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Posts Tagged ‘Sin’

Why did God put the snake in the Garden of Eden? Wasn’t that a mistake?

November 16th, 2009

The Genesis account describes how Adam and Eve disobeyed God at the instigation of a snake. Could this be interpreted to suggest that God had made a mistake in his creation? A mistake that would have devastating implications for humanity. The fact that the snake spoke should be noted, and suggests an alternative understanding of the event. There was nothing created in the seven days or eras apart from humans that could speak. The only beings that could were created before the earth was formed, that is, the angels. In fact, throughout the Bible ‘snake’ has been representative of Satan or the Devil (Rev: 12:9, 20:2). Satan is an angel who envied God’s power, tried to usurp the throne of God, and who was thus thrown out of heaven.

Did God ‘put’ the snake in the Garden of Eden?

The Bible does not explain systematically, like a textbook, the events of the Fall (when Adam and Eve turned against God after the snake tempted them). We have the narrative of the first few chapters of Genesis describing Satan as a ’snake’ who incited Eve to disobey God. It seems to be suggested in the text that the snake was a created creature like any other animal, so in one respect God did ‘put’ the snake in Eden. Yet, no normal, natural snake speaks. This factor combined with other scripture passages using ‘snake’ as refernce for the Devil suggests that the snake was influenced by another supernatural entity.

The omnipotence of God

Did God ‘put’ Satan in the Garden of Eden? I have mentioned above that the Bible does not give exhaustive detail on this point. The other passages, apart from the opening chapters of Genesis, that refer to the fall of Satan are Isaiah 14:4-21, Ezekiel 28:1-17. These two sections of text are poetical and have more than one meaning. As such there are things that we can know about how and why Satan (the snake) was in the Garden of Eden, but there are aspects of the event that we cannot discover from scripture. Yet scripture is clear on this point: God never intiates evil. Instead this has always been a result of the choices made by the created: angels and humans (James 1:13-14). The Bible provides records of God’s actions in history. It is not written as a theology essay, explaining who God is and how he acts in detailed academic exposition. Nevertheless, within the records of the Bible , God’s sovereignty is displayed very clearly, in so-far-as nothing happens that is outside of God’s control. This includes the snake’s presence in the Garden of Eden.

God’s providence

Does the above mean that God is somehow to blame for the Fall of man? Was it God’s mistake? Within a human context, if someone has complete control over another, the one who is subject to the other has no power to initiate free action. Therefore the one who is in control must ultimately take responsibility for any action taken by the one who is subject. The image that comes to mind is a puppeteer in control of the strings. This is not an analogy that can be transfered to the God of the Bible and his relation to humanity. God is beyond us, and therefore his actions cannot be equated to that of a human, and his ultimate control does not negate our free action. God is at the same time distinct from his creation, and working through it. Human action is very real and effective, therefore each human is accountable for what he/she does.

Human free will and God’s providence are not opposed to each other. Many times the Bible represents a scenario where a human freely chooses to act, but the Bible declares that God ultimately governed the outcome of the event (Acts 2:23, 4:27-28, Luke 22:22, Matt 18:7). Therefore there is a paradox which is represented – humans act and choose freely, and are therefore accountable, but God works his purposes in and through the willing free actions of humans. Thus God cannot ever be accused of causing the Fall; humanity chose to reject God, and Satan decided to incite us. We remain accountable.

For a more detailed exposition read: Grudem, Wayne Systematic Theology: An Introduction to Biblical Doctrine, Chapter 16: God’s Providence.

But did God make the ‘mistake’ of not preventing the Fall?

Firstly, because we are beings that are made in the image of God we have the freedom to choose, as I have outlined above. Therefore when Adam and Eve chose to disobey God they had to take responsibility for it. The highest human virtue is love. Part of the essence of love is choice. We need to be free to choose in order to love; and we need to be free to choose in order to do evil. The Fall was caused by our choice to reject God’s governace over our lives.

Secondly, however, God knew that the snake would incite Eve; could he not have stopped it, as he is all powerful? Simply: yes, but realistically, this is a question that is very difficult to answer because it requires information that humanly we do not possess. Such as, God’s thoughts and eternal intentions. How can God not prevent evil and be not partly to blame? I will let Calvin’s words serve as an answer, because he expresses it so well: ‘Let those for whom this seems harsh consider for a little while how bearable their squeamishness is in refusing a thing attested by clear Scriptual proofs because it exceeds their mental capacity’ (Calvin, John. Institutes). The point is this: If God has all the attributes we expect of him he is far beyond our capacity to intellegibly dissect. Paradoxically, however, at the very moment that humanity betrayed God’s law, which he foreknew, God also knew the extremes to which he would go to save humanity from the results of the Fall. This is the very irony of the question: why did God not prevent this evil for our sakes? A result of evil entering creation was the suffering God knew he would undergo for us. The Bible tells us that it is because of his great love for us.

God’s plan

From the beginning God had a plan to save people from the Fall, to totally and ultimately defeat evil through the Son of God, Jesus Christ, who willingly went to the cross to suffer in our place because of our rejection of God. At the Fall, when God is cursing the snake he said this: ‘I will put enmity between you and the woman, and between your offspring and her offspring, he shall bruise your head and you shall bruise his heal’ (Genesis 3:15). This is a promise that Satan and evil will be trampled under the feet of one man – Jesus Christ.

For more information on Genesis 3:15 see: http://biblescripture.net/First.html

Further Reading

1. Wright, Christopher J H, The God I Don’t Understand, Zondervan, 2008, Chapter 1, 2, 3.

2. Grudem, Wayne, Systematic Theology: An Introduction to Biblical Doctrine, Inter-Varsity Press, 1994, Chapter 16

Why didn’t God make things perfect in the beginning if he is going to in heaven? Why go through it all?

April 23rd, 2009

We messed up
First off in the question there is the assumption that God did not create everything perfect when in reality He did (Genesis1:31) Everything He created was good. That was the way things were: there was perfect harmony between God and humanity until the fall. God, who created man and woman out of love, did so with freedom as part of the human package. It was with this free will that man and woman chose to sin, chose to go against God and by doing so they brought the world under a curse (Genesis 3:14-19). As a result of the ‘fall’, Adam and Eve brought sin into the world which causes sickness, decay, severed relationships, human hurts, death. In short, imperfection. Did God create imperfection? No. God’s creation is perfect. But, humanity chose to sever this perfection.

So why did he come to save us?
We are right in believing that we are entirely undeserving of His grace, of Jesus, of forgiveness from God. God would have been entirely just in leaving us to be. Yet, He came to a people who rejected and despised Him and died a brutal death so that we can enter back into a restored relationship with Him. “This is love: not that we loved God, but that he loved us and sent his Son as an atoning sacrifice for our sins.” (1 John 4:10) We can rejoice because of Jesus Christ who reconciled us back to Him whilst we were still enemies of God. (Rom 5:6-11).

Conclusion
God’s first priority is to bring Himself glory, and a redeemed people bring Him more glory that a robot-like people who are somehow ‘programmed’ to love Him. This may seem like a selfish goal, but He is perfect – it is logical that such a being should hold their own praise, honour and glory as of first importance. As for why a redeemed people are more glorious than automatons? Think back to the Champions League Final 2005, AC Milan vs. Liverpool. Almost everyone remembers it! Why? Because Liverpool came back from 3-0 down at half time to win on penalties. It was so unexpected that they made it that it made their win even more amazing. In Ephesians 3:9-11 we read of God’s eternal purpose which he accomplished in Christ, namely, his amazing way of justly redeeming his ‘prodigal sons’. This, we are told, was to demonstrate the manifold wisdom of God to all supernatural powers.

Author: Cat Cotton Categories: Bible, God, Morality Tags: ,

Why did Jesus, the Son of God have to die so brutally?

April 23rd, 2009

The suffering of Christ

The suffering of Jesus was appalling. The Bible records that he was mocked, beaten, spat upon, stripped naked, crowned with thorns and flogged. Nails were then driven through his wrists and ankles, pinning him to a cross that he hung upon till death. Historical sources reveal that sometimes individuals would die from the flogging alone, as “veins were laid bare, and. . . the very muscles, sinews and bowels of the victim were open to exposure.”* All this and we haven’t yet considered the spiritual side of his suffering.
 
God put upon him all the sin that Humanity had and would ever commit, separating him for the first and only time from God. He was wracked with our guilt and shame, best represented by his exclamation, “my God, my God why have you forsaken me”. None in this life can know what it is to be completely separated from God, only Jesus. Isaiah 53: 4-6 records “Surely he took up our infirmities and carried our sorrows, yet we considered him stricken by God, smitten by him, and afflicted. But he was pierced for our transgressions, he was crushed for our iniquities; the punishment that brought us peace was upon him, and by his wounds we are healed. We all, like sheep, have gone astray, each of us has turned to his own way; and the Lord has laid on him the iniquity of us all.” ”
 
The consequence of sin
To understand the need for all of this we must first try to understand the vastness of the problem, the disgusting nature of sin in God’s eyes. The Bible says that God absolutely detests our sin, that he is perfectly pure “God is light; in him there is no darkness at all” and with this in mind our failure to meet his standards is horrific. Paul summarises our condition by saying that “our righteousness is as dirty rags”, by which he means that the best we can offer up in good deeds is disgusting to a holy God. In fact the Hebrew from which we translate ‘dirty rags’ is far more graphic, a bloody tampon would be more precise! Imagine a cat bringing a pigeon back to its owner as a gift, that cat believes he is bringing something valuable to impress but if we understand something of the revulsion of the owner to this gift then we understand a fraction of how God feels about sin.

I have said all that to say this; we understand best the reason for Jesus’ horrific suffering when we begin to grasp the reality of our sin before a perfect and pure God. Jesus’ suffering was necessary because God had to fully punish all our wrong deeds in order for us to be fully accepted before him. We, as Christians, celebrate Jesus’ awesome sacrifice because in so doing we are celebrating our acceptance and cleanness before God.
 
*An account given by the third Century historian, Eusebius.

Author: Chris Sivers Categories: God, Jesus, Suffering Tags: , ,

If we are made in the image of God, why do we sin? (What does being made in the image of God mean?)

April 23rd, 2009

Then God said, “Let us make man in our image, in our likeness, and let them rule over the fish of the sea and the birds of the air, over the livestock, over all the earth, and over all the creatures that move along the ground.”So God created man in his own image, in the image of God he created him; male and female he created them.”
(Genesis 1:26-28)

The image of God

Out of all the creatures God made, only one creature, man is said to be made “in the image of God.” To understand what this means, we may use the following definition: The fact that man is in the image of God means that man is like God and represents God.

The words “image” and “likeness” are used to refer to something that is similar but not identical to the thing it represents or is an “image” of. There’s a sense of distinction involved.

Various characteristics of man serve as examples in which the image of God is primarily seen – man’s intellectual ability, his power to make moral decisions and willing choices, his ability to socially relate, or his exercise of dominion over the earth.

But the passage does not list these characteristics out, because no such list could do justice to the subject: the text only needs to affirm that man is like God, and the rest of the Bible fills in more details to explain this.

As we read more of the Bible, we realize that a full understanding of man’s likeness to God would require a full understanding of who God is in His being and in His actions and a full understanding of who man is and what he does.

The more we know about God and man, the more similarities we will recognize, and the more fully we will understand what scripture means when it says that man is in the image of God.

Sin and the distortion of the image of God

Imagine you are an artist, the very best at what you do. You’ve just put in hours, days, weeks, even months into painting the most beautiful picture your mind has ever conceived. You take great delight in your master piece. This is a one of a kind. Never have you nor will you create something as beautiful. You want to show it to the world. Your heart flutters with anticipation! This is the moment you’ve lived your life for. You can’t contain your pride in your work. And then someone walks up to your creation and vomits all over it.

That is what man did to God when he sinned.

Sin is our failure to conform to the moral law of God in act, attitude or manner.

The question that then arises is whether man could still be thought to be like God after he sinned.

The question is answered quite early in Genesis where God gives Noah the authority to establish the death penalty for murder among human beings just after the flood: God says

“Whoever sheds the blood of man, by man shall his blood be shed; for in the image of God has God made man.”

Even though men are sinful, there is still enough likeness to God remaining in them that to murder another person is to attack the part of creation that most resembles God. Man is still in God’s image.

However, since man has sinned, he is certainly not fully like God as he was before. His moral purity has been lost and his sinful character certainly does not reflect God’s holiness. Though man is still in the image of God, in every aspect of life, some parts of that image have been distorted or lost.

To return to my earlier illustration, though the painting has been defaced, it has not lost its original image. God makes a wonderful provision to have the mess removed and His precious creation restored to its original beauty – He sent His only Son to die on a cross for the forgiveness of sin. (Rom 5:1; John 3:16)

The recovery of the image – becoming more like God

It is encouraging to read then that because of the forgiveness that comes from Jesus, we can progressively grow into more and more likeness to God. Paul says that as Christians we have a new nature that is “being renewed in knowledge after the image of its creator.” (Col 3:10)

As we gain in true understanding of God, His Word, and His World, we begin to think more and more of the thoughts that God Himself thinks. In this way we are “renewed in knowledge” and we become more like God. (2 Cor 3:18)

In fact, the goal for which God has saved us is that we might be “conformed to the image of His Son” (Rom 8:29) and thus be exactly like Christ in our moral character.

It is the Holy Spirit who produces in us those character traits that cause us to resemble Jesus more – love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness, faithfulness, gentleness and self-control. (Gal 5:22-23)

The beauty of this is that God works in you to recover His image in you. Paul writes, “It is God who works in you to will and to act according to his good purpose.” (Phil 2:13), thus indicating something of the way God transforms us – both by causing us to want His will and by giving us the power to do it.