Bible
Commentary
Genesis 3
The
story of this chapter is perhaps as sad a story (all things considered) as any
we have in all the Bible. In the foregoing chapters we have had the pleasant
view of the holiness and happiness of our first parents, the grace and favour
of God, and the peace and beauty of the whole creation, all good, very good;
but here the scene is altered. We have here an account of the sin and misery of
our first parents, the wrath and curse of God against them, the peace of the
creation disturbed, and its beauty stained and sullied, all bad, very bad.
"How has the gold become dim, and the most fine gold changed!" O that
our hearts were deeply affected with this record! For we are all nearly
concerned in it; let it not be to us as a tale that is told. The general contents
of this chapter we have (Rom. v. 12), "By one man sin entered into the
world, and death by sin; and so death passed upon all men, for that all have
sinned." More particularly, we have here, I. The innocent tempted, ver.
1-5. II. The tempted transgressing, ver. 6-8. III. The transgressors arraigned,
ver. 9, 10. IV. Upon their arraignment, convicted, ver. 11-13. V. Upon their
conviction, sentenced, ver. 14-19. VI. After sentence, reprieved, ver. 20, 21.
VII. Notwithstanding their reprieve, execution in part done, ver. 22-24. And,
were it not for the gracious intimations here given of redemption by the
promised seed, they, and all their degenerate guilty race, would have been left
to endless despair.
The
Tempter's Importunity
1 Now the serpent was more subtle 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 with which Satan assaulted our first
parents, to draw them into sin, and which proved fatal to them. Here observe,
I. The tempter, and that was the devil,
in the shape and likeness of a serpent.
1. It is certain it was the devil that
beguiled Eve. The devil and Satan is the old serpent (Rev. xii. 9), a malignant
spirit, by creation an angel of light and an immediate attendant upon God's
throne, but by sin become an apostate from his first state and a rebel against
God's crown and dignity. Multitudes of the angels fell; but this that attacked
our first parents was surely the prince of the devils, the ring-leader in the
rebellion: no sooner was he a sinner than he was a Satan, no sooner a traitor
than a tempter, as one enraged against God and his glory and envious of man and
his happiness. He knew he could not destroy man but by debauching him. Balaam
could not curse Israel, but he could tempt Israel, Rev. ii. 14. The game
therefore which Satan had to play 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 whole race of mankind had here,
as it were, but one neck, and at that Satan struck. The adversary and enemy is
that wicked one.
2. It was the devil in the likeness of a
serpent. Whether it was only the visible shape and appearance of a serpent (as
some think those were of which we read, Exod. vii. 12), or whether it was a
real living serpent, actuated and possessed by the devil, is not certain: by
God's permission it might be either. The devil chose to act his part in a
serpent, (1.) Because it is a specious creature, has a spotted dappled skin,
and then went erect. Perhaps it was a flying serpent, which seemed to come from
on high as a messenger from the upper world, one of the seraphim; for the fiery
serpents were flying, Isa. xiv. 29. Many a dangerous temptation comes to us in
gay fine colours that are but skin-deep, and seems to come from above; for
Satan can seem an angel of light. And, (2.) Because it is a subtle creature;
this is here taken notice of. Many instances are given of the subtlety of the
serpent, both to do mischief and to secure himself in it when it is done. We
are directed to be wise as serpents. But this serpent, as actuated by the
devil, was no doubt more subtle than any other; for the devil, though he has
lost the sanctity, retains the sagacity of an angel, and is wise to do evil. He
knew of more advantage by making use of the serpent than we are aware of.
Observe, There is not any thing by which the devil serves himself and his own
interest more than by unsanctified subtlety. What Eve thought of this serpent
speaking to her we are not likely to tell, when I believe she herself did not
know what to think of it. At first, perhaps, she supposed it might be a good
angel, and yet, afterwards, she might suspect something amiss. It is remarkable
that the Gentile idolaters did many of them worship the devil in the shape and
form of a serpent, thereby avowing their adherence to that apostate spirit, and
wearing his colours.
II. The person tempted was the woman, now
alone, and at a distance from her husband, but near the forbidden tree. It was
the devil's subtlety, 1. To assault the weaker vessel with his temptations.
Though perfect in her kind, yet we may suppose her inferior to Adam in
knowledge, and strength, and presence of mind. Some think Eve received the
command, not immediately from God, but at second hand by her husband, and
therefore might the more easily be persuaded to discredit it. 2. It was his
policy to enter into discourse with her when she was alone. Had she kept close
to the side out of which she was lately taken, she would not have been so much
exposed. There are many temptations, to which solitude gives great advantage;
but the communion of saints contributes much to their strength and safety. 3.
He took advantage by finding her near the forbidden tree, and probably gazing
upon the fruit of it, only to satisfy her curiosity. Those that would not eat
the forbidden fruit must not come near the forbidden tree. Avoid it, pass not
by it, Prov. iv. 15. 4. Satan tempted Eve, that by her he might tempt Adam; so
he tempted Job by his wife, and Christ by Peter. It is his policy to send
temptations by unsuspected hands, and theirs that have most interest in us and
influence upon us.
III. The temptation itself, and the
artificial management of it. We are often, in scripture, told of our danger by
the temptations of Satan, his devices (2 Cor. ii. 11), his depths (Rev. ii.
24), his wiles, Eph. vi. 11. The greatest instances we have of them are in his
tempting of the two Adams, here, and Matt. iv. In this he prevailed, but in
that he was baffled. What he spoke to them, of whom he had no hold by any
corruption in them, he speaks in us by our own deceitful hearts and their carnal
reasonings; this makes his assaults on us less discernible, but not less
dangerous. That which the devil aimed at was to persuade Eve to cut forbidden
fruit; and, to do this, he took the same method that he does still. He
questioned whether it was a sin or no, v. 1. He denied that there was any
danger in it, v. 4. He suggested much advantage by it, v. 5. And these are his
common topics.
1. He questioned whether it was a sin or
no to eat of this tree, and whether really the fruit of it was forbidden.
Observe,
(1.) He said to the woman, Yea, hath God
said, You shall not eat? The first word intimated something said before,
introducing this, and with which it is connected, perhaps some discourse Eve
had with herself, which Satan took hold of, and grafted this question upon. In
the chain of thoughts one thing strangely brings in another, and perhaps
something bad at last. Observe here, [1.] He does not discover his design at
first, but puts a question which seemed innocent: "I hear a piece of news,
pray is it true? has God forbidden you to eat of this tree?" Thus he would
begin a discourse, and draw her into a parley. Those that would be safe have
need to be suspicious, and shy of talking with the tempter. [2.] He quotes the
command fallaciously, as if it were a prohibition, not only of that tree, but
of all. God had said, Of every tree you may eat, except one. He, by aggravating
the exception, endeavours to invalidate the concession: Hath God said, You
shall not eat of every tree? The divine law cannot be reproached unless it be
first misrepresented. [3.] He seems to speak it tauntingly, upbraiding the
woman with her shyness of meddling with that tree; as if he had said, "You
are so nice and cautious, and so very precise, because God has said, You shall
not eat." The devil, as he is a liar, so he is a scoffer, from the
beginning: and the scoffers of the last days are his children. [4.] That which
he aimed at in the first onset was to take off her sense of the obligation of
the command. "Surely you are mistaken, it cannot be that God should tie
you out from this tree; he would not do so unreasonable a thing." See
here, That it is the subtlety of Satan to blemish the reputation of the divine
law as uncertain or unreasonable, and so to draw people to sin; and that it is
therefore our wisdom to keep up a firm belief of, and a high respect for, the
command of God. Has God said, "You 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, whatever the tempter suggests to the
contrary."
(2.) In answer to this question the woman
gives him a plain and full account of the law they were under, v. 2, 3. Here
observe, [1.] It was her weakness to enter into discourse with the serpent. She
might have perceived by his question that he had no good design, and should
therefore have started back with a Get thee behind me, Satan, thou art an
offence to me. But her curiosity, and perhaps her surprise, to hear a serpent
speak, led her into further talk with him. Note, It is a dangerous thing to
treat with a temptation, which ought at first to be rejected with disdain and
abhorrence. The garrison that sounds a parley is not far from being
surrendered. Those that would be kept from harm must keep out of harm's way.
See Prov. xiv. 7; xix. 27. [2.] It was her wisdom to take notice of the liberty
God had granted them, in answer to his sly insinuation, as if God has put them
into paradise only to tantalize them with the sight of fair but forbidden
fruits. "Yea," says she, "we may eat of the fruit of the trees,
thanks to our Maker, we have plenty and variety enough allowed us." Note,
To prevent our being uneasy at the restraints of religion, it is good often to
take a view of the liberties and comforts of it. [3.] It was an instance of her
resolution that she adhered to the command, and faithfully repeated it, as of
unquestionable certainty: "God hath said, I am confident he hath said it,
You shall not eat of the fruit of this tree;" and that which she adds,
Neither shall you touch it, seems to have been with a good intention, not (as
some think) tacitly to reflect upon the command as too strict (Touch not, taste
not and handle not), but to make a fence about it: "We must not eat,
therefore we will not touch. It is forbidden in the highest degree, and the
authority of the prohibition is sacred to us." [4.] She seems a little to
waver about the threatening, and is not so particular and faithful in the
repetition of that as of the precept. God has said, In the day thou eatest
thereof thou shalt surely die; all she makes of that is, Lest you die. Note,
Wavering faith and wavering resolutions give great advantage to the tempter.
2. He denies that there was any danger in
it, insisting that, though it might be the transgressing of a precept, yet it
would not be the incurring of a penalty: You shall not surely die, v. 4.
"You shall not dying die," so the word is, in direct contradiction to
what God had said. Either, (1.) "It is not certain that you shall
die," so some. "It is not so sure as you are made to believe it
is." Thus Satan endeavours to shake that which he cannot overthrow, and
invalidates the force of divine threatenings by questioning the certainty of
them; and, when once it is supposed possible that there may be falsehood or
fallacy in any word of God, a door is then opened to downright infidelity.
Satan teaches men first to doubt and then to deny; he makes them sceptics
first, and so by degrees makes them atheists. Or, (2.) "It is certain you
shall not die," so others. He avers his contradiction with the same phrase
of assurance that God had used in ratifying the threatening. He began to call
the precept in question (v. 1), but, finding that the woman adhered to that, he
quitted that battery, and made his second onset upon the threatening, where he
perceived her to waver; for he is quick to spy all advantages, and to attack
the wall where it is weakest: You shall not surely die. This was a lie, a
downright lie; for, [1.] It was contrary to the word of God, which we are sure
is true. See 1 John ii. 21, 27. It was such a lie as gave the lie to God
himself. [2.] It was contrary to his own knowledge. When he told them there was
no danger in disobedience and rebellion he said that which he knew, by woeful
experience, to be false. He had broken the law of his creation, and had found,
to his cost, that he could not prosper in it; and yet he tells our first
parents they shall not die. He concealed his own misery, that he might draw
them into the like: thus he still deceives sinners into their own ruin. He
tells them that, though they sin, they shall not die; and gains credit rather
than God, who tells them, The wages of sin is death. Note, Hope of impunity is
a great support to all iniquity, and impenitency in it. I shall have peace,
though I walk in the imagination of my heart, Deut. xxix. 19.
3. He promises them advantage by it, v.
5. Here he follows his blow, and it was a blow at the root, a fatal blow to the
tree we are branches of. He not only would undertake that they should be no
losers by it, thus binding himself to save them from harm; but (if they would
be such fools as to venture upon the security of one that had himself become a
bankrupt) he undertakes they shall be gainers by it, unspeakable gainers. He
could not have persuaded them to run the hazard of ruining themselves if he had
not suggested to them a great probability of bettering themselves.
(1.) He insinuates to them the great
improvements they would make by eating of this fruit. And he suits the
temptation to the pure state they were now in, proposing to them, not any
carnal pleasures or gratifications, but intellectual delights and satisfactions.
These were the baits with which he covered his hook. [1.] "Your eyes shall
be opened; 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 further into things than now you do." He speaks as if now they
were but dim-sighted, and short-sighted, in comparison of what they would be
then. [2.] "You shall be as gods, as Elohim, mighty gods; not only
omniscient, but omnipotent too;" or, "You shall be as God himself,
equal to him, rivals with him; you shall be sovereigns and no longer subjects,
self-sufficient and no longer dependent." A most absurd suggestion! As if
it were possible for creatures of yesterday to be like their Creator that was from
eternity. [3.] "You shall know good and evil, that is, every thing that is
desirable to be known." To support this part of the temptation, he abuses
the name given to this tree: it was 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. In
these senses, the name of the tree was a warning to them not to eat of it; 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."
Now in all these insinuations he aims to beget in them, First, Discontent with
their present state, as if it were not so good as it might be, and should be.
Note, No condition will of itself bring contentment, unless the mind be brought
to it. Adam was not easy, no, not in paradise, nor the angels in their first
state, Jude 6. Secondly, Ambition of preferment, as if they were fit to be
gods. Satan had ruined himself by desiring to be like the Most High (Isa. xiv.
14), and therefore seeks to infect our first parents with the same desire, that
he might ruin them too.
(2.) He insinuates to them that God had
no good design upon them, in forbidding them this fruit: "For God doth
know how much it will advance you; and therefore, in envy and ill-will to you,
he hath forbidden it:" as if he durst not let them eat of that tree
because then they would know their own strength, and would not continue in an
inferior state, but be able to cope with him; or as if he grudged them the
honour and happiness to which their eating of that tree would prefer them. Now,
[1.] This was a great affront to God, and the highest indignity that could be
done him, a reproach to his power, as if he feared his creatures, and much more
a reproach to his goodness, as if he hated the work of his own hands and would
not have those whom he has made to be made happy. Shall the best of men think
it strange to be misrepresented and evil spoken of, when God himself is so?
Satan, as he is the accuser of the brethren before God, so he accuses God before
the brethren; thus he sows discord, and is the father of those that do so. [2.]
It was a most dangerous snare to our first parents, as it tended to alienate
their affections from God, and so to withdraw them from their allegiance to
him. Thus still the devil draws people into his interest by suggesting to them
hard thoughts of God, and false hopes of benefit and advantage by sin. Let us
therefore, in opposition to him, always think well of God as the best good, and
think ill of sin as the worst of evils: thus let us resist the devil, and he
will flee from us.
The
Fall of Man
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, and the strong-hold is taken by his wiles. God tried the obedience of
our first parents by forbidding them the tree of knowledge, and Satan does, 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.
I. We have here the inducements that
moved them to transgress. The woman, being deceived by the tempter's artful
management, was ringleader in the transgression, 1 Tim. ii. 14. She was first
in the fault; and it was the result of her consideration, or rather her
inconsideration. 1. She saw no harm in this tree, more than in any of the rest.
It was said of all the rest of the fruit-trees with which the garden of Eden
was planted that they were pleasant to the sight, and good for food, ch. ii. 9.
Now, in her eye, this was like all the rest. It seemed as good for food as any
of them, and she saw nothing in the colour of its fruit that threatened death
or danger; it was as pleasant to the sight as any of them, and therefore,
"What hurt could it do them? Why should this be forbidden them rather than
any of the rest?" Note, When there is thought to be no more harm in
forbidden fruit than in other fruit sin lies at the door, and Satan soon carries
the day. Nay, perhaps it seemed to her to be better for food, more grateful to
the taste, and more nourishing to the body, than any of the rest, and to her
eye it was more pleasant than any. We are often betrayed into snares by an
inordinate desire to have our senses gratified. Or, if it had nothing in it
more inviting than the rest, yet it was the more coveted because it was
prohibited. Whether it was so in her or not, we find that in us (that is, in
our flesh, in our corrupt nature) there dwells a strange spirit of
contradiction. Nitimur in vetitum--We desire what is prohibited. 2. She
imagined more virtue in this tree than in 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; and some think that she saw
the serpent eat of that tree, and that he told her he thereby had gained the
faculties of speech and reason, whence she inferred its power to make one wise,
and was persuaded to think, "If it made a brute creature rational, why
might it not make a rational creature divine?" See here how the desire of
unnecessary knowledge, under the mistaken notion of wisdom, proves hurtful and
destructive to many. Our first parents, who knew so much, did not know
this--that they knew enough. Christ is a tree to be desired to make one wise,
Col. ii. 3; 1 Cor. i. 30. Let us, by faith, feed upon him, that we may be wise
to salvation. In the heavenly paradise, the tree of knowledge will not be a
forbidden tree; for there we shall know as we are known. Let us therefore long
to be there, and, in the mean time, not exercise ourselves in things too high
or too deep for us, nor covet to be wise above what is written.
II. The steps of the transgression, not
steps upward, but downward towards the pit--steps that take hold on hell. 1.
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.
Observe, A great deal of sin comes in at the eyes. At these windows Satan
throws in those fiery darts which pierce and poison the heart. The eye affects
the heart with guilt as well as grief. Let us therefore, with holy Job, make a
covenant with our eyes, not to look on that which we are in danger of lusting
after, Prov. xxiii. 31; Matt. v. 28. Let the fear of God be always to us for a
covering of the eyes, ch. xx. 16. 2. She took. It was her own act and deed. The
devil did not take it, and put it into her mouth, whether she would or no; but
she herself took it. Satan may tempt, but he cannot force; may persuade us to
cast ourselves down, but he cannot cast us down, Matt. iv. 6. Eve's taking was
stealing, like Achan's taking the accursed thing, taking that to which she had
no right. Surely she took it with a trembling hand. 3. She did eat. Perhaps she
did not intend, when she looked, to take, nor, when she took, to eat; but this
was the result. Note, The way of sin is downhill; a man cannot stop himself
when he will. The beginning of it is as the breaking forth of water, to which
it is hard to say, "Hitherto thou shalt come and no further."
Therefore it is our wisdom to suppress the first emotions of sin, and to leave
it off before it be meddled with. Obsta principiis--Nip mischief in the bud. 4.
She gave also to her husband with her. It is probable that he was not with her
when she was tempted (surely, if he had, he would have interposed to prevent
the sin), but came to her when she had eaten, and was prevailed upon by her to
eat likewise; for it is easier to learn that which is bad than to teach that
which is good. She gave it to him, persuading him with the same arguments that
the serpent had used with her, adding this to all the rest, that she herself
had eaten of it, and found it so far from being deadly that it was extremely
pleasant and grateful. Stolen waters are sweet. She gave it to him, under
colour of kindness--she would not eat these delicious morsels alone; but really
it was the greatest unkindness she could do him. Or perhaps she gave it to him
that, if it should prove hurtful, he might share with her in the misery, which
indeed looks strangely unkind, and yet may, without difficulty, be supposed to
enter into the heart of one that had eaten forbidden fruit. Note, Those that
have themselves done ill are commonly willing to draw in others to do the same.
As was the devil, so was Eve, no sooner a sinner than a tempter. 5. He did eat,
overcome by his wife's importunity. It is needless to ask, "What would
have been the consequence if Eve only had transgressed?" The wisdom of
God, we are sure, would have decided the difficulty, according to equity; but,
alas! the case was not so; Adam also did eat. "And what great harm if he
did?" say the corrupt and carnal reasonings of a vain mind. What harm!
Why, this act involved disbelief of God's word, together with confidence in the
devil's, discontent with his present state, pride in his own merits, and
ambition of the honour which comes not from God, envy at God's perfections, and
indulgence of the appetites of the body. In neglecting the tree of life of
which he was allowed to eat, and eating of the tree of knowledge which was
forbidden, he plainly showed a contempt of the favours God had bestowed on him,
and a preference given to those God did not see fit for him. 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 (Rom. v. 19), disobedience to a
plain, easy, and express command, which probably he knew to be a command of
trial. He sinned against great knowledge, against many mercies, against light
and love, the clearest light and the dearest love that ever sinner sinned
against. He had no corrupt nature within him to betray him; but had a freedom
of will, not enslaved, and was in his full strength, not weakened or impaired.
He turned aside quickly. Some think he fell the very day on which he was made;
but I see not how to reconcile this with God's pronouncing all very good in the
close of the day. Others suppose he fell on the sabbath day: the better day the
worse deed. However, it is certain that he kept his integrity but a very little
while: being in honour, he continued not. But the greatest aggravation of his
sin was that he involved all his posterity in sin and ruin by it. God having
told him that his race should replenish the earth, surely 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. The human nature being lodged entirely in our
first parents, henceforward it could not but be transmitted from them under an
attainder of guilt, a stain of dishonour, and an hereditary disease of sin and
corruption. And can we say, then, that Adam's sin had but little harm in it?
III. The ultimate consequences of the
transgression. Shame and fear seized the criminals, ipso facto--in the fact
itself; these came into the world along with sin, and still attend it.
1. Shame seized them unseen, v. 7, where
observe,
(1.) The strong convictions they fell
under, in their own bosoms: The eyes of them both were opened. It is not meant
of the eyes of the body; these were open before, as appears by this, that the
sin came in at them. Jonathan's eyes were enlightened by eating forbidden fruit
(1 Sam. xiv. 27), that is, he was refreshed and revived by it; but theirs were
not so. Nor is it meant of any advances made hereby in true knowledge; but the
eyes of their consciences were opened, their hearts smote them for what they
had done. Now, when it was too late, they saw the folly of eating forbidden
fruit. They saw the happiness they had fallen from, and the misery they had
fallen into. They saw a loving God provoked, his grace and favour forfeited,
his likeness and image lost, dominion over the creatures gone. They saw their
natures corrupted and depraved, and felt a disorder in their own spirits of
which they had never before been conscious. They saw a law in their members
warring against the law of their minds, and captivating them both to sin and
wrath. They saw, as Balaam, when his eyes were opened (Num. xxii. 31), the
angel of the Lord standing in the way, and his sword drawn in his hand; and
perhaps they saw the serpent that had abused them insulting over them. The text
tells us that they saw that they were naked, that is, [1.] 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.
They were disarmed; their defence had departed from them. [2.] That they were
shamed, for ever shamed, before God and angels. They saw themselves disrobed of
all their ornaments and ensigns of honour, degraded from their dignity and
disgraced in the highest degree, laid open to the contempt and reproach of
heaven, and earth, and their own consciences. Now see here, First, What a
dishonour and disquietment sin is; it makes mischief wherever it is admitted,
sets men against themselves disturbs their peace, and destroys all their
comforts. Sooner or later, it will have 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. Sin is a reproach to any people.
Secondly, What deceiver Satan is. He told our first parents, when he tempted
them, that their eyes should be opened; and so they were, but not as they understood
it; they were opened to their shame and grief, not to their honour nor
advantage. Therefore, when he speaks fair, believe him not. The most malicious
mischievous liars often excuse themselves with this, that they only equivocate;
but God will not so excuse them.
(2.) The sorry shift they made to
palliate these convictions, and to arm themselves against them: They sewed, or
platted, fig-leaves together; and to cover, at least, part of their shame from
one another, they made themselves aprons. See here what is commonly the folly
of those that have sinned. [1.] That they are more solicitous to save their
credit before men than to obtain their pardon from God; they are backward to
confess their sin, and very desirous to conceal it, as much as may be. I have
sinned, yet honour me. [2.] That the excuses men make, to cover and extenuate
their sins, are vain and frivolous. Like the aprons of fig-leaves, they make
the matter never the better, but the worse; the shame, thus hidden, becomes the
more shameful. Yet thus we are all apt to cover our transgressions as Adam, Job
xxxi. 33.
2. Fear seized them immediately upon
their eating the forbidden fruit, v. 8. Observe here, (1.) What was the cause
and occasion of their fear: They heard the voice of the Lord God walking in the
garden in the cool of the day. It was the approach of the Judge that put them
into a fright; and yet he came in such a manner as made it formidable only to
guilty consciences. It is supposed that he came in a human shape, and that he
who judged the world now was the same that shall judge the world at the last
day, even that man whom God has ordained. He appeared to them now (it should
seem) in no other similitude than that in which 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 into the garden, not descending immediately from heaven
in their view, as afterwards on mount Sinai (making either thick darkness his
pavilion or the flaming fire his chariot), but he came into the garden, as one
that was still willing to be familiar with them. He came walking, not running,
not riding upon the wings of the wind, but walking deliberately, as one slow to
anger, teaching us, when we are ever so much provoked, not to be hot nor hasty,
but to speak and act considerately and not rashly. He came in the cool of the
day, not in the night, when all fears are doubly fearful, nor in the heat of
day, for he came not in the heat of his anger. Fury is not in him, Isa. xxvii. 4.
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. Some think they heard him
discoursing with himself concerning the sin of Adam, and the judgment now to be
passed upon him, perhaps as he did concerning Israel, Hos. xi. 8, 9. How shall
I give thee up? Or, rather, they heard him calling for them, and coming towards
them. (2.) What was the effect and evidence of their fear: They hid themselves
from the presence of the Lord God--a sad change! Before they had sinned, if
they had heard the voice of the Lord God coming towards them, they would have
run to meet him, and with a humble joy welcomed his gracious visits. But, now
that it was otherwise, God had become a terror to them, and then no marvel that
they had become a terror to themselves, and were full of confusion. Their own
consciences accused them, and set their sin before them in its proper colours.
Their fig-leaves failed them, and would do them no service. God had come forth
against them as an enemy, and the whole creation was at war with them; and as
yet they knew not of any mediator between them and an angry God, so that
nothing remained but a certain fearful looking for of judgment. In this fright
they hid themselves among the bushes; having offended, they fled for the same.
Knowing themselves guilty, they durst not stand a trial, but absconded, and
fled from justice. See here, [1.] The falsehood of the tempter, and the frauds
and fallacies of his temptations. He promised them they should be safe, but now
they cannot so much as think themselves so; he said they should not die, and
yet now they are forced to fly for their lives; he promised them they should be
advanced, but they see themselves a based--never did they seem so little as
now; he promised them they should be knowing, but they see themselves at a
loss, and know not so much as where to hide themselves; he promised them they
should be as gods, great, and bold, and daring, but they are as criminals
discovered, trembling, pale, and anxious to escape: they would not be subjects,
and so they are prisoners. [2.] The folly of sinners, to think it either
possible or desirable to hide themselves from God: can they conceal themselves
from the Father of lights? Ps. cxxxix. 7, &c.; Jer. xxiii. 24. Will they
withdraw themselves from the fountain of life, who alone can give help and
happiness? Jon. ii. 8. [3.] The fear that attends sin. All that amazing fear of
God's appearances, the accusations of conscience, the approaches of trouble,
the assaults of inferior creatures, and the arrests of death, which is common
among men, is the effect of sin. Adam and Eve, who were partners in the sin,
were sharers in the shame and fear that attended it; and though hand joined in
hand (hands so lately joined in marriage), yet could they not animate nor
fortify one another: miserable comforters they had become to each other!
9 And the LORD God called unto Adam, and said unto him, Where art
thou? 10 And he said, I heard thy voice
in the garden, and I was afraid, because I was naked; and I hid myself.
We have here the arraignment of these
deserters before the righteous Judge of heaven and earth, who, though he is not
tied to observe formalities, yet proceeds against them with all possible
fairness, that he may be justified when he speaks. Observe here,
I. The startling question with which God
pursued Adam and arrested him: Where art thou? Not as if God did not know where
he was; but thus he would enter the process against him. "Come, where is
this foolish man?" Some make it a bemoaning question: "Poor Adam,
what has become of thee?" "Alas for thee!" (so some read it)
"How art thou fallen, Lucifer, son of the morning! Thou that wast my
friend and favourite, whom I had done so much for, and would have done so much
more for; hast thou now forsaken me, and ruined thyself? Has it come to
this?" It is rather an upbraiding question, in order to his conviction and
humiliation: Where art thou? Not, In what place? but, In what condition?
"Is this all thou hast gotten by eating forbidden fruit? Thou that
wouldest vie with me, dost thou now fly from me?" Note, 1. Those who by
sin have gone 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 enquiry after Adam may be looked upon
as a gracious pursuit, in kindness to him, and in order to his recovery. If God
had not called to him, to reclaim him, his condition would have been as
desperate as that of fallen angels; this lost sheep would have wandered
endlessly, if the good Shepherd had not sought after him, to bring him back,
and, in order to that, reminded him where he was, where he should not be, and
where he could not be either happy or easy. Note, 2. If sinners will but
consider where they are, they will not rest till they return to God.
II. The trembling answer which Adam gave
to this question: I heard thy voice in the garden, and I was afraid, v. 10. He
does not own his guilt, and yet in effect confesses it by owning his shame and
fear; but it is the common fault and folly of those that have done an ill
thing, when they are questioned about it, to acknowledge no more than what is
so manifest that they cannot deny it. 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. We have reason to be afraid
of approaching to God if we be not clothed and fenced with the righteousness of
Christ, for nothing but this will be armour of proof and cover the shame of our
nakedness. Let us therefore put on the Lord Jesus Christ, and then draw near
with humble boldness.
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? 12 And the man said, The woman whom thou
gavest to be with me, she gave me of the tree, and I did eat. 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.
We have here the offenders found guilty
by their own confession, and yet endeavouring to excuse and extenuate their
fault. They could not confess and justify what they had done, but they confess
and palliate it. Observe,
I. How their confession was extorted from
them. God put it to the man: Who told thee that thou wast naked? v. 11.
"How camest thou to be sensible of thy nakedness as thy shame?" Hast
thou eaten of the forbidden tree? Note, Though 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. In this examination,
God reminds him of the command he had given him: "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, therefore God here sets it before Adam; and in it we should see
our faces. The question put to the woman was, What is this that thou hast done?
v. 13. "Wilt thou also own thy fault, and make confession of it? And wilt
thou see what an evil thing it was?" Note, It concerns those who have
eaten forbidden fruit themselves, and especially those who have enticed others
to eat it likewise, seriously to consider what they have done. In eating
forbidden fruit, we have offended a great and gracious God, broken a just and
righteous law, violated a sacred and most solemn covenant, and wronged our own
precious souls by forfeiting God's favour and exposing ourselves to his wrath
and curse: in enticing others to eat of it, we do the devil's work, make
ourselves guilty of other men's sins, and accessory to their ruin. What is this
that we have done?
II. How their crime was extenuated by
them in their confession. It was to no purpose to plead not guilty. The show of
their countenances testified against them; therefore they become their own
accusers: "I did eat," says the man, "And so did I," says
the woman; for when God judges he will overcome. But these do not look like penitent
confessions; for instead of aggravating the sin, and taking shame to
themselves, they excuse the sin, and lay the shame and blame on others. 1. Adam
lays all the blame upon his wife. "She gave me of the tree, and pressed me
to eat of it, which I did, only to oblige her"--a frivolous excuse. He
ought to have taught her, not to have been taught by her; and it was no hard
matter to determine which of the two he must be ruled by, his God or his wife.
Learn, hence, never to be brought to sin by that which will not bring us off in
the judgment; let not that bear us up in the commission which will not bear us
out in the trial; let us therefore never be overcome by importunity to act
against our consciences, nor ever displease God, to please the best friend we
have in the world. But this is not the worst of it. He not only lays the blame
upon his wife, but expresses it so as tacitly to reflect on God himself:
"It is the woman whom thou gavest me, and gavest to be with me as my
companion, my guide, and my acquaintance; she gave me of the tree, else I had
not eaten of it." Thus he insinuates that God was accessory to his sin: he
gave him the woman, and she gave him the fruit; so that he seemed to have it at
but one remove from God's own hand. Note, There is a strange proneness in those
that are tempted to say that they are tempted of God, as if our abusing God's
gifts would excuse our violation of God's laws. God gives us riches, honours,
and relations, that we may serve him cheerfully in the enjoyment of them; but,
if we take occasion from them to sin against him, instead of blaming Providence
for putting us into such a condition, we must blame ourselves for perverting
the gracious designs of Providence therein. 2. Eve lays all the blame upon the
serpent: The serpent beguiled me. Sin is a brat that nobody is willing to own,
a sign that it is a scandalous thing. Those that are willing enough to take the
pleasure and profit of sin are backward enough to take the blame and shame of
it. "The serpent, that subtle creature of thy making, which thou didst
permit to come into paradise to us, he beguiled me," or made me to err;
for our sins are our errors. Learn hence, (1.) That Satan's temptations are all
beguilings, his arguments are all fallacies, his allurements are all cheats;
when he speaks fair, believe him not. Sin deceives us, and, by deceiving,
cheats us. It is by the deceitfulness of sin that the heart is hardened. See
Rom. vii. 11; Heb. iii. 13. (2.) That though Satan's subtlety drew us into sin,
yet it will not justify us in sin: though he is the tempter, we are the
sinners; and indeed it is our own lust that draws us aside and entices us, Jam.
i. 14. Let it not therefore lessen our sorrow and humiliation for sin that we
are beguiled into it; but rather let it increase our self-indignation that we
should suffer ourselves to be beguiled by a known cheat and a sworn enemy.
Well, this is all the prisoners at the bar have to say why sentence should not
be passed and execution awarded, according to law; and this all is next to
nothing, in some respects worse than nothing.
Sentence
Passed on the Serpent; Intimation of Messiah
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: 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.
The prisoners being found guilty by their
own confession, besides the personal and 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 nor
why he did it; but immediately sentenced him, 1. Because he was already
convicted of rebellion against God, and his malice and wickedness were
notorious, not found by secret search, but openly avowed and declared as
Sodom's. 2. Because he was to be for ever excluded from all hope of pardon; and
why should any thing be said to convince and humble him who was to find no
place for repentance? His wound was not searched, because it was not to be
cured. Some think the condition of the fallen angels was not declared desperate
and helpless, until now that they had seduced man into the rebellion.
I. The sentence passed upon the tempter
may be considered as lighting upon the serpent, the brute-creature which Satan
made use of which was, as the rest, made for the service of man, but was now
abused to his hurt. Therefore, to testify a displeasure against sin, and a
jealousy for the injured honour of Adam and Eve, God fastens a curse and reproach
upon the serpent, and makes it to groan, being burdened. See Rom. viii. 20. The
devil's instruments must share in the devil's punishments. Thus the bodies of
the wicked, though only instruments of unrighteousness, shall partake of
everlasting torments with the soul, the principal agent. Even the ox that
killed a man must be stoned, Exod. xxi. 28, 29. See here how God hates sin, and
especially how much displeased he is with those who entice others into sin. It
is a perpetual brand upon Jeroboam's name that he made Israel to sin. Now, 1.
The serpent is here laid under the curse of God: Thou art cursed above all
cattle. Even the creeping things, when God made them, were blessed of him (ch.
i. 22), but sin turned the blessing into a curse. The serpent was more subtle
than any beast of the field (v. 1), and here, cursed above every beast of the
field. Unsanctified subtlety often proves a great curse to a man; and the more
crafty men are to do evil the more mischief they do, and, consequently, they
shall receive the greater damnation. Subtle tempters are the most accursed
creatures under the sun. 2. He is here laid under man's reproach and enmity.
(1.) He is to be for ever looked upon as a vile and despicable creature, and a
proper object of scorn and contempt: "Upon thy belly thou shalt go, no
longer upon feet, or half erect, but thou shalt crawl along, thy belly cleaving
to the earth," an expression of a very abject miserable condition, Ps.
xliv. 25; "and thou shalt not avoid eating dust with thy meat." His
crime was that he tempted Eve to eat that which she should not; his punishment
was that he was necessitated to eat that which he would not: Dust thou shalt
eat. This denotes not only a base and despicable condition, but a mean and
pitiful spirit; it is said of those whose courage has departed from them that
they lick the dust like a serpent, Mic. vii. 17. How sad it is that the
serpent's curse should be the covetous worldling's choice, whose character it
is that he pants after the dust of the earth! Amos ii. 7. These choose their
own delusions, and so shall their doom be. (2.) He is to be for ever looked
upon as a venomous noxious creature, and a proper object of hatred and
detestation: I will put enmity between thee and the woman. 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. The
serpent is hurtful to man, and often bruises his heel, because it can reach no
higher; nay, notice is taken of his biting the horses' heels, ch. xlix. 17. But
man is victorious over the serpent, and bruises his head, that is, gives him a
mortal wound, aiming to destroy the whole generation of vipers. It is the
effect of this curse upon the serpent that, though that creature is subtle and
very dangerous, yet it prevails not (as it would if God gave it commission) to
the destruction of mankind. This sentence pronounced upon the serpent is much
fortified by that promise of God to his people, Thou shalt tread upon the lion
and the adder (Ps. xci. 13), and that of Christ to his disciples, They shall
take up serpents (Mark xvi. 18), witness Paul, who was unhurt by the viper that
fastened upon his hand. Observe here, The serpent and the woman had just now
been very familiar and friendly in discourse about the forbidden fruit, and a
wonderful agreement there was between them; but here they are irreconcilably
set at variance. Note, Sinful friendships justly end in mortal feuds: those
that unite in wickedness will not unite long.
II.
This sentence may be considered as levelled at the devil, who only made use of
the serpent as his vehicle in this appearance, but was himself the principal
agent. He that spoke through the serpent's mouth is here struck at through the
serpent's side, and is principally intended in the sentence, which, like the
pillar of cloud and fire, has a dark side towards the devil and a bright side
towards our first parents and their seed. Great things are contained in these
words.
1. A perpetual reproach is here fastened
upon that great enemy both to God and man. Under the cover of the serpent, he
is here sentenced to be, (1.) Degraded and accursed of God. It is supposed that
the sin which turned angels into devils was pride, 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. How art thou fallen, O
Lucifer! He that would be above God, and would head a rebellion against him, is
justly exposed here to contempt and lies to be trodden on; a man's pride will
bring him low, and God will humble those that will not humble themselves. (2.)
Detested and abhorred of all mankind. Even those that are really seduced into
his interest yet profess a hatred and abhorrence of him; and all that are born
of God make it their constant care to keep themselves, that this wicked one
touch them not, 1 John v. 18. He is here condemned to a state of war and
irreconcilable enmity. (3.) Destroyed and ruined at last by the great Redeemer,
signified by the breaking of his head. His subtle politics shall all be
baffled, his usurped power shall be entirely crushed, and he shall be for ever
a captive to the injured honour of divine sovereignty. By being told of this
now he was tormented before the time.
2. A perpetual quarrel is here commenced
between the kingdom of God and the kingdom of the devil among men; war is
proclaimed between the seed of the woman and the seed of the serpent. That war
in heaven between Michael and the dragon began now, Rev. xii. 7. It is the
fruit of this enmity, (1.) That there is a continual conflict between grace and
corruption in the hearts of God's people. Satan, by their corruptions, assaults
them, buffets them, sifts them, and seeks to devour them; they, by the exercise
of their graces, resist him, wrestle with him, quench his fiery darts, force
him to flee from them. Heaven and hell can never be reconciled, nor light and
darkness; no more can Satan and a sanctified soul, for these are contrary the
one to the other. (2.) That there is likewise a continual struggle between the
wicked and the godly in this world. Those that love God account those their
enemies that hate him, Ps. cxxxix. 21, 22. And all the rage and malice of
persecutors against the people of God are 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. Marvel not therefore if the world hate you, 1 John iii. 13.
3. A gracious promise is here made of
Christ, as the deliverer of fallen man from the power of Satan. Though what was
said was addressed to the serpent, yet it was said in the hearing of our first
parents, who, doubtless, took the hints of grace here given them, and saw a
door of hope opened to them, else the following sentence upon themselves would
have overwhelmed them. Here was the dawning of the gospel day. No sooner was
the wound given than the remedy was provided and revealed. Here, in the head of
the book, as the word is (Heb. x. 7), in the beginning of the Bible, it is
written of Christ, that he should do the will of God. By faith in this promise,
we have reason to think, 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, the seed of that woman; therefore his genealogy (Luke
iii.) goes so high as to show him to be the son of Adam, but God does the woman
the honour to call him rather her seed, because she it was whom the devil had
beguiled, and on whom Adam had laid the blame; herein God magnifies his grace,
in that, though the woman was first in the transgression, yet she shall be
saved by child-bearing (as some read it), that is, by the promised seed who
shall descend from her, 1 Tim. ii. 15. He was likewise to be the seed of a
woman only, of a virgin, that he might not be tainted with the corruption of
our nature; he was sent forth, made of a woman (Gal. iv. 4), that this promise
might be fulfilled. It is a great encouragement to sinners that their Saviour
is the seed of the woman, bone of our bone, Heb. ii. 11, 14. Man is therefore
sinful and unclean, because he is born of a woman (Job xxv. 4), and therefore
his days are full of trouble, Job xiv. 1. But the seed of the woman was made
sin and a curse for us, so saving us from both. (2.) His sufferings and death,
pointed at in Satan's bruising his heel, that is, his human nature. Satan
tempted Christ in the wilderness, to draw him into sin; and some think it was
Satan that terrified Christ in his agony, to drive him to despair. It was the
devil that put it into the heart of Judas to betray Christ, of Peter to deny
him, of the chief priests to prosecute him, of the false witnesses to accuse
him, and of Pilate to condemn him, aiming in all this, by destroying the
Saviour, to ruin the salvation; but, on the contrary, it was by death that
Christ destroyed him that had the power of death, Heb. ii. 14. Christ's heel
was bruised when his feet were pierced and nailed to the cross, and Christ's
sufferings are continued in the sufferings of the saints for his name. The
devil tempts them, casts them into prison, 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, it is well that the head is safe in heaven. (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, Col. ii. 15. He shall bruise his head,
that is, he shall destroy all his politics and all his powers, and give a total
overthrow to his kingdom and interest. Christ baffled Satan's temptations,
rescued souls out of his hands, cast him out of the bodies of people,
dispossessed the strong man armed, and divided his spoil: by his death, he gave
a fatal and incurable blow to the devil's kingdom, a wound to the head of this
beast, that can never be healed. As his gospel gets ground, Satan falls (Luke
x. 18) and is bound, Rev. xx. 2. By his grace, he treads Satan under his
people's feet (Rom. xvi. 20) and will shortly cast him into the lake of fire,
Rev. xx. 10. And the devil's perpetual overthrow will be the complete and
everlasting joy and glory of the chosen remnant.
Sentence
Passed on Eve
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 passed upon the
woman for her sin. Two things 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.
I. She is here put into a state of
sorrow, one particular of which only is specified, 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. Note, Sin brought sorrow into the world; it was this
that made the world a vale of tears, brought showers of trouble upon our heads,
and opened springs of sorrows in our hearts, and so deluged the world: had we
known no guilt, we should have known no grief. The pains of child-bearing,
which are great to a proverb, a scripture proverb, are the effect of sin; every
pang and every groan of the travailing woman speak aloud the fatal consequences
of sin: this comes of eating forbidden fruit. Observe,
1.
The sorrows are here said to be multiplied, greatly multiplied. All the sorrows
of this present time are so; many are the calamities which human life is liable
to, of various kinds, and often repeated, the clouds returning after the rain,
and no marvel that our sorrows are multiplied when our sins are: both are
innumerable evils. The sorrows of child-bearing are multiplied; for they
include, not only the travailing throes, but the indispositions before (it is
sorrow from the conception), and the nursing toils and vexations after; and
after all, if the children prove wicked and foolish, they are, more than ever,
the heaviness of her that bore them. Thus are the sorrows multiplied; as one
grief is over, another succeeds in this world. 2. It is God that multiplies our
sorrows: I will do it. God, as a righteous Judge, does 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, does it for our necessary
correction, that we may be humbled for sin, and weaned from the world by all
our sorrows; and the good we get by them, with the comfort we have under them,
will abundantly balance our sorrows, how greatly soever they are multiplied.
II. She is here put into a state of
subjection. The whole sex, which by creation was equal with man, is, for sin,
made inferior, and forbidden to usurp authority, 1 Tim. ii. 11, 12. The wife
particularly is hereby put under the dominion of her husband, and is not sui
juris--at her own disposal, of which see an instance in that law, Num. xxx.
6-8, where the husband is empowered, if he please, to disannul the vows made by
the wife. This sentence amounts only to that command, Wives, be in subjection
to your own husbands; but the entrance of sin has made that duty a punishment,
which otherwise it would not have been. If man had not sinned, he would always
have ruled with wisdom and love; and, if the woman had not sinned, she would
always have obeyed with humility and meekness; and then the dominion would have
been no grievance: but our own sin and folly make our yoke heavy. If Eve had
not eaten forbidden fruit herself, and tempted her husband to eat it, she would
never have complained of her subjection; therefore it ought never to be
complained of, though harsh; but sin must be complained of, that made it so.
Those wives who not only despise and disobey their husbands, but domineer over
them, do not consider that they not only violate a divine law, but thwart a
divine sentence.
III. Observe here how mercy is mixed with
wrath in this sentence. The woman shall have sorrow, but it shall be in
bringing forth children, and the sorrow shall be forgotten for joy that a child
is born, John xvi. 21. She shall be subject, but it shall be to her own husband
that loves her, not to a stranger, or an enemy: the sentence was not a curse,
to bring her to ruin, but a chastisement, to bring her to repentance. It was
well that enmity was not put between the man and the woman, as there was
between the serpent and the woman.
Sentence
Passed on Adam: Consequences of the Fall
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;
18 Thorns also and thistles shall it bring forth to thee; and thou shalt
eat the herb of the field; 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.
We have here the sentence passed upon
Adam, which is prefaced with a recital of his crime: Because thou hast
hearkened to the voice of thy wife, v. 17. He excused the fault, by laying it
on his wife: She gave it me. But God does not admit the excuse. She could but
tempt him, she could not force him; though it was her fault to persuade him to
eat, it was his fault to hearken to her. Thus men's frivolous pleas will, in
the day of God's judgment, not only be overruled, but turned against them, and
made the grounds of their sentence. Out of thine own mouth will I judge thee.
Observe,
I. God put marks of his displeasure on Adam
in three instances:
1. His habitation is, by this sentence,
cursed: Cursed is the ground for thy sake; and the effect of that curse is,
Thorns and thistles shall it bring forth unto thee. It is here intimated that
his habitation should be changed; he should no longer dwell in a distinguished,
blessed, paradise, but should be removed to common ground, and that cursed. The
ground, or earth, is here put for the whole visible creation, which, 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 designed to be when
they were made, and would have been if he had not sinned. God gave the earth to
the children of men, designing it to be a comfortable dwelling to them. But sin
has altered the property of it. It is now cursed for man's sin; that is, it is
a dishonourable habitation, it bespeaks man mean, that his foundation is in the
dust; it is a dry and barren habitation, its spontaneous productions are now
weeds and briers, something nauseous or noxious; what good fruits it produces
must be extorted from it by the ingenuity and industry of man. Fruitfulness was
its blessing, for man's service (ch. i. 11, 29), and now barrenness was its
curse, for man's punishment. It is not what it was in the day it was created.
Sin turned a fruitful land into barrenness; and man, having become as the wild
ass's colt, has the wild ass's lot, the wilderness for his habitation, and the
barren land his dwelling, Job xxxix. 6; Ps. lxviii. 6. Had not this curse been
in part removed, for aught I know, the earth would have been for ever barren,
and never produced any thing but thorns and thistles. The ground is cursed,
that is, doomed to destruction at the end of time, when the earth, and all the
works that are therein, shall be burnt up for the sin of man, the measure of
whose iniquity will then be full, 2 Pet. iii. 7, 10. But observe a mixture of
mercy in this sentence. (1.) Adam himself is not cursed, as the serpent was (v.
14), but only the ground for his sake. God had blessings in him, even the holy
seed: Destroy it not, for that blessing is in it, Isa. lxv. 8. And he had
blessings in store for him; therefore he is not directly and immediately
cursed, but, as it were, at second hand. (2.) He is yet above ground. The earth
does not open and swallow him up; only it is not what it was: as he continues
alive, notwithstanding his degeneracy from his primitive purity and rectitude,
so the earth continues to be his habitation, notwithstanding its degeneracy
from its primitive beauty and fruitfulness. (3.) This curse upon the earth,
which cut off all expectations of a happiness in things below, might direct and
quicken him to look for bliss and satisfaction only in things above.
2. His employments and enjoyments are all
embittered to him.
(1.) His business shall henceforth become
a toil to him, and he shall go on with it in the sweat of his face, v. 19. His
business, before he sinned, was a constant pleasure to him, the garden was then
dressed without any uneasy labour, and kept without any uneasy care; but now
his labour shall be a weariness and shall waste his body; his care shall be a
torment and shall afflict his mind. The curse upon the ground which made it
barren, and produced thorns and thistles, made his employment about it much
more difficult and toilsome. If Adam had not sinned, he had not sweated.
Observe here, [1.] That labour is our duty, which we must faithfully perform;
we are bound to work, not as creatures only, but as criminals; it is part of
our sentence, which idleness daringly defies. [2.] That uneasiness and
weariness with labour are our just punishment, which we must patiently submit
to, and not complain of, since they are less than our iniquity deserves. Let
not us, by inordinate care and labour, make our punishment heavier than God has
made it; but rather study to lighten our burden, and wipe off our sweat, by
eyeing Providence in all and expecting rest shortly.
(2.) His food shall henceforth become (in
comparison with what it had been) unpleasant to him. [1.] The matter of his
food is changed; he must now eat the herb of the field, and must no longer be
feasted with the delicacies of the garden of Eden. Having by sin made himself
like the beasts that perish, he is justly turned to be a fellow-commoner with
them, and to eat grass as oxen, till he know that the heavens do rule. [2.]
There is a change in the manner of his eating it: In sorrow (v. 17). and in the
sweat of his face (v. 19) he must eat of it. Adam could not but eat in sorrow
all the days of his life, remembering the forbidden fruit he had eaten, and the
guilt and shame he had contracted by it. Observe, First, That human life is
exposed to many miseries and calamities, which very much embitter the poor remains
of its pleasures and delights. Some never eat with pleasure (Job xxi. 25),
through sickness or melancholy; all, even the best, have cause to eat with
sorrow for sin; and all, even the happiest in this world, have some allays to
their joy: troops of diseases, disasters, and deaths, in various shapes,
entered the world with sin, and still ravage it. Secondly, That the
righteousness of God is to be acknowledged in all the sad consequences of sin.
Wherefore then should a living man complain? Yet, in this part of the sentence,
there is also a mixture of mercy. He shall sweat, but his toil shall make his
rest the more welcome when he returns to his earth, as to his bed; he shall
grieve, but he shall not starve; he shall have sorrow, but in that sorrow he shall
eat bread, which shall strengthen his heart under his sorrows. He 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 (yea, even though life be
unpleasant) that concludes the sentence. "Thou shalt return to the ground
out of which thou wast taken; thy body, that part of thee which was taken out
of the ground, shall return to it again; for dust thou art." This points
either to the first original of his body; it was made of the dust, nay it was
made dust, and was still so; so that there needed no more than to recall the
grant of immortality, and to withdraw the power which was put forth to support
it, and then he would, of course, return to dust. Or to the present corruption
and degeneracy of his mind: Dust thou art, that is, "Thy precious soul is
now lost and buried in the dust of the body and the mire of the flesh; it was
made spiritual and heavenly, but it has become carnal and earthly." His
doom is therefore read: "To dust thou shalt return. Thy body shall be
forsaken by thy soul, and become itself a lump of dust; and then it shall be
lodged in the grave, the proper place for it, and mingle itself with the dust
of the earth," our dust, Ps. civ. 29. Earth to earth, dust to dust.
Observe here, (1.) That man is a mean frail creature, little as dust, the small
dust of the balance--light as dust, altogether lighter than vanity--weak as
dust, and of no consistency. Our strength is not the strength of stones; he
that made us considers it, and remembers that we are dust, Ps. ciii. 14. Man is
indeed the chief part of the dust of the world (Prov. viii. 26), but still he
is dust. (2.) That he is a mortal dying creature, and hastening to the grave.
Dust may be raised, for a time, into a little cloud, and may seem considerable
while it is held up by the wind that raised 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; a great man is but a great mass of dust, and must return
to his earth. (3.) That sin brought death into the world. If Adam had not
sinned, he would not have died, Rom. v. 12. God entrusted Adam with a spark of
immortality, which he, by a patient continuance in well-doing, might have blown
up into an everlasting flame; but he foolishly blew it out by wilful sin: and
now death is the wages of sin, and sin is the sting of death.
II. We must not go off from this sentence
upon our first parents, which we are all so nearly concerned in, and feel from,
to this day, till we have considered two things:--
1. How fitly the sad consequences of sin
upon the soul of Adam and his sinful race were represented and figured out by
this sentence, and perhaps were more intended in it than we are aware of.
Though that misery only is mentioned which affected the body, yet that was a
pattern of spiritual miseries, the curse that entered into the soul. (1.) The
pains of a woman in travail represent the terrors and pangs of a guilty
conscience, awakened to a sense of sin; from the conception of lust, these
sorrows are greatly multiplied, and, sooner or later, will come upon the sinner
like pain upon a woman in travail, which cannot be avoided. (2.) The state of
subjection to which the woman was reduced represents that loss of spiritual
liberty and freedom of will which is the effect of sin. The dominion of sin in
the soul is compared to that of a husband (Rom. vii. 1-5), the sinner's desire
is towards it, for he is fond of his slavery, and it rules over him. (3.) The
curse of barrenness which was brought upon the earth, and its produce of briars
and thorns, are a fit representation of the barrenness of a corrupt and sinful
soul in that which is good and its fruitfulness in evil. It is all overgrown
with thorns, and nettles cover the face of it; and therefore it is nigh unto
cursing, Heb. vi. 8. (4.) The toil and sweat bespeak the difficulty which,
through the infirmity of the flesh, man labours under, in the service of God
and the work of religion, so hard has it now become to enter into the kingdom
of heaven. Blessed be God, it is not impossible. (5.) The embittering of his
food to him bespeaks the soul's want of the comfort of God's favour, which is
life, and the bread of life. (6.) The soul, like the body, returns to the dust
of this world; its tendency is that way; it has an earthy taint, John iii. 31.
2. How admirably the satisfaction our
Lord Jesus made by his death and sufferings answered to the sentence here
passed upon our first parents. (1.) Did travailing pains come in with sin? We
read of the travail of Christ's soul (Isa. liii. 11); and the pains of death he
was held by are called odinai (Acts ii. 24), the pains of a woman in travail.
(2.) Did subjection come in with sin? Christ was made under the law, Gal. iv.
4. (3.) Did the curse come in with sin? Christ was made a curse for us, died a
cursed death, Gal. iii. 13. (4.) Did thorns come in with sin? He was crowned
with thorns for us. (5.) Did sweat come in with sin? He for us did sweat as it
were great drops of blood. (6.) Did sorrow come in with sin? He was a man of
sorrows, his soul was, in his agony, exceedingly sorrowful. (7.) Did death come
in with sin? He became obedient unto death. Thus is the plaster as wide as the
wound. Blessed be God for Jesus Christ!
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, Adam, in further token of dominion, named the
woman, and called her Eve, that is, life. Adam bears the name of the dying
body, Eve that 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 before called her Ishah--woman,
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 and his displeasure against them for it,
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 it of himself, it was an instance of his faith in the word of God.
Doubtless it was not done, as some have suspected, in contempt or defiance of
the curse, but rather in a humble confidence and dependence upon the blessing.
(1.) The blessing of a reprieve, admiring the patience of God, that he should
spare such sinners to be the parents of all living, and that he did not
immediately shut up those fountains of the human life and nature, because they
could send forth no other than polluted, poisoned, streams. (2.) The blessing
of a Redeemer, the promised seed, to whom Adam had an eye, in calling his wife
Eve--life; for he should be the life of all the living, and in him all the
families of the earth should be blessed, in hope of which he thus triumphs.
21 Unto Adam also and to his wife did the LORD God make coats of
skins, and clothed them.
We have here a further instance of God's
care concerning our first parents, notwithstanding their sin. Though he
corrects his disobedient children, and put them under the marks of his
displeasure, yet he does not disinherit them, but, like a tender father,
provides the herb of the field for their food and coats of skins for their
clothing. Thus the father provided for the returning prodigal, Luke xv. 22, 23.
If the Lord had been pleased to kill them, he would not have done this for
them. Observe, 1. That clothes came in with sin. We should have had no occasion
for them, either for defence or decency, if sin had not made us naked, to our
shame. Little reason therefore we have to be proud of our clothes, which are
but the badges of our poverty and infamy. 2. That 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. Their clothes were made, not of silk and
satin, but plain skins; not trimmed, nor embroidered, none of the ornaments
which the daughters of Sion afterwards invented, and prided themselves in. Let
the poor, that are meanly clad, learn hence not to complain: having food and a
covering, let them be content; they are as well done to as Adam and Eve were.
And let the rich, that are finely clad, learn hence not to make the putting on
of apparel their adorning, 1 Pet. iii. 3. 3. That God is to be acknowledged
with thankfulness, not only in giving us food, but in giving us clothes also,
ch. xxviii. 20. The wool and the flax are his, as well as the corn and the
wine, Hos. ii. 9. 4. These coats of skin had a significancy. The beasts whose
skins they were must be slain, slain before their eyes, to show them what death
is, and (as it is Eccl. iii. 18) that they may see that they themselves were
beasts, mortal and dying. It is supposed that they were slain, not for food,
but 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, who is therefore said to be the Lamb slain
from the foundation of the world. These sacrifices were divided between God and
man, in token of reconciliation: the flesh was offered to God, a whole
burnt-offering; the skins were given to man for clothing, signifying that,
Jesus Christ having offered himself to God a sacrifice of a sweet-smelling
savour, we are to clothe ourselves with his righteousness as with a garment,
that the shame of our nakedness may not appear. Adam and Eve made for
themselves aprons of fig-leaves, a covering too narrow for them to wrap
themselves in, Isa. xxviii. 20. Such are all the rags of our own righteousness.
But God made them coats of skins; large, and strong, and durable, and fit for
them; such is the righteousness of Christ. Therefore put on the Lord Jesus
Christ.
Adam
and Eve Expelled from Eden
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:
23 Therefore the LORD God sent him forth from the garden of Eden, to
till the ground from whence he was taken.
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.
Sentence being passed upon the offenders,
we have here execution, in part, done upon them immediately. Observe here,
I. How they were justly disgraced and
shamed before God and the holy angels, by the ironical upbraiding of them with
the issue of their enterprise: "Behold, the man has become as one of us,
to know good and evil! A goodly god he makes! Does he not? See what he has got,
what preferments, what advantages, by eating forbidden fruit!" This was
said to awaken and humble them, and to bring them to a sense of their sin and
folly, and to repentance for it, that, seeing themselves thus wretchedly
deceived by following the devil's counsel, they might henceforth pursue the
happiness God should offer in the way he should prescribe. God thus fills their
faces with shame, that they may seek his name, Ps. lxxxiii. 16. He puts them to
this confusion, in order to their conversion. True penitents will thus upbraid
themselves: "What fruit have I now by sin? Rom. vi. 21. Have I gained what
I foolishly promised myself in a sinful way? No, no, it never proved what it
pretended to, but the contrary."
II. How they were justly discarded, and
shut out of paradise, which was a part of the sentence implied in that, Thou
shalt eat the herb of the field. Here we have,
1. The reason God gave why he shut man
out of paradise; not only because he had put forth his hand, and taken of the
tree of knowledge, which was his sin, but lest he should again put forth his
hand, and take also of the tree of life (now forbidden him by the divine
sentence, as before the tree of knowledge was forbidden by the law), and should
dare to eat of that tree, and so profane a divine sacrament and defy a divine
sentence, and yet flatter himself with a conceit that thereby he should live
forever. Observe, (1.) There is a foolish proneness in those that have rendered
themselves unworthy of the substance of Christian privileges to catch at the
signs and shadows of them. Many that like not the terms of the covenant, yet,
for their reputation's sake, are fond of the seals of it. (2.) It is not only
justice, but kindness, to such, to be denied them; for, by usurping that to
which they have no title, they affront God and make their sin the more heinous,
and by building their hopes upon a wrong foundation they render their
conversion the more difficult and their ruin the more deplorable.
2. The method God took, in giving him
this bill of divorce, and expelling and excluding him from this garden of
pleasure. He turned him out, and kept him out.
(1.) He turned him out, from the garden
to the common. This is twice mentioned: He sent him forth v. 23), and then he
drove him out, v. 24. God bade him go out, told him that that was no place for
him, he should no longer occupy and enjoy that garden; but he liked the place
too well to be willing to part with it, and therefore God drove him out, made
him go out, whether he would or no. This signified the exclusion of him, and
all his guilty race, from that communion with God which was the bliss and glory
of paradise. The tokens of God's favour to him and his delight in the sons of
men, which he had in his innocent estate, were now suspended; the
communications of his grace were withheld, and Adam became weak, and like other
men, as Samson when the Spirit of the Lord had departed from him. His
acquaintance with God was lessened and lost, and that correspondence which had
been settled between man and his Maker was interrupted and broken off. He was
driven out, as one unworthy of this honour and incapable of this service. Thus
he and all mankind, by the fall, forfeited and lost communion with God. But
whither did he send him when he turned him out of Eden? He might justly have
chased him out of the world (Job xviii. 18), but he only chased him out of the
garden. He might justly have cast him down to hell, as he did the angels that
sinned when he shut them out from the heavenly paradise, 2 Pet. ii. 4. 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. 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 of its fruits; and his converse with the earth whence
he was taken was improvable to good purposes, to keep him humble, and to remind
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.
(2.) He kept him out, and forbade him all
hopes of a re-entry; for he placed at the east of the garden of Eden a
detachment of cherubim, God's hosts, 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, so that he could neither steal nor force an entry; for
who can make a pass against an angel on his guard or gain a pass made good by
such force? Now this intimated to Adam, [1.] That God was displeased with him.
Though he had mercy in store for him, yet at present he was angry with him, was
turned to be his enemy and fought against him, for here was a sword drawn (Num.
xxii. 23); and he was to him a consuming fire, for it was a flaming sword. [2.]
That the angels were at war with him; no peace with the heavenly hosts, while
he was in rebellion against their Lord and ours. [3.] That the way to the tree
of life was shut up, namely, that way which, at first, he was put into, the way
of spotless innocency. It is not said that the cherubim were set to keep him
and his for ever from the tree of life (thanks be to God, there is a paradise
set before us, and a tree of life in the midst of it, which we rejoice in the
hopes of); but they were set to keep that way of the tree of life which
hitherto they had been in; that is, it was henceforward in vain for him and his
to expect righteousness, life, and happiness, by virtue of the first covenant,
for it was irreparably broken, and could never be pleaded, nor any benefit
taken by it. The command of that covenant being broken, the curse of it is in
full force; it leaves no room for repentance, but we are all undone if we be
judged by that covenant. God revealed this to Adam, not to drive him to
despair, but to oblige and quicken him to look for life and happiness in the
promised seed, by whom the flaming sword is removed. God and his angels are
reconciled to us, and a new and living way into the holiest is consecrated and
laid open for us.