Origin Story 14.1 of 21:
Did
God say…? (Gn 3:1)
That’s the way of temptation—to question our trust in God’s
Word. That’s what makes this such a cleaver and interesting conversation. The
serpent is not an atheist. He’s not questioning the reality of God; or, that
God created the heavens and the earth. In our choice of origin stories, between
the one we find in the Bible and the one according to “modern science” as told
by David C.; the serpent is on our side of the issue. Like us, the serpent
believes God created the heavens and the earth. He apparently takes pride, that
as creatures go, God created him as “the craftiest of all the wild animals that
the Lord God had made.” He’s really something—cleaver and crafty.
He just raises questions about our trust in God’s
Word:
Serpent: Did God say, “You shall not eat from
any tree in the garden”?
Woman: We may eat of the fruit of the trees in
the garden; but God said, “You shall
not
eat of the fruit of the tree that is in the middle of the garden, nor shall you
touch it, or you shall die.”
The serpent overstates what God has forbidden. The
woman, no dummy herself, corrects the serpent: No, God didn’t says that; but,
he did say we are not to eat of the tree “that is in the middle of the
garden”. It’s a discussion about God—a
theological conversation. What exactly did God say? Why did he say it? What do
you think God actually meant? Are you
sure God meant that you will die when you eat its fruit? The serpent is
something of a theologian. He knows things about: “You will not die,” says the
serpent, “God knows that when you eat of it your eyes will be opened, and you
will be like God, knowing good and evil.”
It’s a pious argument: “You want to be like God, don’t
you?” Where did the serpent obtain this knowledge about God? John Milton, in
his epic poem Paradise Lost, has a
wild and creative explanation about how Satan, having a long antagonist history
with God, knows things about God that man does not know. The serpent knows, for
example, that maybe you won’t die; at least, not right away—not on that very
day you eat of the forbidden fruit.
“God wants you to be like him knowing good and evil,”
goes the serpent. Why would God forbid such godly knowledge? To the woman’s
credit, she points out that God has given them all sorts of freedom: “We can
eat of all sorts of fruit!” There is plenty to eat and enjoy. We are free to
explore all the wonders and delights of God’s good and beautiful creation. Why
fuss about this one forbidden tree in the midst of the garden?
Did God really say…? There’s something about God’s
“No” that grates on us. Just one “No” is one too many. Maybe God says “No”
because he wants to deprive us of greater knowledge. Be your own person. Be
smart. Take of the forbidden fruit. It is tempting, isn’t it?
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