The Story of Patriarchs and Prophets
by Ellen G. White
Chapter 3: The Temptation and Fall
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Under the curse of sin all nature was to witness to man of the
character and results of rebellion against God. When God made
man He made him rule over the earth and all living creatures.
So long as Adam remained loyal to Heaven, all nature was in
subjection to him. But when he rebelled against the divine law,
the inferior creatures were in rebellion against his rule. Thus the [p. 60] Lord, in His great mercy, would show men the sacredness of His
law, and lead them, by their own experience, to see the danger of
setting it aside, even in the slightest degree.
And the life of toil and care which was henceforth to be
man's lot was appointed in love. It was a discipline rendered
needful by his sin, to place a check upon the indulgence of appetite
and passion, to develop habits of self-control. It was a part of
God's great plan of man's recovery from the ruin and degradation
of sin.
The warning given to our first parents—"In the day that thou
eatest thereof thou shalt surely die" (Genesis 2:17)—did not imply
that they were to die on the very day when they partook of the
forbidden fruit. But on the day the irrevocable sentence would
be pronounced. Immortality was promised them on condition of
obedience; by transgression they would forfeit eternal life. That
very day would be doomed to death.
In order to possess an endless existence, man must continue to
partake of the tree of life. Deprived of this, his vitality would
gradually diminish until life should become extinct. It was
Satan's plan that Adam and Eve should by disobedience incur
God's displeasure; and then, if they failed to obtain forgiveness, he
hoped that they would eat of the tree of life, and thus perpetuate
an existence of sin and misery. But after man's fall, holy angels
were immediately commissioned to guard the tree of life. Around
these angels flashed beams of light having the appearance of a
glittering sword. None of the family of Adam were permitted to
pass the barrier to partake of the life-giving fruit; hence there is
not an immortal sinner.
The tide of woe that flowed from the transgression of our
first parents is regarded by many as too awful a consequence for
so small a sin, and they impeach the wisdom and justice of God
in His dealings with man. But if they would look more deeply
into this question, they might discern their error. God created
man after His own likeness, free from sin. The earth was to be
peopled with beings only a little lower than the angels; but their
obedience must be tested; for God would not permit the world to
be filled with those who would disregard His law. Yet, in His
great mercy, He appointed Adam no severe test. And the very
lightness of the prohibition made the sin exceedingly great. If
Adam could not bear the smallest of tests, he could not have [p. 61] endured a greater trial had he been entrusted with higher
responsibilities.
Had some great test been appointed Adam, then those whose
hearts incline to evil would have excused themselves by saying,
"This is a trivial matter, and God is not so particular about little
things." And there would be continual transgression in things
looked upon as small, and which pass unrebuked among men.
But the Lord has made it evident that sin in any degree is offensive
to Him.
To Eve it seemed a small thing to disobey God by tasting the
fruit of the forbidden tree, and to tempt her husband also to
transgress; but their sin opened the floodgates of woe upon the
world. Who can know, in the moment of temptation, the terrible
consequences that will result from one wrong step?
Many who teach that the law of God is not binding upon
man, urge that it is impossible for him to obey its precepts. But
if this were true, why did Adam suffer the penalty of transgression?
The sin of our first parents brought guilt and sorrow upon
the world, and had it not been for the goodness and mercy of
God, would have plunged the race into hopeless despair. Let
none deceive themselves. "The wages of sin is death." Romans
6:23. The law of God can no more be transgressed with impunity
now than when sentence was pronounced upon the father of
mankind.
After their sin Adam and Eve were no longer to dwell in Eden.
They earnestly entreated that they might remain in the home of
their innocence and joy. They confessed that they had forfeited all
right to that happy abode, but pledged themselves for the future
to yield strict obedience to God. But they were told that their
nature had become depraved by sin; they had lessened their
strength to resist evil and had opened the way for Satan to gain
more ready access to them. In their innocence they had yielded
to temptation; and now, in a state of conscious guilt, they would
have less power to maintain their integrity.
In humility and unutterable sadness they bade farewell to their
beautiful home and went forth to dwell upon the earth, where
rested the curse of sin. The atmosphere, once so mild and uniform
in temperature, was now subject to marked changes, and the
Lord mercifully provided them with a garment of skins as a
protection from the extremes of heat and cold. [p. 62]
As they witnessed in drooping flower and falling leaf the first
signs of decay, Adam and his companion mourned more deeply
than men now mourn over their dead. The death of the frail,
delicate flowers was indeed a cause of sorrow; but when the
goodly trees cast off their leaves, the scene brought vividly to
mind the stern fact that death is the portion of every living thing.
The Garden of Eden remained upon the earth long after man
had become an outcast from its pleasant paths. The fallen race
were long permitted to gaze upon the home of innocence, their
entrance barred only by the watching angels. At the cherubim-guarded
gate of Paradise the divine glory was revealed. Hither
came Adam and his sons to worship God. Here they renewed
their vows of obedience to that law the transgression of which
had banished them from Eden. When the tide of iniquity overspread
the world, and the wickedness of men determined their
destruction by a flood of waters, the hand that had planted Eden
withdrew it from the earth. But in the final restitution, when
there shall be "a new heaven and a new earth" (Revelation 21:1),
it is to be restored more gloriously adorned than at the beginning.
Then they that have kept God's commandments shall breathe
in immortal vigor beneath the tree of life; and through unending
ages the inhabitants of sinless worlds shall behold, in that garden
of delight, a sample of the perfect work of God's creation, untouched
by the curse of sin—a sample of what the whole earth
would have become, had man but fulfilled the Creator's glorious
plan.
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