The Story of Patriarchs and Prophets
by Ellen G. White
Chapter 3: The Temptation and Fall
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Such has been Satan's work from the days of Adam to the
present, and he has pursued it with great success. He tempts men
to distrust God's love and to doubt His wisdom. He is constantly [p. 55] seeking to excite a spirit of irreverent curiosity, a restless,
inquisitive desire to penetrate the secrets of divine wisdom and
power. In their efforts to search out what God has been pleased
to withhold, multitudes overlook the truths which He has
revealed, and which are essential to salvation. Satan tempts men to
disobedience by leading them to believe they are entering a
wonderful field of knowledge. But this is all a deception. Elated with
their ideas of progression, they are, by trampling on God's requirements,
setting their feet in the path that leads to degradation and
death.
Satan represented to the holy pair that they would be gainers
by breaking the law of God. Do we not today hear similar
reasoning? Many talk of the narrowness of those who obey God's
commandments, while they themselves claim to have broader
ideas and to enjoy greater liberty. What is this but an echo of the
voice from Eden, "In the day ye eat thereof"—transgress the divine
requirement—"ye shall be as gods"? Satan claimed to have
received great good by eating of the forbidden fruit, but he did not
let it appear that by transgression he had become an outcast from
heaven. Though he had found sin to result in infinite loss, he
concealed his own misery in order to draw others into the same
position. So now the transgressor seeks to disguise his true character;
he may claim to be holy; but his exalted profession only makes
him the more dangerous as a deceiver. He is on the side of Satan,
trampling upon the law of God, and leading others to do the same,
to their eternal ruin.
Eve really believed the words of Satan, but her belief did not
save her from the penalty of sin. She disbelieved the words of
God, and this was what led to her fall. In the judgment men will
not be condemned because they conscientiously believed a lie, but
because they did not believe the truth, because they neglected the
opportunity of learning what is truth. Notwithstanding the
sophistry of Satan to the contrary, it is always disastrous to
disobey God. We must set our hearts to know what is truth. All the
lessons which God has caused to be placed on record in His
word are for our warning and instruction. They are given to save
us from deception. Their neglect will result in ruin to ourselves.
Whatever contradicts God's word, we may be sure proceeds from
Satan.
The serpent plucked the fruit of the forbidden tree and placed
it in the hands of the half-reluctant Eve. Then he reminded her [p. 56] of her own words, that God had forbidden them to touch it,
lest they die. She would receive no more harm from eating the
fruit, he declared, than from touching it. Perceiving no evil
results from what she had done, Eve grew bolder. When she
"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." It was grateful to the taste, and as
she ate, she seemed to feel a vivifying power, and imagined
herself entering upon a higher state of existence. Without a fear she
plucked and ate. And now, having herself transgressed, she
became the agent of Satan in working the ruin of her husband. In
a state of strange, unnatural excitement, with her hands filled
with the forbidden fruit, she sought his presence, and related all
that had occurred.
An expression of sadness came over the face of Adam. He
appeared astonished and alarmed. To the words of Eve he
replied that this must be the foe against whom they had been
warned; and by the divine sentence she must die. In answer she
urged him to eat, repeating the words of the serpent, that they
should not surely die. She reasoned that this must be true, for she
felt no evidence of God's displeasure, but on the contrary
realized a delicious, exhilarating influence, thrilling every faculty with
new life, such, she imagined, as inspired the heavenly messengers.
Adam understood that his companion had transgressed the
command of God, disregarded the only prohibition laid upon
them as a test of their fidelity and love. There was a terrible
struggle in his mind. He mourned that he had permitted Eve to
wander from his side. But now the deed was done; he must be
separated from her whose society had been his joy. How could he
have it thus? Adam had enjoyed the companionship of God and
of holy angels. He had looked upon the glory of the Creator. He
understood the high destiny opened to the human race should
they remain faithful to God. Yet all these blessings were lost
sight of in the fear of losing that one gift which in his eyes
outvalued every other. Love, gratitude, loyalty to the Creator—all
were overborne by love to Eve. She was a part of himself, and he
could not endure the thought of separation. He did not realize
that the same Infinite Power who had from the dust of the earth
created him, a living, beautiful form, and had in love given him
a companion, could supply her place. He resolved to share her
fate; if she must die, he would die with her. After all, he [p. 57] reasoned, might not the words of the wise serpent be true? Eve was
before him, as beautiful and apparently as innocent as before this
act of disobedience. She expressed greater love for him than
before. No sign of death appeared in her, and he decided to brave
the consequences. He seized the fruit and quickly ate.
After his transgression Adam at first imagined himself entering
upon a higher state of existence. But soon the thought of his sin
filled him with terror. The air, which had hitherto been of a mild
and uniform temperature, seemed to chill the guilty pair. The love
and peace which had been theirs was gone, and in its place they
felt a sense of sin, a dread of the future, a nakedness of soul. The
robe of light which had enshrouded them, now disappeared, and
to supply its place they endeavored to fashion for themselves a
covering; for they could not, while unclothed, meet the eye of
God and holy angels.
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