nChrist
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« on: November 29, 2017, 04:59:05 PM » |
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"But the serpent said to the woman: You will not surely die!" Genesis 3:4
This is a sad chapter — perhaps the saddest in the whole Bible. For it tells us of the fall of man — of sin entering into the world, and death by sin. It is a tale of loss and sorrow and ruin. And it ends with our first parents being driven out from that happy paradise in which they had lived until then, never to return there again — but thenceforth to labor for their daily bread until the time should come when they should return to the dust from which they were taken.
How did this sad change arise? All from denying, disbelieving, and disobeying the Word of God. God had said, "You may surely eat of every tree of the garden, but of the tree of the knowledge of good and evil you shall not eat — for in the day that you eat of it you shall surely die!" The evil one, coming to Eve in the form of the serpent, gave the lie to this word of God: "You will not surely die." The woman listened to the tempter's voice — the word of God was no longer regarded, and she and the man ate of the forbidden tree.
Which word proved true — the word of God, or the word of Satan? Let the state of the world for these six thousand years answer the question. No sooner was the deed done, than its consequences were felt. Then came a guilty conscience, a strangeness toward God, hard labor, sickness and death! From that moment, death lay before Adam and Eve; in due time they died — and ever since, the whole race of man has been subject to death.
The word of God came true. It always must come true. The same evil work which Satan did in the case of our first parents — he is engaged in to this very day — it is still one of his chief aims to lead men to disbelieve the word of God.
With regard to the Bible as a whole, Satan's object is to throw discredit on it. In the case of Adam and Eve, the word of God was the spoken word — that is, what God had said to them. In our case the word of God is the written word, the scriptures — written at different times and by different men, but all inspired by God.
In various ways, suited to different minds and to different states of thought and of knowledge — the evil one tries to do away with the authority of the Bible. To Eve he said boldly, "You shall not surely die," in direct opposition to what God had declared; and sometimes he still dares to give the lie to scripture and tempts men to think it altogether false. But often his plan is more crafty. He seeks to lead the mind into a state of doubt and confusion. The Bible is a good book — that he does not venture to deny, lest he should show his object too plainly. But he suggests to the mind difficulties and objections of various kinds.
Inspiration, for instance — what is it, and how far does it go, and how can we be sure of it? Though the Bible may be true as a whole — yet are there no parts which are not true? And even if true, are we not to look upon much as allegorical and figurative, and not simply true? Who can tell what is to be taken literally — and what figuratively? How can this doctrine, be reconciled with that doctrine? Is not such and such a statement against all our notions? Can we believe that God would do this or that?
Some of these doubts and questions may seem, at first sight, to have little, if anything, wrong in them. But closer examination will show whence they come, when they are suggested in a skeptical spirit. Anything that tends to lead away from a simple belief in the word of God — must be evil. It is a device of Satan to ensnare souls; as dangerous a device as that which he used with Eve, when he said, "You will not surely die!" It is perhaps even more dangerous, because more subtle.
Satan pursues the same object with regard to particular truths of the Bible. His aim is to make men disbelieve what God has said. For instance, the word of God declares that God sees all and hears all and is everywhere present. "The eyes of the Lord are in every place, keeping watch on the evil and the good." "Even before a word is on my tongue, behold, O Lord — You know it altogether."
The tempter seeks to make men disbelieve this. "And they say: How can God know? Is there knowledge in the Most High?" At least he strives to lead men to forget it, for there are many who dare not deny the truths of scripture, and yet live in constant forgetfulness of them. And when God is forgotten — His all-seeing eye, His all-hearing ear, His presence everywhere — then the sinner goes on in his own way, and Satan's object is gained.
Again, the Bible declares endless misery to be the portion of impenitent sinners. It speaks of "the second death" and of "eternal death" and of "damnation" and of the worm that never dies and the fire that is never quenched. And nothing can be plainer than those awful words of our Lord, "These will go away into eternal punishment — but the righteous into eternal life!" (Matthew 25:46).
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