The Story of Patriarchs and Prophets
by Ellen G. White
Chapter 2: The Creation
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God placed man under law, as an indispensable condition of
his very existence. He was a subject of the divine government,
and there can be no government without law. God might have
created man without the power to transgress His law; He might
have withheld the hand of Adam from touching the forbidden
fruit; but in that case man would have been, not a free moral
agent, but a mere automaton. Without freedom of choice, his
obedience would not have been voluntary, but forced. There
could have been no development of character. Such a course
would have been contrary to God's plan in dealing with the
inhabitants of other worlds. It would have been unworthy of man
as an intelligent being, and would have sustained Satan's charge
of God's arbitrary rule.
God made upright; He gave him noble traits of character,
with no bias toward evil. He endowed him with high intellectual
powers, and presented before him the strongest possible inducements
to be true to his allegiance. Obedience, perfect and perpetual,
was the condition of eternal happiness. On this condition
he was to have access to the tree of life.
The home of our first parents was to be a pattern for other
homes as their children should go forth to occupy the earth. That
home, beautified by the hand of God Himself, was not a gorgeous
palace. Men, in their pride, delight in magnificent and costly
edifices and glory in the works of their own hands; but God
placed Adam in a garden. This was his dwelling. The blue heavens
were its dome; the earth, with its delicate flowers and carpet
of living green, was its floor; and the leafy branches of the goodly
trees were its canopy. Its was walls were hung with the most magnificent
adornings—the handiwork of the great Master Artist. In
the surroundings of the holy pair was a lesson for all time—that
true happiness is found, not in the indulgence of pride and luxury,
but in communion with God through His created works. If men
would give less attention to the artificial, and would cultivate
greater simplicity, they would come far nearer to answering the [p. 50] purpose of God in their creation. Pride and ambition are never
satisfied, but those who are truly wise will find substantial and
elevating pleasure in the sources of enjoyment that God has placed
within the reach of all.
To the dwellers in Eden was committed the care of the garden,
"to dress it and to keep it." Their occupation was not wearisome,
but pleasant and invigorating. God appointed labor as a blessing
to man, to occupy his mind, to strengthen his body, and to develop
his faculties. In mental and physical activity Adam found one of
the highest pleasures of his holy existence. And when, as a result
of his disobedience, he was driven from his beautiful home, and
forced to struggle with a stubborn soil to gain his daily bread,
that very labor, although widely different from his pleasant
occupation in the garden, was a safeguard against temptation and a
source of happiness. Those who regard work as a curse, attended
though it be with weariness and pain, are cherishing an error.
The rich often look down with contempt upon the working
classes, but this is wholly at variance with God's purpose in
creating man. What are the possessions of even the most wealthy in
comparison with the heritage given to the lordly Adam? Yet
Adam was not to be idle. Our Creator, who understands what is
for man's happiness, appointed Adam his work. The true joy of
life is found only by the working men and women. The angels are
diligent workers; they are the ministers of God to the children
of men. The Creator has prepared no place for the stagnating
practice of indolence.
While they remained true to God, Adam and his companion
were to bear rule over the earth. Unlimited control was given
them over every living thing. The lion and the lamb sported
peacefully around them or lay down together at their feet. The
happy birds flitted about them without fear; and as their glad
songs ascended to the praise of their Creator, Adam and Eve
united with them in thanksgiving to the Father and the Son.
The holy pair were not only children under the fatherly care
of God but students receiving instruction from the all-wise Creator.
They were visited by angels, and were granted communion
with their Maker, with no obscuring veil between. They were
full of the vigor imparted by the tree of life, and their intellectual
power was but little less than that of the angels. The mysteries
of the visible universe—"the wondrous works of Him which is [p. 51] perfect in knowledge" (Job 37:16)—afforded them an exhaustless
source of instruction and delight. The laws and operations of
nature, which have engaged men's study for six thousand years,
were opened to their minds by the infinite Framer and Upholder
of all. They held converse with leaf and flower and tree, gathering
from each the secrets of its life. With every living creature,
from the mighty leviathan that playeth among the waters to the
insect mote that floats in the sunbeam, Adam was familiar. He
had given to each its name, and he was acquainted with the nature
and habits of all. God's glory in the heavens, the innumerable
worlds in their orderly revolutions, "the balancings of the clouds,"
the mysteries of light and sound, of day and night—all were open
to the study of our first parents. On every leaf of the forest or
stone of the mountains, in every shining star, in earth and air and
sky, God's name was written. The order and harmony of creation
spoke to them of infinite wisdom and power. They were ever
discovering some attraction that filled their hearts with deeper love
and called forth fresh expressions of gratitude.
So long as they remained loyal to the divine law, their capacity
to know, to enjoy, and to love would continually increase. They
would be constantly gaining new treasures of knowledge,
discovering fresh springs of happiness, and obtaining clearer and yet
clearer conceptions of the immeasurable, unfailing love of God.
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C
< Prev T. of C.
Pref.
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