Friday, March 12, 2021

Astounding Magnitude of Adam's "Little" Sin

Do you think the choice by Adam and Eve to eat the fruit of the tree of knowledge of good and evil was a minor thing?

On the surface, their offenses consisted of disobeying God by lusting for and then seizing something forbidden -- a mere piece of fruit. 

First, that violates "Thou shalt love the Lord thy God," "Thou shalt not covet," and "Thou shalt not steal. That's three of the Ten Commandments right off the bat. But we can go a bit deeper.

Hebrew use of "to know" means to personally, intimately experience something; for example, Adam knew his wife, and she bore a son. So to know evil is to know it experientially: that is, to commit evil. Thus, choosing knowledge of good and evil means choosing to participate in evil.

Someone has asked, what's wrong with wanting to be like God? You should bear in mind, first, that it was the serpent who suggested that knowledge of good and evil  would make them like God. Be careful whom you choose as a source! But was the desired result really to be like God?

While God understood evil and had performed the good and just act of punishing evil when He put down Lucifer's rebellion, God, being all-good, did not "know" (participate in) evil. The serpent lied: Having the knowledge of good and evil would not have made them like God.

Had they wanted to be like God, with no other context, it might not have mattered. But that is NOT all it was. 

  • Believing the serpent's claim that they would not die, rather than God's warning that they would, effectively called God a liar, which is bearing false witness.
  • Believing God wanted to keep knowledge to Himself calls Him selfish, which is bearing false witness against the One who is Truth and Love.
  • Doing so constituted violation of the commandment to love God.
  • Setting up the serpent and themselves as superior arbiters of truth constituted idolatry.
  • Rebelling against God's authority constituted taking His name in vain (i.e., treating it as worthless).
  • Desiring what belonged to God alone constituted the first act of covetousness. 
  • Taking the fruit (it does not say it was an apple) was stealing. 
  • Dishonoring their Creator was a variation on failing to honor one's parents. 
  • The sin brought about their spiritual death and made physical death inevitable. It passed their deaths down to billions of descendants. That is, at best, manslaughter; and at worst, mass murder. 

And I haven't even gone into the even weightier secondary consequences, namely the Fall of all creation, its effects, and the cost imposed on God to redeem us from that Fall.

Please explain how taking the fruit of the tree of the knowledge of good and evil could be NOT a big deal! 

One more thing. Adam and Eve could have gone to the Tree of Life before God pronounced judgment. But they didn't have the faith to do so. Most of the world follows that same pattern. A metaphorical Tree of Life is available to all in the cross of Christ. Tragically, only a few turn to Him before it is too late.


Copyright 2021, Richard Wheeler. Permission granted for non-remunerated use as long as credit is given where credit is due.

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