Inside: We don’t know why Eve didn’t go straight to God for help when she was first tempted in the garden. But we do know He is ready and willing to rescue us in our times of testing and temptation.
There are some details missing from the story of Adam and Eve in the Garden of Eden, particulars we might think of as biblical fact that aren’t there at all.
The Bible doesn’t actually say, for example, what their relationship with God really looked like. It doesn’t specify how often they experienced His presence and heard His actual voice.
But based on Gen. 3:3, which says they “heard the sound of the Lord God as He was walking in the garden in the cool of the day,” it’s not unreasonable to assume they spent enough time near Him to know what His presence sounded like.
Inconceivable
I can’t imagine what it might have been like to be in such close fellowship with God—completely comfortable and free from the slightest trace of guilt or shame. Whatever it was like, that’s what Adam and Eve experienced.
Then Satan, cleverly disguised as a serpent, tempted them to eat fruit from the one tree in the Garden that God declared off limits. Forget all the other delicious fruit they’d been eating since Day One. Now, suddenly (or maybe not so suddenly), they want the one they aren’t supposed to have.
That’s how it always is, isn’t it? No wonder Ruth Bell Graham calls it the testing tree in her lovely children’s book One Wintry Night.
If Only
I’m pointing no fingers at Eve. I might have done exactly what she did if I had been in her place. It makes me sad, though, that her first inclination was not to run to her Creator and ask for help when that serpent first appeared.
This is what conscientious parents teach their children to do, right? I know it’s a lesson Randy and I have tried to impart to our daughters over the years.
“Girls,” we’ve told them, “if you find yourself in a situation or conversation and you don’t know what to do, or you have a funny feeling about it, or you know something’s not right, don’t wait—come and talk to us about it.”
And They Do
“Mom, I need to talk to you,” one will say. And she takes me to the bedroom, shuts the door and asks a question or tells me what’s on her mind. I go into these conversations with a bit of trepidation because I never know what to expect, but I cherish them nonetheless.
Whatever it is, I always want them to ask or tell me. I always want them to feel like they can tell me.
Not that I’m always a big help. I remember Lilly coming home in second grade and quizzing me—more than once, as I recall—about a word she had heard at school.
“Is funk a bad word?” she wanted to know.
“No, of course not,” I answered, without giving it a second thought. “It’s like a rotten mood or something.”
Oops
Take a wild guess where this is about to go.
I’m sure I heard an occasional cuss word in second grade. But I was not prepared for my innocent little girl to be exposed to the granddaddy of all bad words at that age. So it didn’t even register that she might be asking about the obvious four-letter word that starts with F.
Turns out, it was that word, not funk, that she was asking about. A too-knowledgeable-for-his-own-good classmate had gotten a big kick out of teaching her to say it, and their conversation had been overheard by a teacher at recess.
It Gets Worse
By the time the students had been ushered back to the classroom to deal with this little crisis, Lilly was so frustrated that she exclaimed—loudly and in front of everyone—“But I don’t even know what @#$% means!”
I’m happy to report that she remembers none of this. But talk about dropping the mom ball. Yikes.
Fortunately, God never drops the ball in such situations.
The still small Voice. That feeling we get when we know something’s not right. That specific bit of Scripture that speaks directly into our soul. That’s Him, letting us know which way is the right way, and which way is not.
Which Makes Me Wonder
When the serpent first appeared, why in the name of all things good and holy didn’t Eve get that funny feeling in the pit of her stomach that would have sent her running straight to God? Or, if she did get it, why didn’t she heed it?
There’s no way to know, of course. But still, I can’t help but wonder.
Part of me thinks if Eve didn’t do this, and she physically walked in the presence of God, what hope is there for any of us? But then I think of another tree, and what Jesus did there—the reason He did it and the finality of His sacrifice. And I know there is always a chance, and another chance, and another chance.
It’s called grace. And how lost we would be without it.
♥ Lois
I might have done exactly what Eve did if I had been in her place. But I wonder why her first inclination was not to run to her Creator and ask for help when that serpent first appeared. Share on X The still small Voice, that specific bit of Scripture that speaks directly into our soul—that’s God, letting us know which way is the right way, and which way is not. Share on XP.S. This is an updated version of a post that was first published in 2014. This week, I’m linking up with #tellhisstory, InstaEncouragements, Recharge Wednesday, Let’s Have Coffee and Grace & Truth.
20 comments
Oh, poor girl! What a misunderstanding! But that will stick with me. So glad God always wants us to come to Him, and that we can right away, knowing He is our ever-present help! Thanks for this reflection, Lois.
I’m glad for that too, Bethany. Such a comfort …
Oh, the naivete of a child. 🙂 I had moments like that too. Yes, grace! We all need it.
So true, Lisa. Daily and in large doses!
Interestingly, I was just reading this account in my devotional time this morning. I only say interestingly because I know it is not a coincidence. As you said, we will never really know – but certainly we know just how cunning, clever and deceitful our enemy is. Always has been and always will be –
That’s a very good point, Jennifer. Even more reason to run to the Father first, right? 😊
Our human nature is so prone to take the advice of others rather than going directly to God, isn’t it? This is so comforting – “But then I think of another tree, and what Jesus did there—the reason He did it and the finality of His sacrifice. And I know there is always a chance, and another chance, and another chance.” Oh yes, how lost we would be without His amazing grace! Love and blessings to you, Lois!
It’s called grace. And how lost we would be without it.
I’m glad you found this to be comforting, Trudy. It’s been helping me lately too. Hugs, dear friend.
There is so much I wonder about that incident with Eve. Not with blame–as you said, I might have (probably would have) done the same. Maybe in her innocence, she didn’t recognize temptation or wiliness. Still, it seems like her fellowship with God would have led her to trust His word rather than a serpent’s who was trying to discredit Him. Then again–we do the same even there, giving way to temptation when we should know better. But I am so thankful for Jesus did on the other tree so we could be forgiven.
Me too, Barbara. Maybe someday we’ll have the chance to ask about all this. Or else it will get placed in the pile of topics we no longer care about when we’re enjoying eternity. 😊
Always good, Lois.
Thanks, Susan. ❤️
You’ve got me thinking here, Lois. I’m wondering if this lack of running to God had to do with the innocence… they had not yet eaten of the tree of good and evil – therefore, Eve had no idea what it was. She didn’t have that warning sign in her stomach because she had only known good… but then i wonder… does that mean there was no skepticism too? There was no incredulity? I don’t know. What I know is that we do! We have that crazy stomach feeling, that incredulity and skepticism. And God is always ready to answer. Thank you for the thoughts and reminder today, Lois.
Sarah, those are great questions about what Adam and Eve may have experienced. Hmmmm … 😊 And yes, in the absence of answers, we can be thankful for the tools God has provided to help US obey Him.
Lois,
It’s so easy for me to look at others’ situations and wonder — why didn’t they go immediately to God with this one? Then I look back on my own stubbornness, sense of self-sufficiency, even pride, and I see that God is not my immediate default mechanism. Perhaps it’s human nature — we think we have it covered…until we don’t. Thank you for a timely reminder to ask God for help at the first sign of trouble.
Blessings,
Bev xx
I see that same tendency in myself, Bev. Even after publishing this post, I’ve needed to remind myself … wait, you should pray about this! Hugs, friend.
What a great story! May we learn to follow our intuition (that still, small voice) instead of squashing it or ignoring it. God has promised to whisper in our ear which way to go—but if we stick our fingers down n our ears, we won’t hear him
Ugh, I hear you, Anita (pun intended)! Sticking fingers down our ears might be out first response, but it never solves anything, does it?
Lois, hi! it’s like the older we get, the more we realize how much we need to go right to the Lord instead of trying to figure everything out on our own. how much time was wasted along the way thinking we had to have the answers, the solutions, the magic wand.
this is a season of resting, of peace, of quiet minds and hearts. it’s hard won but well worth the wait. even in the bad times.
“Go right to the Lord.” Linda, I need to write that down and post it all over my house, in my car, on the treadmill … love to you in this resting season.