! Bitter regret! profound misery! Oh, could Adam find again
the way to Eden! Oh that the flaming sword of eternal justice no longer
glittered! But no, it is not so, my brethren; Adam can no longer even desire
the abode in Eden; and this is the completion of his misery! To fallen man,
Eden has no more attractions, no more glory, no more happiness. What avail the
beauties of man¡¦s first abode? his heart, deprived of innocence and peace,
could no longer enjoy them. What does it avail that the glorious majesty of the
Lord still shines forth in all His works? man is despoiled and ashamed. What
does it avail that he still beholds over his head the azure firmament of
heaven, and the brightness with which it sparkles, while darkness reigns in his
soul, and gloomy clouds hide from him the glory of the Most High? What does it
avail that all created beings unite to send up on high one melodious hymn of
praise? there is nothing now in the heart of man but discord, anguish, and
grief. What does it avail what riches and abundance replenish Eden? man is
poor, miserable, and naked. What avails the tree of knowledge? man sees in it
an accusing witness of his crime. What avails the tree of life? man reads in it
the sentence of death against himself. What avails even the presence of God!
man now only sees in Him a Judge; he feels in His presence only the fear of a
slave, the shame of a criminal, the terror of a condemned malefactor. He has
fled at the voice of God; he has gone to hide his disgrace among the trees of
Eden. Flee, Adam, flee far from thy God, far from Eden, which sin has made an
abode of misery to thee; flee, and let the gates of Eden be closed upon thy
footsteps, let the flaming sword forever guard its entrance against thee! O my
beloved brethren! how hateful is sin in the sight of God! how bitter are its
fruits! how disastrous its effects! Let the expulsion of Adam explain to us the
incomprehensible mystery of a world sunk in evil, a world whose sufferings seem
to fling an accusation against Providence; a world full of sin, crimes,
injustice, animosities, war, and murders. Let this fact explain to us the
contradictions, the continual afflictions of a life whose sources sin has
poisoned, and whose relations with God it has destroyed! Let this fact explain
the grief which has invaded the whole human race, and the numberless sufferings
which result from man¡¦s want of harmony with himself and with his God! Let this
fact explain to us disease and death--death, that mystery inscrutable to human
wisdom, that abyss which has yawned beneath the feet of man, ever since he was
banished from Eden! Ah! my brethren, deny it not, we also have been banished
from Eden, or rather, we are born in this land of exile; Adam¡¦s lot has become
ours; he has bequeathed unto us this sad heritage of sin, corruption, misery,
and death! (L. Bonnet.)
Expulsion from Paradise, but not from Eden
His expulsion is not to be viewed, as is generally done, as mere
ejection from a happy dwelling, his own special home, as if this were his
punishment. No, it is banishment from God and from His presence, that is the
true idea which the passage presents to us. Paradise was not so much Adam¡¦s
home as Jehovah¡¦s dwelling. Man is banished from paradise, yet he is left
within sight of it; he is allowed to remain in Eden. He is not driven into some
desert, as if there were nothing for him bat wrath. There is favour for him in
spite of his sin; and the expulsion does not cancel the pardon he has received,
or intimate that God has begun to frown. It merely showed that before the full
consequences of that favour could reach man, time must elapse, and barriers be
thrown down. It is not the ¡§outer darkness,¡¨ neither is it the full sunshine,
into which he is brought. It is the twilight that surrounds him; and that
twilight assures him of the coming noon. He is left to linger at the gate, or
wander round the sacred fences of that forbidden ground. For paradise is not
swept off nor swallowed up. It is left as God¡¦s temple, now shut up and empty,
but still within sight of man. Probably it shared the common blight of
creation; though, like primeval man, it took long to wither; till, having waxed
old and being ready to vanish away, the deluge came and swept it from the
earth. It remained as a specimen of God¡¦s original handiwork, reminding man of
the glory which he had lost. It stood as a monument of what sin had done in
blighting God¡¦s perfect creation, and turning man into an exile. It showed how
God estimates the material creation, and that matter is not the defiling and
hateful thing which some conceive it to be. It proclaimed that God had not
wholly left the earth, and that in His own set time He would return to it; nay,
that man, though for a season dethroned and banished, should yet repossess
earth as king and lord. (H. Bonar, D. D.)
The garden of Eden left
I. THE TREE OF
LIFE GUARDED. When mankind were driven out of paradise, the tree of life was
not removed nor destroyed, but still left there: to show that there was still
immortal life left for man, though out of his reach. To this our own nature
bears witness; for there lies at the bottom of the heart of man the
inextinguishable desire for happiness and immortality; and that desire still
implanted within us proves that it is not altogether lost. Thus Aristotle
inferred from this universal desire in the very constitution of man¡¦s nature,
that there is a happiness for which he is born; and that though it be never
attained, yet it must in some way be attainable by man. The principle must
exist, though every access to that life is closed to mankind; or, in other
words, is guarded by the sword which turns every way.
II. THE CHERUBIM
OF SCRIPTURE. Of the different figures we may observe, that in the holy of
holies they are at rest; in Ezekiel in motion; in St. John in adoration. Over
the ark they seem to indicate inquiry; in the prophetic vision judgment; in the
Church of the redeemed thanksgiving. In the holy place they seem as if
inquiring of each other, and at the same time as if the subject of their
inquiry was the propitiation or mercy seat. Thus it is said to Moses, ¡§their
faces shall look one to another, toward the mercy seat shall the faces of the
cherubims be.¡¨ To which St. Peter is supposed to allude when he says that the
angels ¡§desire to look into the things¡¨ of our salvation. And thus the two
angels were seen by Mary Magdalene, ¡§the one at the head and the other at the
feet where the body of Jesus had lain,¡¨ which is the true mercy seat. But the
four cherubims afterwards are described as ¡§full of eyes,¡¨ instinct with
knowledge, and adoring wonder. Again, in the holy of holies not only are they
entirely withdrawn from sight by the veil, but even when the High Priest
entered once a year within that veil, they are hid from view by the smoke and
the cloud of incense; but in the Apocalypse all is open, and they are
glorifying God, for the gospel is then manifested. It appears then from all
these passages, that by the term cherubims we must understand some symbols or
representation of the incarnation. So was it in the holy of holies; so was it
in the prophet Ezekiel, and in the Apocalypse; and therefore we may conclude
that the same is meant in this place in the garden of Eden.
III. THEIR FORM AND
CHARACTER. We may further infer, that not only did those cherubims which
appeared in the beginning in Eden bear the same kind of significance with those
which are introduced in the rest of Scripture, and at the close in the
Apocalypse, but also are of a similar form and character. Now these in the
latter instances were expressly composite forms of animal life, or creature
combinations, and in all probability those in the temple were likewise of the
same kind. The compound figures keeping the entrances of Assyrian and Egyptian
temples or palaces, so utterly inexplicable on any other grounds, were probably
derived from some tradition of the cherubims that kept the gate of paradise. To
these might be added mythological fables, as that of the brazen-footed bulls
breathing fire, that kept the golden fleece. And what was that golden fleece
but some record of that clothing of God, some memory of that mystery of great
price, in Eden guarded by cherubim?
IV. SIGNIFICATION
OF CHERUBIMS. It will then be granted that by the cherubims were signified some
manifestation of Christ. And it has always been considered that the four
cherubims of Ezekiel and St. John had reference to the four Gospels or
Evangelists; for it is they that bear the manifestation or knowledge of Christ
throughout the world; they may be said to bear His throne as seen by the
prophet Ezekiel, or to encompass it as by St. John. In like manner the two
cherubims in the Temple have been considered by St. Augustine to mean the two
Testaments. We may therefore infer that the cherubims in Eden had the like
intent. But though they may have been afterwards seen and partially fulfilled
in four Evangelists, yet this does not explain the meaning of such appearances;
they must have some peculiar signification in themselves in addition to, or
independently of, the four Gospels. For we may ask, Why should figures of this
kind be chosen? And what do their curious shapes imply? What are they? They are
in some sense angelic, inasmuch as they bear messages of God, and the only way
we can represent angels is by some form of human youth in a spiritual body; yet
they are not angelic, for they are human and animal. They are not human,
because there are among them the countenances of animals; they are not animal,
for they are full of knowledge; the very name implies multitude of knowledge,
as also do their many eyes; and they bear in their hand a sword; they are human
as well as animal; they are spiritual as well as human, as their spiritual
movement indicates. They are called by the prophet and by the evangelist ¡§the
living creatures,¡¨--not, as improperly translated, ¡§beasts,¡¨ but living
creatures--creatures gifted with excessive life, ¡§the living ones.¡¨ But we
mayobserve, that though that which is animal and spiritual he mixed up with
these appearances, yet the prevailing character is man; the basis, so to speak,
of all these symbolic figures is man. They seem to represent the perfection of
animal life, yet gifted with a spiritual body, as to be found in the new man,
the last Adam, who shall reinstate again in paradise; man by the manhood of
Christ reconciled unto God, and admitted into union and fellowship with God,
wherein is eternal life. It is therefore the pledge and covenant of the seed
that should come, admitting again to immortality, by union of God with man, the
life of life, spiritual life, in the perfection of the creature united with the
Creator.
V. THE ANIMAL
CREATION RESTORED. See Romans 8:19; Romans 8:21-22; Colossians 1:15; 2 Corinthians 5:17; Revelation 3:14; Revelation 5:13; Isaiah 11:5-6; Isaiah 65:25. The animals partake of the
sentence passed on man of labour; they labour and suffer for us and with us,
sharing our toil and relieving it in their lives, and in their deaths
sustaining our frail bodies, setting forth the atonement, and thereby our
deliverance from death. Thus they are connected both with our death by sin, and
with the promise of that better life which is in God. It is then through
animals that God clothes fallen man; it is through animals slain that He
receives a sacrifice in Abel; and both these as setting forth Christ;--¡§the
secret of the Lord¡¨ which ¡§is with them that fear Him.¡¨ It is not therefore
inconsistent with this that something of an animal character should also be
found in these cherubims, which kept the way of the tree of life, and which
must in some sense be symbols of Christ¡¦s incarnation. (I. Williams, B. D.)
The cherubim
1. The cherubim are real
creatures and not mere symbols. In the narrative of the Fall they are
introduced as real into the scenes of reality. Their existence is assumed as
known. For God is said to place or station the cherubim at the east of the
garden of Eden. The representation of a cherub too in vision as part of a
symbolic figure implies a corresponding reality Ezekiel 10:14). A symbol itself points to
a reality.
2. They are afterwards described as living creatures, especially in
the visions of Ezekiel (1:10). This seems to arise, not from their standing at
the highest stage of life, which the term does not denote, but from the members
of the various animals, which enter into their variously described figure.
Among these appear the faces of the man, the lion, the ox, and the eagle, of
which a cherubic form had one, two or four (Exodus 25:20; Ezekiel 41:18; Ezekiel 1:16). They had besides wings in
number two or four Exodus 25:20; 1 Kings 6:27; Ezekiel 1:6). And they had the hands of a
man under their wings on their four sides (Ezekiel 1:8; Ezekiel 10:8). Ezekiel also describes
their feet as being straight, and having the soul like that of a calf. They
sometimes appear too with their bodies, hands, wings, and even accompanying
wheels full of eyes (Ezekiel 1:18; Ezekiel 10:12). The variety in the
figuration of the cherubim is owing to the variety of aspects in which they
stand, and of offices or services they have to perform in the varying posture
of affairs.
3. The cherubim are intelligent beings. This is indicated by their
form, movement, and conduct. In their visible appearance the human form
predominates. ¡§They had the likeness of a man¡¨ (Ezekiel 1:5). The human face is in front,
and has therefore the principal place. The ¡§hands of a man¡¨ determine the erect
posture, and therefore the human form of the body. The parts of other animal
forms are only accessory.
4. Their special office seems to be intellectual and potential
rather than moral. The hand symbolizes intelligent agency. The multiplicity of
eyes denotes many-sided intelligence. The number four is evidently normal and
characteristic. It marks their relation to the Kosmos, universe or system of
created things.
5. Their place of ministry is about the throne, and in the presence
of the Almighty. Accordingly, where He manifests Himself in a stated place, and
with all the solemnity of a court, there they generally appear.
6. Their special functions correspond with these indications of
their nature and place. They are figured in the most holy place, which was
appropriated to the Divine presence, and constructed after the pattern seen in
the mount. They stand on the mercy seat, where God sits to rule His people, and
they look down with intelligent wonder on the mysteries of redemption. In the
vision of the likeness of the glory of God vouchsafed to Ezekiel, they appear
under the expanse on which rests the throne of God, and beside the wheels which
move as they move. And when God is represented as in movement for the execution
of His judgments, the physical elements and the spiritual essences are alike
described as the vehicles of His irresistible progress (Psalms 18:11). All these movements are
mysteries to us, while we are in the world of sense. We cannot comprehend the
relation of the spiritual and the physical. But of this we may be assured, that
material things are at bottom centres of multiform forces, or fixed springs of
power, to which the Everlasting Potentate has given a local habitation and a
name, and therefore cognate with spiritual beings of free power, and
consequently manageable by them.
7. The cherubim seem to be officially distinct from angels or
messengers who go upon special errands to a distance, from the presence chamber
of the Almighty. It is possible that they are also to be distinguished in
function from the seraphim and the living beings of the Apocalypse, who like
them appear among the attendants in the court of heaven. (Prof. J. G.
Murphy.)
The way of life and its guardian forces
Let us try to analyse the spiritual ideas represented by these
words of the text: ¡§Life,¡¨ ¡§Tree,¡¨ ¡§Way,¡¨ ¡§Cherubims,¡¨ ¡§Flaming Sword.¡¨
1. What is life? The true life of man is to partake of the Divine
life of God. ¡§This is life eternal, that they might know Thee the only true
God.¡¨
2. The power of the Divine life in its relation to the being of man
is here represented by a ¡§tree.¡¨ A tree represents a germ, a growth, and a
fruitfulness. So the Divine life, implanted in the being of humanity as a
hidden germ, grows, casting forth branches in the formation of habits and
tendencies of character, and brings forth fruits in the energies of a spiritual
being reflecting the image of God; that is, ¡§the fruits of the Spirit.¡¨
3. Alienation from the life of God, and reconciliation to it, imply
a departure and a return. These ideas are here represented by the word ¡§way.¡¨
The ¡§way¡¨ would seem to represent those means of grace, and that mediatorial
system, by the power of which alone man is able to reach the realization of the
Divine presence.
4. This way is subject to conditions. ¡§The cherubims¡¨ keep the way.
The winged forms of the cherubims would seem to represent the spiritual
supernatural forces which elevate the soul of man out of the earthly, lower
life, into the communion of the Most High. The wings of the ¡§cherubims¡¨ alone
can waft the soul of man into the presence of ¡§The Most High.¡¨
5. There is another guardian force represented by the flaming sword.
What is the spiritual power symbolized by the sword? The knife, or sword, is
the symbol of sacrifice. Our love of any object may be measured by the
sacrifices which we are willing to make for it. Now, the life of man stands in
the reflection of the attributes of God. The one all-comprehensive attribute of
God is love. Therefore the one all-comprehensive duty of man is sacrifice.
Sacrifice is the reflection by humanity on earth of the Divine love in heaven.
The sword keeps the way of life. But it is the ¡§flaming¡¨ sword. The flame would
seem to represent the motive spirit of true sacrifice. The cold sacrifice,
which is not prompted by the ardour of burning love, is not the power that
keeps the way, but the unquenched spirit of fervent love, symbolized by the
flame. In all the ages of the Church¡¦s life, the access of the human soul to
the secret place, in which dwells the eternal life, has been by the same way,
and subject to the same conditions. Let us, then, endeavour to trace the same
verities, as they are presented under various forms, in successive ages.
I. Where did THE
PATRIARCHS, who lived on earth before the flood, find the source of spiritual,
undecaying life? In the presence of God. Their souls drew near to realize the
image of the eternal life, in order that, gazing on its glory, they might be
changed into the same image. In the motions of his consciousness Enoch walked
with God, and Noah walked with God. On the other hand, when Cain by
transgression lost the higher life of his being, that perdition is described as
departure from the presence of God: ¡§Cain went out from the presence of the
Lord.¡¨ In that alienation the tree of life ceased to grow within the reach of
his soul, and its spiritual fruits no longer strengthened and gladdened his
being. What, then, constituted the ¡§way¡¨ of access for these patriarchs? The
means of grace which God had ordained. The forms in which the means of grace
consisted in those ages are not revealed to us. The spiritual forces which
encircled that ¡§way,¡¨ as the conditions of approach, were essentially the same
as in our own and in every age of the Church. The human consciousness cannot
realize the presence of God without the revealed knowledge of God and the
ordained exercises of devotion. The wings of the eternal cherubims, then as
now, in the shadowing power of reverence, and in the elevating power of
spiritual aspiration, were the guardian forces, without whose activity the soul
could not draw near to the Most High. The other force which keeps the way was
also present in the antediluvian Church. The ¡§sword¡¨ of sacrifice appears in an
early page of religious history. In the religion of Cain and Abel sacrifice is
seen. The sword was not wanting in the religion of Cain. Why, then, did he lose
the ¡§respect¡¨ of the Divine presence? His was the cold sword of a heartless,
formal sacrifice, which cost him no self-denial. On the other hand, the soul of
Abel had seen dimly the mighty truth of the Cross. In the progress of his soul
the sword of sacrifice is seen baptized with the flames of the tongues of fire,
kindled by the one eternal Spirit of God.
II. In the Church
of THE POSTDILUVIAN PATRIARCHS THE SPIRITUAL LIFE OF MAN WAS QUICKENED AND FROM
TIME TO TIME REVIVED BY THE REALIZATION OF THE PRESENCE OF GOD. Again and again
in the religious history of the patriarchs we read of remarkable spiritual epochs
in their lives. How are these epochs described? In the oft repeated phrase:
¡§God appeared unto Abraham¡¨--Isaac--Jacob. These appearances of God, that is,
realizations of His presence, are marked as the points of spiritual
illumination and spiritual revival. In each of those manifestations, the tree
of the Divine life casts forth branches, and brings forth new spiritual fruit
in the patriarch¡¦s soul. But, let us ask, how were the souls of these
patriarchs entitled to draw near, so that God manifested His countenance to the
inward eye of faith in their spiritual consciousness? By the diligent use of
the Divinely appointed means. The system of Divine doctrine and worship, as far
as its forms are concerned, which prevailed in the Church of the patriarchs, is
very dimly revealed to us. But there are many expressions which clearly show
that such a system existed. Special seasons, and special places, were evidently
consecrated to the pursuit of illumination and the exercises of worship. In
that system the soul found the ¡§way¡¨ of the tree of life. The spiritual forces,
which come forth from the eternal throne ¡§to minister for them who shall be
heirs of salvation,¡¨ were ever surrounding the ¡§way of the tree of life¡¨ in the
history of the patriarchs. In the elevating powers which came in response to
meditation, prayer, and praise, the cherubic wings made their presence felt
during the waking and dreaming hours of the patriarchs. In the most remarkable
passage in the life of Abraham, we also behold the guardian agency of ¡§the
flaming sword.¡¨ As in the New Testament, the incarnate God has taught us that
we cannot reach His presence except upon the condition of entire
self-sacrifice, in the ¡§forsaking of all,¡¨ so this mighty principle appears in
the trial of Abraham. In the ascent of Mount Moriah he rose to the height of
self-sacrifice, and there won the richest promises of life. By the mighty faith
of that act he won the smile of the eternal countenance, and inherited the
highest blessing vouchsafed to man. His self-surrender proved that burning love
of God had absorbed his entire being.
III. IN THE MOSAIC
ECONOMY OF THE JEWISH CHURCH, the presence of the Lord is ever represented as
the source of the Church¡¦s life. The promise of that abiding sacramental
presence was given in the words, ¡§There I will meet with thee, and I will
commune with thee, from above the mercy seat, from between the two cherubims,
which are upon the ark of the testimony.¡¨ This Divine presence was also
realized by the Church in the days of Solomon. At the opening of the Temple,
¡§The glory of the Lord had filled the house of the Lord.¡¨ That central presence
was the life of the Church. The far-extending and fructifying influences of
that mysterious presence in the Church were as the branches of the tree of
life. That presence first manifested to Moses in the burning brightness of the
tree on Horeb continued to abide in the growing Church, the increase of which
the Psalmist sang in these words: ¡§Thou preparedst room before it, and didst
cause it to take deep root, and it filled the land She sent out her boughs unto
the sea, and her branches unto the river.¡¨ The ¡§way¡¨ of the tree of life was
sacramentally represented in the entrance into the holy of holies on the great
day of the Atonement. On that day the high priest drew near into the presence
of the eternal Life according to the appointed order of access. That order
represented ¡§the way.¡¨ As in the patriarchal Church, the ¡§way¡¨ was kept by the
guardian forces. The golden cherubims, resting upon the ark of the testimony,
cast their shadow over the ¡§way¡¨ of approach. Those golden figures, with wings
out stretched, as if for mounting into the realms of the Eternal Life of the
Most High, and resting upon the ark of the testimony, symbolized the truth that
the elevating forces of spiritual worship and aspiration must have as their
basis the solid ground of Church witness and dogmatic truth. Thus we find that
in the Jewish Church the ¡§way¡¨ of access to the Presence was kept by the
cherubims. Was the power of the flaming sword also represented in the typical
teaching of the Tabernacle? Yes. As a condition of entrance, the high priest
was commanded to bear the sword and the fire. ¡§Into the second tabernacle went
the high priest alone, not without blood, which he offered for himself and for
the errors of the people.¡¨
IV. So likewise in
the INCARNATION. When the fulness of time was come, the everlasting Son, who is
the eternal Word and fountain of life, entered our humanity: ¡§The Word was made
flesh, and dwelt among us In Him was life.¡¨ In Jesus Christ was embodied the
image of the eternal life, for the participation of which man was created. The
tidings of His mission are, ¡§The glorious gospel of Christ, who is the image of
God.¡¨ If we regard the progressive manifestation of the Divine life in the
manhood of Jesus Christ, He is also the ¡§tree¡¨ of life. The hidden Godhead
dwelt bodily in the ungrown form at Bethlehem. The manifestation of the
Godhead, according to the conditions of humanity, was gradual: ¡§Jesus increased
in wisdom and stature, and in favour with God and man.¡¨ Of His earthly course
John the Baptist said: ¡§He must increase.¡¨ In that increase He appears as the
¡§tree¡¨ of life. The holy nativity was the germ, containing within itself the
tree, the leaves of which are for the healing of the nations. The successive
glories, or manifestations, of His Divinity were as the branches which the
growing tree put forth. By the power of these man is saved. In the ascension
the tree of life reached the fulness of its height; and in the coming of the
Holy Ghost began to shed upon human nature the fruits of the everlasting life.
In His mediatorial power, as opening the Divine life to the human nature, Jesus
Christ is the ¡§way¡¨ of the tree of life: ¡§For through Him we both have access
by one spirit unto the Father.¡¨ His flesh and blood are the media of access to
the invisible eternal life. Therefore Jesus Christ is also the ¡§way¡¨ of the
tree of life for man, ¡§Jesus saith unto him, I am the way . . . no man cometh
unto the Father but by Me.¡¨ In the history of the incarnation we also behold
the presence and agency of the ministering spirits that were appointed to keep
the ¡§way.¡¨ In the temptation the power of the ministering spirits is seen
keeping the ¡§way¡¨: ¡§Behold, angels came and ministered unto Him.¡¨ In Jesus
Christ we behold also the spiritual powers represented by the flaming sword.
From Bethlehem onwards every act of Jesus was a sacrifice. But the crowning
act, which gathered into itself the significance of all His previous acts, was
His self-surrender unto the death of the cross. The original life of the
unfallen man flowed from the image of the one eternal Life, whose name is Love.
The mighty power that redeems man from that unloving self-will, which is the
¡§law of sin and death,¡¨ is the manifestation of the infinite love. The
expression of love is sacrifice, and all love may be measured by the value of
the victim sacrificed. Blood is the true exponent of love. In the eternal Being
of God, love holds a place analogous to that of blood in the physical being of
man. Love permeates the infinite system of God¡¦s eternal Being, giving motion
and vitality, as it were, to all the other attributes. Power, justice, wisdom,
holiness, and all the other attributes of the Eternal, are quickened by His
all-circulating love. On Calvary we see the flaming sword, under the strokes of
which humanity in Christ found entrance into the secret recesses of the eternal
life. Christ ¡§by His own blood entered in once into the holy place, having obtained
eternal redemption for us.¡¨
V. The eternal
life, lost by man in nature, is brought near in that ¡§ONE CATHOLIC AND
APOSTOLIC CHURCH,¡¨ which is the Body of Christ. Wherein does that life dwell?
Where is the throne upon which He is seated? The Presence dwells sacramentally
in the holy mysteries. The Divine life, communicated from Christ to the being
of man, is a life that grows. The tree of life in the soul of the young
communicant may be but a weak and tender plant. As the outward form of flesh
and blood in which the eternal Word chose to come into humanity was lowly and
feeble to the eye of man, so the sacramental ¡§way¡¨ in which the eternal life is
communicated to us hath no form or splendour that our natural hearts would
desire. The sacramental ¡§way¡¨ to the Presence is also guarded by the
¡§cherubims.¡¨ Unless you have sought the influence of the ministering spirits
that elevate and waft the soul from its earthliness into the light and air of
the higher life, you cannot realize the presence of Christ. The other condition
of access that keeps the ¡§way¡¨ is the mighty power of sacrifice. That flaming
sword must be known in our personal being, before we can reach the presence of
the Life. When you draw near along the sacramental ¡§way,¡¨ you are commanded to
acknowledge and bewail your manifold sins and wickednesses. If that confession
be a genuine act of the soul, then you are willing to sacrifice the dearest
sins, and, taking the sword, to cut off the right hand, and to cut out the
right eye, in order to enter into the hidden life. On that condition alone can
you worthily draw near. But whence can we draw the power to wield this sword?
We have no sufficient motive power in our own nature. We must draw inspiration
by a living faith from the one omnipotent sacrifice on Calvary. (H. T.
Edwards, M. A.)
The guarded way
Observe, the tree of life was not cut down; nor was it withdrawn
from the trees of the field--no, the tabernacle of God was left with men upon
the earth. Well was the way watched until the time should come for approach:
strait is the gate and narrow is the way that leadeth unto life, yet men may
travel now up to the blessed tree and take the fruit of immortality! God has
never taught us to set little store by life. He has always watched it and
guarded it as with hosts of armed angels. It is not to be wantonly plucked. It
is God¡¦s choice gift. He has, too, alway kept the line very distinct between
Himself and His creatures ¡§the man is become as one of Us, to know good and
evil¡¨; not really as ¡§one of Us,¡¨ but imaginatively so; he thinks he now knows
all that there is to be known, but this imagination must be corrected by the
imposition of high discipline: he thinks he has discovered the sham and failure
of things and found out the scheme of God; he must be undeceived; throw a skin
upon his back, drive him out of the garden, keep the tree of life, and let him
learn by long and bitter experience that there is no short road to dominion and
immortality. (J. Parker, D. D.)
¢w¢w¡mThe Biblical Illustrator¡n