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Youngs
Literal Translation
King
James Version
The 1599
Geneva
Study Bible
American Standard ASV-1901
Historical Book
Flavius Josephus
Philip Schaff
History
of the
Christian Church
8 Vol.
Keil & Delitzsch
OT Commentary
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What We Believe
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Sola Scriptura: The
Scripture Alone is the Standard
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Soli Deo Gloria: For the
Glory of God Alone
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Solo Christo: By Christ's
Work Alone are We Saved
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Sola Gratia: Salvation by
Grace Alone
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Sola Fide: Justification by
Faith Alone
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World Without End Ministry
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"It is enough for good
people to do nothing, for evil people to succeed."
12 Little Things Every Filipino Can Do To Help Our Country
by Alexander L. Lacson
Keil & Delitzsch
Commentary on the Old Testament
(Genesis 3)
Genesis 3 -
The Fall
The man, whom God had appointed lord of the earth and
its inhabitants, was endowed with everything requisite for the development
of his nature and the fulfilment of his destiny. In the fruit of the trees
of the garden he had food for the sustenance of his life; in the care of
the garden itself, a field of labour for the exercise of his physical
strength; in the animal and vegetable kingdom, a capacious region for the
expansion of his intellect; in the tree of knowledge, a positive law for
the training of his moral nature; and in the woman associated with him, a
suitable companion and help. In such circumstances as these he might have
developed both his physical and spiritual nature in accordance with the
will of God. But a tempter approached him from the midst of the animal
world, and he yielded to the temptation to break the command of God. The
serpent is said to have been the tempter. But to any one who reads
the narrative carefully in connection with the previous history of the
creation, and bears in mind that man is there described as exalted far
above all the rest of the animal world, not only by the fact of his having
been created in the image of God and invested with dominion over all the
creatures of the earth, but also because God breathed into him the breath
of life, and no help meet for him was found among the beasts of the field,
and also that this superiority was manifest in the gift of speech, which
enabled him to give names to all the rest - a thing which they, as
speechless, were unable to perform, - it must be at once apparent that it
was not from the serpent, as a sagacious and crafty animal, that the
temptation proceeded, but that the serpent was simply the tool of that
evil spirit, who is met with in the further course of the world's history
under the name of Satan (the opponent), or the Devil ( ὁ
διάβολος, the slanderer or accuser).
(Note: There was a fall, therefore, in the higher
spiritual world before the fall of man; and this is not only plainly
taught in 2Pe_2:4
and Jud_1:6,
but assumed in everything that the Scriptures say of Satan. But this
event in the world of spirits neither compels us to place the fall of
Satan before the six days' work of creation, nor to assume that the days
represent long periods. For as man did not continue long in communion
with God, so the angel-prince may have rebelled against God shortly
after his creation, and not only have involved a host of angels in his
apostasy and fall, but have proceeded immediately to tempt the men, who
were created in the image of God, to abuse their liberty by
transgressing the divine command.)
When the serpent, therefore, is introduced as speaking,
and that just as if it had been entrusted with the thoughts of God
Himself, the speaking must have emanated, not from the serpent, but from a
superior spirit, which had taken possession of the serpent for the sake of
seducing man. This fact, indeed, is not distinctly stated in the canonical
books of the Old Testament; but that is simply for the same educational
reason which led Moses to transcribe the account exactly as it had been
handed down, in the pure objective form of an outward and visible
occurrence, and without any allusion to the causality which underlay the
external phenomenon, viz., not so much to oppose the tendency of
contemporaries to heathen superstition and habits of intercourse with the
kingdom of demons, as to avoid encouraging the disposition to transfer the
blame to the evil spirit which tempted man, and thus reduce sin to a mere
act of weakness. But we find the fact distinctly alluded to in the book of
Wis. 2:24; and not only is it constantly noticed in the rabbinical
writings, where the prince of the evil spirits is called the old serpent,
or the serpent, with evident reference to this account, but it was
introduced at a very early period into Parsism also. It is also attested
by Christ and His apostles ( Joh_8:44;
2Co_11:3
and 2Co_11:14;
Rom_16:20;
Rev_12:9;
Rev_20:2),
and confirmed by the temptation of our Lord. The temptation of Christ is
the counterpart of that of Adam. Christ was tempted by the devil, not only
like Adam, but because Adam had been tempted and overcome, in order that
by overcoming the tempter He might wrest from the devil that dominion over
the whole race which he had secured by his victory over the first human
pair. The tempter approached the Saviour openly; to the first man he came
in disguise. The serpent is not a merely symbolical term applied to Satan;
nor was it only the form which Satan assumed; but it was a real serpent,
perverted by Satan to be the instrument of his temptation (Gen_3:1
and Gen_3:14).
The possibility of such a perversion, or of the evil spirit using an
animal for his own purposes, is not to be explained merely on the ground
of the supremacy of spirit over nature, but also from the connection
established in the creation itself between heaven and earth; and still
more, from the position originally assigned by the Creator to the spirits
of heaven in relation to the creatures of earth. The origin, force, and
limits of this relation it is impossible to determine a priori, or
in any other way than from such hints as are given in the Scriptures; so
that there is no reasonable ground for disputing the possibility of such
an influence. Notwithstanding his self-willed opposition to God, Satan is
still a creature of God, and was created a good spirit; although, in proud
self-exaltation, he abused the freedom essential to the nature of a
superior spirit to purposes of rebellion against his Maker. He cannot
therefore entirely shake off his dependence upon God. And this dependence
may possibly explain the reason, why he did not come “disguised as an
angel of light” to tempt our first parents to disobedience, but was
obliged to seek the instrument of his wickedness among the beasts of the
field. The trial of our first progenitors was ordained by God, because
probation was essential to their spiritual development and
self-determination. But as He did not desire that they should be tempted
to their fall, He would not suffer Satan to tempt them in a way which
should surpass their human capacity. The tempted might therefore have
resisted the tempter. If, instead of approaching them in the form of a
celestial being, in the likeness of God, he came in that of a creature,
not only far inferior to God, but far below themselves, they could have no
excuse for allowing a mere animal to persuade them to break the
commandment of God. For they had been made to have dominion over the
beasts, and not to take their own law from them. Moreover, the fact that
an evil spirit was approaching them in the serpent, could hardly be
concealed from them. Its speaking alone must have suggested that; for Adam
had already become acquainted with the nature of the beasts, and had not
found one among them resembling himself - not one, therefore, endowed with
reason and speech. The substance of the address, too, was enough to prove
that it was no good spirit which spake through the serpent, but one at
enmity with God. Hence, when they paid attention to what he said, they
were altogether without excuse.
Gen 3:1-5 -
“The serpent was more subtle than all the beasts of
the field, which Jehovah God had made.” - The serpent is here
described not only as a beast, but also as a creature of God; it must
therefore have been good, like everything else that He had made. Subtilty
was a natural characteristic of the serpent ( Mat_10:16),
which led the evil one to select it as his instrument. Nevertheless the
predicate
עָרוּם
is not used here in the good sense of
φρόνιμος
(lxx), prudens, but in the bad sense of
πανοῦργος,
callidus. For its subtilty was manifested as the craft of a
tempter to evil, in the simple fact that it was to the weaker woman that
it turned; and cunning was also displayed in what it said: “Hath
God indeed said, Ye shall not eat of all the trees of the garden?”
כִּי
אַף
is an interrogative expressing surprise (as in
1Sa_23:3;
2Sa_4:11):
“Is it really the fact that God has prohibited you from eating of all
the trees of the garden?” The Hebrew may, indeed, bear the meaning, “hath
God said, ye shall not eat of every tree?” but from the context,
and especially the conjunction, it is obvious that the meaning is, “ye
shall not eat of any tree.” The serpent calls God by the name of
Elohim alone, and the woman does the same. In this more general and
indefinite name the personality of the living God is obscured. To attain
his end, the tempter felt it necessary to change the living personal God
into a merely general numen divinium, and to exaggerate the
prohibition, in the hope of exciting in the woman's mind partly distrust
of God Himself, and partly a doubt as to the truth of His word. And his
words were listened to. Instead of turning away, the woman replied, “We
may eat of the fruit of the trees of the garden; 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.” She was aware of the
prohibition, therefore, and fully understood its meaning; but she added, “neither
shall ye touch it,” and proved by this very exaggeration that it
appeared too stringent even to her, and therefore that her love and
confidence towards God were already beginning to waver. Here was the
beginning of her fall: “for doubt is the father of sin, and skepsis the
mother of all transgression; and in this father and this mother, all our
present knowledge has a common origin with sin” (Ziegler). From
doubt, the tempter advances to a direct denial of the truth of the divine
threat, and to a malicious suspicion of the divine love (Gen_3:4,
Gen_3:5).
“Ye will by no means die” (לֹא
is placed before the infinitive absolute, as in
Psa_49:8 and
Amo_9:8;
for the meaning is not, “he will not die;” but, ye will positively
not die). “But
(Note:
כִּי
used to establish a denial.)
God doth know that in the day ye eat thereof, your eyes
will be opened,
(Note:
וְנִפֵקְחוּ
perfect c.
ו
consec. See Gesenius, §126, Note 1.)
and ye will be like God, knowing good and evil.”
That is to say, it is not because the fruit of the tree will injure you
that God has forbidden you to eat it, but from ill-will and envy, because
He does not wish you to be like Himself. “A truly satanic double
entendre, in which a certain agreement between truth and untruth is
secured!” By eating the fruit, man did obtain the knowledge of good and
evil, and in this respect became like God ( Gen_3:7
and Gen_3:22).
This was the truth which covered the falsehood “ye shall not die,” and
turned the whole statement into a lie, exhibiting its author as the father
of lies, who abides not in the truth (Joh_8:44).
For the knowledge of good and evil, which man obtains by going into evil,
is as far removed from the true likeness of God, which he would have
attained by avoiding it, as the imaginary liberty of a sinner, which leads
into bondage to sin and ends in death, is from the true liberty of a life
of fellowship with God.)
Gen 3:6 -
The illusive hope of being like God excited a longing
for the forbidden fruit. “The woman saw that the tree was good for
food, and that it was a pleasure to the eyes, and to be desired to make
one wise ( הַשְׂכִּיל
signifies to gain or show discernment or insight); and she took of its
fruit and ate, and gave to her husband by her (who was present), and he
did eat.” As distrust of God's command leads to a disregard of it, so
the longing for a false independence excites a desire for the seeming good
that has been prohibited; and this desire is fostered by the senses, until
it brings forth sin. Doubt, unbelief, and pride were the roots of the sin
of our first parents, as they have been of all the sins of their
posterity. The more trifling the object of their sin seems to have been,
the greater and more difficult does the sin itself appear; especially when
we consider that the first men “stood in a more direct relation to God,
their Creator, than any other man has ever done, that their hearts were
pure, their discernment clear, their intercourse with God direct, that
they were surrounded by gifts just bestowed by Him, and could not excuse
themselves on the ground of any misunderstanding of the divine
prohibition, which threatened them with the loss of life in the event of
disobedience” (Delitzsch). Yet not only did the woman yield to the
seductive wiles of the serpent, but even the man allowed himself to be
tempted by the woman.
Gen 3:7-8 -
“Then the eyes of them both were opened” (as the
serpent had foretold: but what did they see?), “and they knew that they
were naked.” They had lost “that blessed blindness, the ignorance of
innocence, which knows nothing of nakedness” (Ziegler). The
discovery of their nakedness excited shame, which they sought to conceal
by an outward covering. “They sewed fig-leaves together, and made
themselves aprons.” The word
תְּאֵנָה
always denotes the fig-tree, not the pisang (Musa paradisiaca), nor
the Indian banana, whose leaves are twelve feet long and two feet broad,
for there would have been no necessity to sew them together at all.
חֲגֹרֹת,
περιζώματα, are aprons, worn round the hips. It was
here that the consciousness of nakedness first suggested the need of
covering, not because the fruit had poisoned the fountain of human life,
and through some inherent quality had immediately corrupted the
reproductive powers of the body (as Hoffmann and Baumgarten
suppose), nor because any physical change ensued in consequence of the
fall; but because, with the destruction of the normal connection between
soul and body through sin, the body ceased to be the pure abode of a
spirit in fellowship with God, and in the purely natural state of the body
the consciousness was produced not merely of the distinction of the sexes,
but still more of the worthlessness of the flesh; so that the man and
woman stood ashamed in each other's presence, and endeavoured to hide the
disgrace of their spiritual nakedness, by covering those parts of the body
through which the impurities of nature are removed. That the natural
feeling of shame, the origin of which is recorded here, had its root, not
in sensuality or any physical corruption, but in the consciousness of
guilt or shame before God, and consequently that it was the conscience
which was really at work, is evident from the fact that the man and his
wife hid themselves from Jehovah God among the trees of the garden,
as soon as they heard the sound of His footsteps.
יְהֹוָה
קֹול
(the voice of Jehovah,
Gen_3:8) is not the voice of God speaking or
calling, but the sound of God walking, as in
2Sa_5:24;
1Ki_14:6,
etc. - In the cool of the day (lit., in the wind of the day), i.e.,
towards the evening, when a cooling wind generally blows. The men have
broken away from God, but God will not and cannot leave them alone. He
comes to them as one man to another. This was the earliest form of divine
revelation. God conversed with the first man in a visible shape, as the
Father and Instructor of His children. He did not adopt this mode for the
first time after the fall, but employed it as far back as the period when
He brought the beasts to Adam, and gave him the woman to be his wife (Gen_2:19,
Gen_2:22).
This human mode of intercourse between man and God is not a mere figure of
speech, but a reality, having its foundation in the nature of humanity, or
rather in the fact that man was created in the image of God, but not in
the sense supposed by Jakobi, that “God theomorphised when
creating man, and man therefore necessarily anthropomorphises when he
thinks of God.” The anthropomorphies of God have their real
foundation in the divine condescension which culminated in the incarnation
of God in Christ. They are to be understood, however, as implying, not
that corporeality, or a bodily shape, is an essential characteristic of
God, but that God having given man a bodily shape, when He created him in
His own image, revealed Himself in a manner suited to his bodily senses,
that He might thus preserve him in living communion with Himself.
Gen 3:9-13 -
The man could not hide himself from God. “Jehovah
God called unto Adam, and said unto him, Where art thou?” Not that He
was ignorant of his hiding-place, but to bring him to a confession of his
sin. And when Adam said that he had hidden himself through fear of his
nakedness, and thus sought to hide the sin behind its consequences, his
disobedience behind the feeling of shame; this is not to be regarded as a
sign of peculiar obduracy, but easily admits of a psychological
explanation, viz., that at the time he actually thought more of his
nakedness and shame than of his transgression of the divine command, and
his consciousness of the effects of his sin was keener than his sense of
the sin itself. To awaken the latter God said, “Who told thee that thou
wast naked?” and asked him whether he had broken His command. He could
not deny that he had, but sought to excuse himself by saying, that the
woman whom God gave to be with him had given him of the tree. When the
woman was questioned, she pleaded as her excuse, that the serpent had
beguiled her (or rather deceived her,
ἐξαπάτησεν,
2Co_11:3).
In offering these excuses, neither of them denied the fact. But the fault
in both was, that they did not at once smite upon their breasts. “It is so
still; the sinner first of all endeavours to throw the blame upon others
as tempters, and then upon circumstances which God has ordained.”
Gen 3:14-15 -
The sentence follows the examination, and is pronounced
first of all upon the serpent as the tempter: “Because thou hast done
this, thou art cursed before all cattle, and before every beast of the
field.”
מִן,
literally out of the beasts, separate from them (Deu_14:2;
Jdg_5:24),
is not a comparative signifying more than, nor does it mean by; for
the curse did not proceed from the beasts, but from God, and was not
pronounced upon all the beasts, but upon the serpent alone. The
κτίσις,
it is true, including the whole animal creation, has been “made subject to
vanity” and “the bondage of corruption,” in consequence of the sin of man
(Rom_8:20-21);
yet this subjection is not to be regarded as the effect of the curse,
which was pronounced upon the serpent, having fallen upon the whole animal
world, but as the consequence of death passing from man into the rest of
the creation, and thoroughly pervading the whole. The creation was drawn
into the fall of man, and compelled to share its consequences, because the
whole of the irrational creation was made for man, and made subject to him
as its head; consequently the ground was cursed for man's sake, but not
the animal world for the serpent's sake, or even along with the serpent.
The curse fell upon the serpent for having tempted the woman, according to
the same law by which not only a beast which had injured a man was ordered
to be put to death (Gen_9:5;
Exo_21:28-29),
but any beast which had been the instrument of an unnatural crime was to
be slain along with the man (Lev_20:15-16);
not as though the beast were an accountable creature, but in consequence
of its having been made subject to man, not to injure his body or his
life, or to be the instrument of his sin, but to subserve the great
purpose of his life. “Just as a loving father,” as Chrysostom says,
“when punishing the murderer of his son, might snap in two the sword or
dagger with which the murder had been committed.” The proof, therefore,
that the serpent was merely the instrument of an evil spirit, does not lie
in the punishment itself, but in the manner in which the sentence was
pronounced. When God addressed the animal, and pronounced a curse upon it,
this presupposed that the curse had regard not so much to the irrational
beast as to the spiritual tempter, and that the punishment which fell upon
the serpent was merely a symbol of his own. The punishment of the serpent
corresponded to the crime. It had exalted itself above the man; therefore
upon its belly it should go, and dust it should eat all the days of its
life. If these words are not to be robbed of their entire meaning, they
cannot be understood in any other way than as denoting that the form and
movements of the serpent were altered, and that its present repulsive
shape is the effect of the curse pronounced upon it, though we cannot form
any accurate idea of its original appearance. Going upon the belly (=
creeping, Lev_11:42)
was a mark of the deepest degradation; also the eating of dust, which is
not to be understood as meaning that dust was to be its only food, but
that while crawling in the dust it would also swallow dust (cf.
Mic_7:17;
Isa_49:23).
Although this punishment fell literally upon the serpent, it also affected
the tempter if a figurative or symbolical sense. He became the object of
the utmost contempt and abhorrence; and the serpent still keeps the
revolting image of Satan perpetually before the eye. This degradation was
to be perpetual. “While all the rest of creation shall be delivered from
the fate into which the fall has plunged it, according to
Isa_65:25, the
instrument of man's temptation is to remain sentenced to perpetual
degradation in fulfilment of the sentence, 'all the days of thy life.' and
thus to prefigure the fate of the real tempter, for whom there is no
deliverance” (Hengstenberg, Christology
Gen_1:15). -
The presumption of the tempter was punished with the deepest degradation;
and in like manner his sympathy with the woman was to be turned into
eternal hostility (Gen_3:15).
God established perpetual enmity, not only between the serpent and the
woman, but also between the serpent's and the woman's seed, i.e., between
the human and the serpent race. The seed of the woman would crush the
serpent's head, and the serpent crush the heel of the woman's seed. The
meaning, terere, conterere, is thoroughly established by the
Chald., Syr., and Rabb. authorities, and we have therefore retained it, in
harmony with the word
συντρίβειν
in Rom_16:20,
and because it accords better and more easily with all the other passages
in which the word occurs, than the rendering inhiare, to regard
with enmity, which is obtained from the combination of
שׁוּף
with
שָׁאַף. The verb is construed with a double
accusative, the second giving greater precision to the first (vid., Ges.
§139, note, and Ewald, §281). The same word is used in connection
with both head and heel, to show that on both sides the intention is to
destroy the opponent; at the same time, the expressions head and heel
denote a majus and minus, or, as Calvin says, superius et
inferius. This contrast arises from the nature of the foes. The
serpent can only seize the heel of the man, who walks upright; whereas the
man can crush the head of the serpent, that crawls in the dust. But this
difference is itself the result of the curse pronounced upon the serpent,
and its crawling in the dust is a sign that it will be defeated in its
conflict with man. However pernicious may be the bite of a serpent in the
heel when the poison circulates throughout the body (Gen_49:17),
it is not immediately fatal and utterly incurable, like the cursing of a
serpent's head.
But even in this sentence there is an unmistakable
allusion to the evil and hostile being concealed behind the serpent. That
the human race should triumph over the serpent, was a necessary
consequence of the original subjection of the animals to man. When,
therefore, God not merely confines the serpent within the limits assigned
to the animals, but puts enmity between it and the woman, this in itself
points to a higher, spiritual power, which may oppose and attack the human
race through the serpent, but will eventually be overcome. Observe, too,
that although in the first clause the seed of the serpent is opposed to
the seed of the woman, in the second it is not over the seed of the
serpent but over the serpent itself that the victory is said to be gained.
It, i.e., the seed of the woman will crush thy head, and thou
(not thy seed) wilt crush its heel. Thus the seed of the serpent is hidden
behind the unity of the serpent, or rather of the foe who, through the
serpent, has done such injury to man. This foe is Satan, who incessantly
opposes the seed of the woman and bruises its heel, but is eventually to
be trodden under its feet. It does not follow from this, however, apart
from other considerations, that by the seed of the woman we are to
understand one solitary person, one individual only. As the woman
is the mother of all living ( Gen_3:20),
her seed, to which the victory over the serpent and its seed is promised,
must be the human race. But if a direct and exclusive reference to Christ
appears to be exegetically untenable, the allusion in the word to Christ
is by no means precluded in consequence. In itself the idea of
זֶרַע,
the seed, is an indefinite one, since the posterity of a man may consist
of a whole tribe or of one son only (Gen_4:25;
Gen_21:12-13),
and on the other hand, an entire tribe may be reduced to one single
descendant and become extinct in him. The question, therefore, who is to
be understood by the “seed” which is to crush the serpent's head, can only
be answered from the history of the human race. But a point of much
greater importance comes into consideration here. Against the natural
serpent the conflict may be carried on by the whole human race, by all who
are born of a woman, but not against Satan. As he is a fore who can only
be met with spiritual weapons, none can encounter him successfully but
such as possess and make use of spiritual arms. Hence the idea of the
“seed” is modified by the nature of the foe. If we look at the natural
development of the human race, Eve bore three sons, but only one of them,
viz., Seth, was really the seed by whom the human family was
preserved through the flood and perpetuated in Noah: so, again, of the
three sons of Noah, Shem, the blessed of Jehovah, from whom
Abraham descended, was the only one in whose seed all nations were to be
blessed, and that not through Ishmael, but through Isaac alone. Through
these constantly repeated acts of divine selection, which were not
arbitrary exclusions, but were rendered necessary by differences in the
spiritual condition of the individuals concerned, the “seed,” to which the
victory over Satan was promised, was spiritually or ethically determined,
and ceased to be co-extensive with physical descent. This spiritual seed
culminated in Christ, in whom the Adamitic family terminated, henceforward
to be renewed by Christ as the second Adam, and restored by Him to its
original exaltation and likeness to God. In this sense Christ is the seed
of the woman, who tramples Satan under His feet, not as an individual, but
as the head both of the posterity of the woman which kept the promise and
maintained the conflict with the old serpent before His advent, and also
of all those who are gathered out of all nations, are united to Him by
faith, and formed into one body of which He is the head (Rom_16:20).
On the other hand, all who have not regarded and preserved the promise,
have fallen into the power of the old serpent, and are to be regarded as
the seed of the serpent, whose head will be trodden under foot (Mat_23:33;
Joh_8:44;
1Jo_3:8).
If then the promise culminates in Christ, the fact that the victory over
the serpent is promised to the posterity of the woman, not of the man,
acquires this deeper significance, that as it was through the woman that
the craft of the devil brought sin and death into the world, so it is also
through the woman that the grace of God will give to the fallen human race
the conqueror of sin, of death, and of the devil. And even if the words
had reference first of all to the fact that the woman had been led astray
by the serpent, yet in the fact that the destroyer of the serpent was born
of a woman (without a human father) they were fulfilled in a way which
showed that the promise must have proceeded from that Being, who secured
its fulfilment not only in its essential force, but even in its apparently
casual form.
Gen 3:16-19 -
It was not till the prospect of victory had been
presented, that a sentence of punishment was pronounced upon both the man
and the woman on account of their sin. The woman, who had broken the
divine command for the sake of earthly enjoyment, was punished in
consequence with the sorrows and pains of pregnancy and childbirth. “I
will greatly multiply ( הַרְבָּה
is the inf. abs. for
הַרְבֵּה,
which had become an adverb: vid., Ewald, §240c, as in
Gen_16:10 and
Gen_22:17)
thy sorrow and thy pregnancy: in sorrow thou shalt bring forth children.”
As the increase of conceptions, regarded as the fulfilment of the blessing
to “be fruitful and multiply” (Gen_1:28),
could be no punishment,
וְהֵרֹנֵךְ
must be understood as in apposition to
עִצְּבֹונֵךְ
thy sorrow (i.e., the sorrows peculiar to a woman's life), and
indeed (or more especially) thy pregnancy (i.e., the sorrows attendant
upon that condition). The sentence is not rendered more lucid by the
assumption of a hendiadys. “That the woman should bear children was
the original will of God; but it was a punishment that henceforth she was
to bear them in sorrow, i.e., with pains which threatened her own life as
well as that of the child” (Delitzsch). The punishment consisted in
an enfeebling of nature, in consequence of sin, which disturbed the normal
relation between body and soul. - The woman had also broken through her
divinely appointed subordination to the man; she had not only emancipated
herself from the man to listen to the serpent, but had led the man into
sin. For that, she was punished with a desire bordering upon
disease (תְּשׁוּקָה
from
שׁוּק to run, to have a violent craving for a
thing), and with subjection to the man. “And he shall rule over
thee.” Created for the man, the woman was made subordinate to him from
the very first; but the supremacy of the man was not intended to become a
despotic rule, crushing the woman into a slave, which has been the rule in
ancient and modern Heathenism, and even in Mahometanism also-a rule which
was first softened by the sin-destroying grace of the Gospel, and changed
into a form more in harmony with the original relation, viz., that of a
rule on the one hand, and subordination on the other, which have their
roots in mutual esteem and love.
Gen_3:17-19
“And unto Adam:” the noun is here used for the
first time as a proper name without the article. In
Gen_1:26 and
Gen_2:5,
Gen_2:20,
the noun is appellative, and there are substantial reasons for the
omission of the article. The sentence upon Adam includes a twofold
punishment: first the cursing of the ground, and secondly death, which
affects the woman as well, on account of their common guilt. By listening
to his wife, when deceived by the serpent, Adam had repudiated his
superiority to the rest of creation. As a punishment, therefore, nature
would henceforth offer resistance to his will. By breaking the divine
command, he had set himself above his Maker, death would therefore show
him the worthlessness of his own nature. “Cursed be the ground for thy
sake; in sorrow shalt thou eat it (the ground by synecdoche for its
produce, as in Isa_1:7)
all the days of thy life: thorns and thistles shall it bring forth to
thee, and thou shalt eat the herb of the field.” The curse pronounced
on man's account upon the soil created for him, consisted in the fact,
that the earth no longer yielded spontaneously the fruits requisite for
his maintenance, but the man was obliged to force out the necessaries of
life by labour and strenuous exertion. The herb of the field is in
contrast with the trees of the garden, and sorrow with the easy dressing
of the garden. We are not to understand, however, that because man failed
to guard the good creation of God from the invasion of the evil one, a
host of demoniacal powers forced their way into the material world to lay
it waste and offer resistance to man; but because man himself had fallen
into the power of the evil one, therefore God cursed the earth, not merely
withdrawing the divine powers of life which pervaded Eden, but changing
its relation to man. As Luther says, “primum in eo, quod illa
bona non fert quae tulisset, si homo non esset lapsus, deinde in eo quoque,
quod multa noxia fert quae non tulisset, sicut sunt infelix lolium,
steriles avenae, zizania, urticae, spincae, tribuli, adde venena, noxias
bestiolas, et si qua sunt alia hujus generis.” But the curse reached
much further, and the writer has merely noticed the most obvious aspect.
(Note: Non omnia incommoda enumerat Moses, quibus
se homo per peccatum implicuit: constat enim ex eodem prodiisse fonte
omnes praesentis vitae aerumnas, quas experientia innumeras esse
ostendit. Aëris intemperies, gelu, tonitrua, pluviae intempestivae,
uredo, grandines et quicquid inordinatum est in mundo, peccati sunt
fructus.
Nec alia morborum prima est causa: idque poeticis
fabulis celebratum fuit: haud dubie quod per manus a patribus traditum
esset. Unde illud Horatii :
- Post ignem aethera domo
- Subductum, macies et nova febrium
- Terris incubuit cohors:
- Semotique prius tarda necessitas
- Lethi corripuit gradum.
Sed Moses qui brevitati studet, suo more pro communi
vulgi captu attingere contentus fuit quod magis apparuit: ut sub exemplo
uno discamus, hominis vitio inversum fuisse totum naturae ordinem .
Calvin.)
The disturbance and distortion of the original harmony
of body and soul, which sin introduced into the nature of man, and by
which the flesh gained the mastery over the spirit, and the body, instead
of being more and more transformed into the life of the spirit, became a
prey to death, spread over the whole material world; so that everywhere on
earth there were to be seen wild and rugged wastes, desolation and ruin,
death and corruption, or
ματαιότης
and
φθορά (Rom_8:20-21).
Everything injurious to man in the organic, vegetable and animal creation,
is the effect of the curse pronounced upon the earth for Adam's sin,
however little we may be able to explain the manner in which the curse was
carried into effect; since our view of the causal connection between sin
and evil even in human life is very imperfect, and the connection between
spirit and matter in nature generally is altogether unknown. In this
causal link between sin and the evils in the world, the wrath of God on
account of sin was revealed; since, as soon as the creation (πᾶσα
ἡ
κτίοις,
Rom_8:22)
had been wrested through man from its vital connection with its Maker, He
gave it up to its own ungodly nature, so that whilst, on the one hand, it
has been abused by man for the gratification of his own sinful lusts and
desires, on the other, it has turned against man, and consequently many
things in the world and nature, which in themselves and without sin would
have been good for him, or at all events harmless, have become poisonous
and destructive since his fall. For in the sweat of his face man is to eat
his bread (לֶחֶם
the bread-corn which springs from the earth, as in
Job_28:5;
Psa_104:14)
until he return to the ground. Formed out of the dust, he shall return to
dust again. This was the fulfilment of the threat, “In the day thou eatest
thereof thou shalt surely die,” which began to take effect immediately
after the breach of the divine command; for not only did man then become
mortal, but he also actually came under the power of death, received into
his nature the germ of death, the maturity of which produced its eventual
dissolution into dust. The reason why the life of the man did not come to
an end immediately after the eating of the forbidden fruit, was not that
“the woman had been created between the threat and the fall, and
consequently the fountain of human life had been divided, the life
originally concentrated in one Adam shared between man and woman, by which
the destructive influence of the fruit was modified or weakened.” (v.
Hoffmann), but that the mercy and long-suffering of God afforded space
for repentance, and so controlled and ordered the sin of men and the
punishment of sin, as to render them subservient to the accomplishment of
His original purpose and the glorification of His name.
Gen 3:20-21 -
As justice and mercy were combined in the divine
sentence; justice in the fact that God cursed the tempter alone, and only
punished the tempted with labour and mortality, mercy in the promise of
eventual triumph over the serpent: so God also displayed His mercy to the
fallen, before carrying the sentence into effect. It was through the power
of divine grace that Adam believed the promise with regard to the woman's
seed, and manifested his faith in the name which he gave to his wife.
חִוָּה
Eve, an old form of
חַיָּה,
signifying life (ζωή,
lxx), or life-spring, is a substantive, and not a feminine adjective
meaning “the living one,” nor an abbreviated form of
מְחַוָּה,
from
חִוָּה =
חִיָּה
(Gen_19:32,
Gen_19:34),
the life-receiving one. This name was given by Adam to his wife, “because,”
as the writer explains with the historical fulfilment before his mind, “she
became the mother of all living,” i.e., because the continuance and
life of his race were guaranteed to the man through the woman. God also
displayed His mercy by clothing the two with coats of skin, i.e., the
skins of beasts. The words, “God made coats,” are not to be interpreted
with such bare literality, as that God sewed the coats with His own
fingers; they merely affirm “that man's first clothing was the work of
God, who gave the necessary directions and ability” (Delitzsch). By
this clothing, God imparted to the feeling of shame the visible sign of an
awakened conscience, and to the consequent necessity for a covering to the
bodily nakedness, the higher work of a suitable discipline for the sinner.
By selecting the skins of beasts for the clothing of the first men, and
therefore causing the death or slaughter of beasts for that purpose, He
showed them how they might use the sovereignty they possessed over the
animals for their own good, and even sacrifice animal life for the
preservation of human; so that this act of God laid the foundation for the
sacrifices, even if the first clothing did not prefigure our ultimate
“clothing upon” (2Co_5:4),
nor the coats of skins the robe of righteousness.
Gen 3:22-24 -
Clothed in this sign of mercy, the man was driven out
of paradise, to bear the punishment of his sin. The words of Jehovah,
“The man is become as one of Us, to know good and evil,” contain no
irony, as though man had exalted himself to a position of autonomy
resembling that of God; for “irony at the expense of a wretched tempted
soul might well befit Satan, but not the Lord.” Likeness to God is
predicated only with regard to the knowledge of good and evil, in which
the man really had become like God. In order that, after the germ of death
had penetrated into his nature along with sin, he might not “take also
of the tree of life, and eat and live for ever ( חַי
contracted from
חָיַי
= חָיָה,
as in Gen_5:5;
1Sa_20:31),
God sent him forth from the garden of Eden.” With
וַיְשַׁלְּחֵהוּ
(sent him forth) the narrative passes over from the words to the actions
of God. From the
גַּם
(also) it follows that the man had not yet eaten of the tree of life. Had
he continued in fellowship with God by obedience to the command of God, he
might have eaten of it, for he was created for eternal life. But after he
had fallen through sin into the power of death, the fruit which produced
immortality could only do him harm. For immortality in a state of sin is
not the
ζωὴ
αἰώνιος,
which God designed for man, but endless misery, which the Scriptures call
“the second death” (Rev_2:11;
Rev_20:6,
Rev_20:14;
Rev_21:8).
The expulsion from paradise, therefore, was a punishment inflicted for
man's good, intended, while exposing him to temporal death, to preserve
him from eternal death. To keep the approach to the tree of life, “God
caused cherubim to dwell (to encamp) at the east (on the
eastern side) of the garden, and the (i.e., with the) flame of
the sword turning to and fro” (מִתְהַפֶּכֶת,
moving rapidly). The word
כְּרוּב
cherub has no suitable etymology in the Semitic, but is
unquestionably derived from the same root as the Greek
γρύψ
or
γρυπές, and has been handed down from the
forefathers of our race, though the primary meaning can no longer be
discovered. The Cherubim, however, are creatures of a higher world,
which are represented as surrounding the throne of God, both in the
visions of Ezekiel (Eze_1:22.,
Gen_10:1)
and the Revelation of John (Joh_4:6);
not, however, as throne-bearers or throne-holders, or as forming the
chariot of the throne, but as occupying the highest place as living beings
(חַיֹּות,
ζῷα)
in the realm of spirits, standing by the side of God as the heavenly King
when He comes to judgment, and proclaiming the majesty of the Judge of the
world. In this character God stationed them on the eastern side of
paradise, not “to inhabit the garden as the temporary representatives of
man,” but “to keep the way of the tree of life,” i.e., to render it
impossible for man to return to paradise, and eat of the tree of life.
Hence there appeared by their side the flame of a sword, apparently in
constant motion, cutting hither and thither, representing the devouring
fire of the divine wrath, and showing the cherubim to be ministers of
judgment. With the expulsion of man from the garden of Eden, paradise
itself vanished from the earth. God did not withdraw from the tree of life
its supernatural power, nor did He destroy the garden before their eyes,
but simply prevented their return, to show that it should be preserved
until the time of the end, when sin should be rooted out by the judgment,
and death abolished by the Conqueror of the serpent (1Co_15:26),
and when upon the new earth the tree of life should flourish again in the
heavenly Jerusalem, and bear fruit for the redeemed (Rev_20:1-15
and 21).
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Bethel Missionary Baptist:
The name Bethel comes from the Hebrew beth,
meaning house,
and el, meaning God. Bethel means "The House of
God."
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