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Genesis
Chapter 2

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Book of Genesis Chapter Two

Audio Bible Study - Genesis 2:1-5

Verse 1. "Thus the heavens and the earth were completed, and all their hosts."

This verse and the ones that immediately follow are like a flourish, a brief statement of what was already reported in Chapter One. The “heavens and the earth” were now complete, put into place by a series of sudden, dramatic events ordained and carried-out by Almighty God. More detail about the Creation of all that was and is will be added in this Chapter, which can be viewed somewhat as a “microscopic” view of certain aspects of Creation, as opposed to the “macroscopic” view reported in Chapter One.

Moses, the human author of this Book we call “Genesis,” was prompted to write by the same Holy Spirit who was seen “hovering over the face of the waters” in Genesis 1:2. The Spirit not only participated in our Creation, but He also does much more – all the Books in the Bible came into being through His prompts to willing hearts. Those who are willing to have faith in the Lord, such as Moses, along with you and me, receive that Spirit, who gives men and women the ability to write and speak the words that come from God. The “heavens and the earth were completed,” and so are we when we trust in the Lord.

Verse 2. "By the seventh day God completed His work which He had done, and He rested on the seventh day from all His work which He had done."

Everything was done; there was nothing more to do. Galaxies, bacteria, land animals, plant life, sea creatures, the many species that fly in the air – it was all complete. Complex processes like photosynthesis were occurring. The various gases and other substances in the atmosphere and the seas – it was all there. No evolutionary developments were needed because there was nothing more to do. In the universe, one form of energy might be turning into another, but no new matter or energy was being brought into the universe through black holes or any other source. The work was “done” and that is what is meant by “rested” in these verses.

When we take a day, such as the “Sabbath,” and rest from all of our work, we are giving credence to these verses in Genesis, whether we know it or not. If we select a day like Saturday or Sunday and abstain from work, it is a day to reflect that it was God who created all things in finished form and nothing more was needed. Maple trees, fir trees, Banyan trees, all were in existence at that time and there was no need for one type of life to evolve into another.

Verse 3. "Then God blessed the seventh day and sanctified it, because in it He rested from all His work which God had created and made."

And now on the seventh day, “Godrested.” He was not in any way tired for He is God. It was simply – done! Unlike Him, we DO need rest, which is reflected in His commandment that we not only rest on one day of the week, called the “Sabbath,” but also we are to encourage others to rest as well (Exodus 20:8-11). The Pharisees, a group of religious leaders at the time of Jesus, interpreted this as merely a day when no work was to be done, but it’s more. This “rest” is an opportunity to remember the God who created us; to ponder Him, to discover His sufficiency for us and find His great love. As it says in Hebrews 4, we enter the “rest” of God when we trust in His Son.

It is a rest from struggling to find God on our own terms. When Jesus was asked, “What shall we do, that we may work the works of God?” He answered, “This is the work of God, that you believe in Him whom He has sent” (John 6:28-29). The simple act of believing, of having honest faith in the Lord is what has characterized every man and woman of God who has ever lived. As it says in Hebrews 4:3, “we who have believed enter that rest.”

Verse 4. "This is the account of the heavens and the earth when they were created, in the day that the Lord God made earth and heaven."

We know from Genesis Chapter One that six days were involved in the creation of all that is. The Hebrew for “day” in each of those creative events is the word “yom,” and a form of that word is used in this verse as well, but with a difference. In this verse, the six days of Genesis One are described as “the day” when “the Lord God made earth and heaven.” In other words, “yom” can mean one day or it can refer to an event that took several days. In other places it can also refer to an indeterminate period of time.

The variety of meanings that can be attached to this word have given rise to differing theories about the meaning of the word “day” in the preceding chapter. Some have taught that each “day” in Genesis One could be hundreds, thousands, even millions of years in length, but the wording of that Chapter does not support such a theory. God spoke and “called the light Day, and the darkness He called night; so the evening and the morning were the first day” (Genesis 1:5). That verse spoke of the rotation of the planet on its axis in relation to a source of light in space. Those were simply “days,” which may have been slightly longer or shorter than the 24-hours we know, but they were “days” in a way that all can understand.

Verse 5. "Now no shrub of the field was yet in the earth, and no plant of the field had yet sprouted, for the Lord God had not sent rain upon the earth, and there was no man to cultivate the ground."

When it says in this verse that “no shrub of the field was yet in the earth, and no plant of the field had yet sprouted,” the emphasis is on the word, “field.” In other words, farming was not in existence at that moment because there were not yet any people to do the cultivating and reaping of crops. It does not mean that some of the plants came into being after the creation of mankind.

As we will see in this verse and in Verse 6, the hydrosphere, the water-systems, and the atmosphere of this planet were not quite the same at that time as they are now. Presently there is no protective “belt” of water at the top of the atmosphere, as we saw in Genesis 1:6-7. It subsequently FELL during the Genesis Flood and is presently within the great ocean basins of our present time. Another very interesting difference is, as this verse relates, that there was no “rain upon the earth,” which will be discussed in the next verse.

Father, You created us; You created all things.  We are Your creation and so is everything and everyone in our lives.  We love You and place our trust in the Lord.  We praise Your Holy Name.  In Jesus Name.  Amen.

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Audio Bible Study - Genesis 2:6-10

Verse 6. "But a mist used to rise from the earth and water the whole surface of the ground."

The topography of the earth at the time of these verses included shallow seas and much larger land masses than today. The vegetation was lush, but the land did not receive water in the same way it does at the present time. As it was said in Verse 5, “the Lord God had not sent rain upon the earth.” He used another method: “a mist used to rise from the earth and water the whole surface of the ground." This dense, fog-like condition carried a lot of water; enough to soak - everything! This was even though probably fifty percent of today’s water was, at that time, suspended above the atmosphere, as we saw in Genesis 1:7-8.

This created a greenhouse effect on the earth which ended at the time of the Genesis Flood. The absence of rain probably meant there were no clouds, either, and the orbital water was likely in the form of ice or ice particles, undoubtedly altering the appearance of the sky for an observer on the ground. The greenhouse effect of the orbital water, along with the dense, humid fog-like conditions occurring daily at ground level, is consistent with the stratified record of the tropical earth conditions that existed in the far distant past.

Verse 7. "Then the Lord God formed man of dust from the ground, and breathed into his nostrils the breath of life; and man became a living being."

We were given a glimpse of the creation of humanity in Genesis 1:26 & forward. Now in this Chapter, God's creative event is shown once more, but this time it’s a closer look from a different perspective. If the universe was not made out of previously created materials, as some say, humanity WAS made from previous materials – out of the common "dust from the ground." It is true that the same fourteen or so elements that are found in ordinary dirt, are the same fourteen or so that occur within our bodies. And note that this was not the “dust” of the Garden of Eden, for the man would be placed INTO the Garden, AFTER he was formed (Verse 8).

It was not necessary for God to initiate this secondary process for our creation, and so He must have had a specific purpose in doing it in this manner. An important purpose, of course, is to create in us a tendency toward humility rather than pride. If we are made out of the "dust from the ground," it is more difficult for us to be proud about who we are and what we think of our accomplishments.

At the instant the events in this verse began, the process of breathing and the circulation of bodily fluids had not yet begun occurring within the “man” of this verse. He was formed on the sixth day, but he was still dead, not yet alive. God not only formed us, but He also generated LIFE into us. Without the creative action of God, we are physically dead. Without the creative touch of God, we are no more than animals, and without Him, we are spiritually dead. With Him, we are made ALIVE.

Verse 8. "The Lord God planted a garden toward the east, in Eden; and there He placed the man whom He had formed."

Thousands of years later, when 72-Jews in Egypt were translating the Old Testament from Hebrew into the Greek language of the time, they searched for a word to use in translating the word “Eden” in this verse, into the Greek. The word they selected was “Paradiso,” which has come into English as the word “Paradise.” When Jesus was being crucified, 2000 years ago, He turned to the thief on another cross who had just said, “Jesus, remember me when You come in Your kingdom,” and He replied, “Truly I say to you, today you shall be with Me in Paradise” (Luke 23:42-43). The word that Jesus used in the New Testament rendering of that account was “Paradiso.” The repentant thief would be in Eden.

It was in Paradiso, in Eden, that the Lord God placed Adam, the man whom He had formed and it was to Eden that the repentant thief went after his death. The way into Eden was soon to be closed to mankind after the moment of this verse in Genesis, but the way is once again open in Christ Jesus, our Savior and Lord. God has very special and positive plans for us. Our future is bright, beautiful and filled with wonder. After the Fall of man, the world was still beautiful, but significantly less so than Eden. After the Flood, it was less beautiful still. Even today, after we have polluted our nest for thousands of years, there is still much beauty in the world. This place is degenerating, but our future contains certain HOPE in Christ Jesus our Lord.

Verse 9. "Out of the ground the Lord God caused to grow every tree that is pleasing to the sight and good for food; the tree of life also in the midst of the garden, and the tree of the knowledge of good and evil."

This “garden” was very special. It was wonderful to an extent that we cannot even imagine it. The trees that God “caused to grow” contained fruit that was “pleasing to the sight and good for food." It would stagger us if we knew the extent of them. When we go into a market, there are a few kinds of fruit, often including apples, bananas, oranges and pears, etc., but the kinds in Eden were more than we know. It is said that in the geologic column, there is evidence that for every kind of animal or plant that we have in existence today, there are at least hundreds that are no longer in existence on this earth.

What must any “supermarkets” have been like before the Flood? What was the food in Eden like before the Fall? The earliest people were vegetarians and it would not have occurred to them to be anything else, because what they had been given was so “pleasing” and so “good.” Every vitamin and mineral was provided. Every need was met. And their taste buds were utterly satisfied by what was offered to them. There was no such thing as obesity; no such thing as need. They had it all.

And they lived in a world where only one thing could go wrong. They were given “LIFE” through the "tree of life," whatever it was, and they were given a test in the form of this “tree of the knowledge of good and evil,” which we will see again in Verse 17.

Verse 10. "Now a river flowed out of Eden to water the garden; and from there it divided and became four rivers."

An objection to this verse and the verses that follow, has been based on the assumption that Eden, as a “garden” would be a somewhat flat place – how then, they have wondered, could such a place produce a significant “riverthat became four rivers?” Looking around today’s world, we can see rivers that flow from high places, formed in mountainous places, producing water from snow-melt, and we conclude, “that’s the way it happens!” But not always.

Like the food we eat, which seems to the come from the money we earn, but in reality, the food (and the money) really comes from God, the real source of all water and everything else – comes from Him. In Ezekiel 47:1 & its context, Ezekiel the prophet was taken by the Lord to the Temple and he was shown water, a lot of water, flowing out of that Temple. It only came up to his ankles initially as it flowed from that place, but the further away he went, the deeper it became. It went up to his knees, his waist and then it reached a depth where he would have had to swim. Water does not merely come from the mountains, the Temple or the Garden of Eden – it comes from God.

Lord, we need You.  We can see from these verses that You created everything, including our own bodies, and that much has been lost from this world.  Since You are the creator and sustainer of life, we entrust ourselves to You.  Thank You, Lord, for creating us, and for re-creating us in Christ Jesus.  We praise Your Holy Name.  In Jesus Name.  Amen.

Audio Bible Study - Genesis 2:11-15

Verse 11. "The name of the first is Pishon; it flows around the whole land of Havilah, where there is gold."

As we saw in Verse 10, a significant river streamed from the Garden of Eden, flowing out to other parts of the world. The river “divided and became four rivers” and this verse names one of them, the river “Pishon,” a word that may be translated as “freely flowing.” The word “Havilah” may best translate as “sand-land.” The name “Havilah” is found several times in the Old Testament, referring to a son of Cush (Genesis 10:7), a descendent of Shem (Genesis 10:29), and is mentioned as a geographical place in 1 Samuel 15:7.

However, there is an intervening force that came upon the world, called the Genesis Flood, which began in Genesis 7, unleashing powerful topographic changes on the earth to the extent that it is unlikely that ANYTHING survived its furious impact. The sheer weight of the water, along with the earthquakes and volcanism that accompanied it, utterly destroyed the earth that existed before that time. “Havilah” and its “gold” are no more. The name lasted in the memory of the Flood’s survivors, but the place did not survive.

Verse 12. "The gold of that land is good; the bdellium and the onyx stone are there."

This verse contains the first hint that metal workers, artisans that fashioned substances such as gold into beautiful and no-doubt costly shapes, existed early in human history. The “gold” which was mined in the place called “Havilah” in Verse 11, was considered “good” by those who refined and fashioned it into a variety of shapes and for differing uses. “Good” in that context means that it was relatively pure – little refining was needed and its color was likely clear and beautiful.

The nature of “bdellium” is less certain. Some have thought it was a gum or resin. Others have proposed that it was a precious stone or perhaps a pearl. In the Book of Numbers, the manna was described as “the color of bdellium” (Numbers 11:7). As for the “onyx stone,” it is also called the “sardonyx,” and it is interesting that two onyx stones were engraved with the names of the 12-tribes of Israel and placed on the ephod of the priests. Such stones were mined in the land of Havilah, a place that contained the river Pishon, mentioned in Verse 11.

Verse 13. "The name of the second river is Gihon; it flows around the whole land of Cush."

The “second river” that flowed out of the Garden of Eden was named “Gihon,” which can be translated, “burst-forth,” suggesting that the currents of that river were especially powerful. The name “Gihon” survived into the future, even though the river itself did not. When Solomon was anointed to succeed his father, David, as king of Israel (1 Kings 1:32-40), the ceremony was done at a spring near Jerusalem called “Gihon.”

Cush” was a son of Ham, probably the oldest son, since he was listed first among his brothers (Genesis 10:6, 1 Chronicles 1:8). Cush was the grandson of Noah the ark-builder, and Cush’s name can be translated as “black.” He lived on after the flood, so the land of Cush was not named after him. It was the other way around – the man was likely named in memory of the first land of Cush that was no more.

Verse 14. "The name of the third river is Tigris; it flows east of Assyria and the fourth river is the Euphrates."

The third and fourth branches of the river that flowed out of the Garden of Eden, had familiar names: the “Tigris” (“tiger” in the Greek language, but in the Hebrew Bible it was called “Hiddekel” – “rapid”) and the “Euphrates” (“that which makes fruitful”); names that are well-known all over the modern world because of the war in Iraq. The Tigris arises in the Taurus Mountains of Eastern Turkey, flowing southeast until it joins the Euphrates and both flow together into the Persian Gulf. The Euphrates originates in the Kargapazari Mountains.

But these rivers are not the original Tigris and Euphrates. At the time of the Great Flood, much like the time when the Jordan River was parted for the people of Israel, “the mountains skipped like rams” (Psalm 115:4). Underneath the waters of the Great Flood, great earthquakes occurred, volcanoes spewed forth magma, and that which was soon to be land once more was forever changed. The few survivors remembered the names that existed from the world that was now gone. Much like the colonists that went to America often named their towns after cities in the Old World, Noah and his family gave names to rivers and other places that were memories of that which had been destroyed.

Verse 15. "Then the Lord God took the man and put him into the Garden of Eden to cultivate it and keep it."

This was the sixth day of creation, which was first glimpsed in Genesis 1:26. The “man” of that verse was the same as the “man,” the “Adam” seen here. There was more, for as it continued in Genesis 1:27, “male and female He created them,” and both were in the “image of God.” We will hear more about the “female” part of all this when we get to Verse 22, but for now we will see the man, who seems to have become a farmer in this verse, but he was also to have “dominion” over all the creatures of the earth, as stated in Genesis 1:26.

He was essentially to be the GOVERNOR of all that exists on this planet. We were and are destined to RULE, in the spirit, power and love of God. It’s interesting that the man was not placed into the Garden to relax, but he was immediately given a function – “to cultivate it and keep it.” In a place ostensibly of rest, he had work to do. Eternity will be like that – it will not be angels reclining on clouds strumming on harps, though music and praise to God will be in that place; but it will instead be a place full of eternal purpose, significance and joy.

Lord, help us to understand Your Word.  Open this Book we call the Bible to our understanding, and let us use it, in the power of God, as a way to help others understand.  Fill us with Your Holy Spirit, that we may see Your purpose for our lives, and be useful in Your service.  In Jesus Name.  Amen.

Audio Bible Study - Genesis 2:16-20

Verse 16. "The Lord God commanded the man, saying, "From any tree of the garden you may eat freely;"

There was an incredible variety of trees in the "Garden," with more forms of fruits and other edible vegetation than we even remotely know about. For a vegetarian today, the struggle is to find and eat sufficient amounts of protein. Beans are protein, but endless beans would not be the solution for most people. At the time of this verse in Genesis, it was not a problem. Every type of delicious, nutritious fruit, vegetable and nut was there for them, each moment and at all times.

That’s what this verse says was given to mankind in the beginning – vegetables and fruits. The very thought of eating meat would have been disgusting to them. It would have been impossible anyway, for death did not exist and anyone who harmed God’s creatures would have been subject to the judgment of God. Much later, the eating of meat would be allowed, but that was only after the available fruits and vegetables were sharply reduced in type and number through the action of the Genesis Flood.

Verse 17. "but from the tree of the knowledge of good and evil you shall not eat, for in the day that you eat from it you will surely die."

Two of the many trees in the Garden of Eden were remarkably different from all the others. One of them was a unique gift and the other was to be a test, which was to be this “tree of the knowledge of good and evil.” It was not an “apple” or “pomegranate,” as some have thought. It was unique, special; different from all the others. Can you imagine a world in which only one thing could go wrong? This was it. There were not dozens or hundreds of things you or I could bungle today – there was only one.

This was a world where there was no sickness, sorrow, death or loss of any kind. The world Adam tended was filled with animals that would never die. Also, our first ancestors were innocent to a degree beyond our comprehension. Because we are not innocent, we cannot truly appreciate people who were in that condition. We don’t even know how they thought. This man, this Adam, never heard of crime, and if he did not make the one mistake represented by this "tree," he would surely have lived in innocence forever.

Verse 18. "Then the Lord God said, "It is not good for the man to be alone; I will make him a helper suitable for him."

There is a deep need in us all to share who and what we are. This basic hunger is often repressed, however, for we can be hurt so badly that sharing becomes painful. But the need is real and it is still there, buried in our pain. And just like the Lord God who created us looked into the man and saw his need, He looks into you. David understood. He said about God, “O Lord, You have searched me and known me. You know when I sit down and when I rise up. You understand my thoughts from afar” (Psalm 139:1).

If you are lonely, He knows it. Sometimes there can be lots of people around you, but they don’t perceive your need and you are “lonely in a crowded room.” As to Adam, note that God created for him “a helper SUITABLE for him.” God has a “suitable” solution for your every need, and if you doubt that, look to Jesus Christ, for He became a human being who personally knows your sorrow. “As in Adam all die, even so in Christ all shall be made alive” (1 Corinthians 15:22).  He intends to give you LIFE!  And if you decide to marry, take a job, move to someplace else or make any other decision - PRAY.  He has the answer "suitable" for your need.

Verse 19. "Out of the ground the Lord God formed every beast of the field and every bird of the sky, and brought them to the man to see what he would call them; and whatever the man called a living creature, that was its name.”

Before God found it necessary to “confuse” humanity’s ability to communicate (Genesis 11:7 & context), there was only one proto-language on the whole earth. Every object, each concept, everything imaginable had a name or names that perfectly described what was meant, resulting in perfect communication for every situation. This original language was built right into the brain cells of the first man and women, and it was also clearly understood by their children.  Adam utterly KNEW and was able to recite the name of each type of life that is on this planet.

The action of this verse in Genesis 2 can be compared to the testing of a new computer program. The man had been given extensive language skills and now it would be seen whether or not those skills were functioning perfectly. God knew the outcome, but Adam and the rest of us did not know the extent of his skills, and this exercise would reveal them. And note the freedom to choose that was given to Adam. He would provide the names for all that is. And see his intelligence. There is no botanist, chemist, or any other kind of scientist in the world that can recite the names of every plant and animal on earth, and when you consider that a very large number of original species of animals and plants are now extinct, Adam’s feat was very great indeed.

Verse 20. "The man gave names to all the cattle, and to the birds of the sky, and to every beast of the field, but for Adam there was not found a helper suitable for him."

The ability of the man, Adam, to “give names to all the cattlebirds of the skyand every beast of the field,” does suggest a very high intelligence. He named every “living creature” as it said in Verse 19. The phrase undoubtedly includes insects of all kinds, a staggering feat for anyone of any time. When these events occurred, there was no confusion of languages like we have today. Adam had been given, at his creation, the verbal expression for the true essence of everything that existed and he faithfully recited every one of them.  His performance also took a great deal of time to complete.

This may have been like a testing of his “circuits,” to see how effectively he would respond. The words that we choose to say, reveal who we are. Adam was undoubtedly intelligent, and considering the character of God, the man was likely the smartest person who has ever lived. God selected him for his unique position as the first born, the representative of the entire human race that was to come. Not only his intellect, but also his emotions were fully in operation as revealed by this verse – he was lonely!

Lord, we know that You reach into our every need and know everything about us.  You know our abilities and our weaknesses.  Show us the way we should go and help us to walk in the way everlasting.  Forgive us our sins and bring us to faith in Your Son.  Fill us with Your Spirit and introduce us to the fulfilling innocence that You offer to us all. Thank You, Lord.  In Jesus Name.  Amen.

Audio Bible Study - Genesis 2:21-25

Verse 21. "So the Lord God caused a deep sleep to fall upon the man, and he slept; then He took one of his ribs and closed up the flesh at that place."

God, through the human writer, Moses, now gives us a closer look at the process involved in the creation of the “helper suitable” for Adam, who was mentioned in Verses 18 and 20. It’s interesting that one of the co-discoverers of the anesthetics used in surgery got his idea from reading this passage. Since Adam needed to be in a “deep sleep” in order for God, the Great Physician, to perform surgery on him, it suggests that the man was truly a physical being, even before the Fall of Mankind, though it is possible, even likely that his body was not precisely the same as ours today. Sin had not yet left its mark.

He lived in a place where there were no thorns, nothing in the Garden that would be thought of as a “weed;” there were no problems compared to what we have in the world today; and all the animals were herbivores. There were no meat-eaters because there was no death. But he would have felt pain from the surgery God was performing at the moment, and so “God caused a deep sleep” to fall on him. The side of his body was opened up and something of Adam was removed from his body.

Verse 22. "The Lord God fashioned into a woman the rib which He had taken from the man, and brought her to the man."

It can be noticed at the time of these verses that Adam possessed an utter compliance to the will and purposes of God. He had the faith of a child in the Lord’s good intentions in all that He did. Adam did not complain or run away from the surgery mentioned in Verse 21; he merely submitted, which suggests that, before the Fall that is written about in Chapter 3, that Adam and subsequently Eve, his wife, had utter faith in God.  Something like, but not the same as what we call "cloning," was about to occur.

Many have wondered, how could something small like a “rib” from a man, be “fashioned” into another person, a woman? But it did happen.  Adam was made out of the dust of the ground, which we saw in Verse 7. This “woman” was “fashioned” from the man, for as we will see in Verse 23, the two were to be “one” in a deeper way than probably any of us can understand. She was undoubtedly beautiful, he was good-looking as well, and they were delighted as they saw each other for the first time.

Verse 23. "The man said, 'This is now bone of my bones, and flesh of my flesh; She shall be called Woman, because she was taken out of Man."

Did God need to fashion the woman in the manner described in these verses? Not at all! God could have simply spoken and she would have been, or He could have made her out of the dust of the ground as He did with the man who was to be her husband. Therefore it is very important for us to recognize and believe that the manner of creation is just like it says in these verses, for it will help us to see the purposes of God in the creation of mankind. The marriage of a man (Hebrew “Ish” in this verse) and woman (Hebrew “Isshah“) MATTERS to our God. The two in marriage are to be one.

Eve must have been very beautiful. The way this verse is worded certainly indicates that Adam thought so. With these words, he ABSOLUTELY accepted her into his heart and life. Adam was in love. Paul the Apostle observed that “husbands ought to love their own wives as their own bodies” (Ephesians 5:28). As Adam loved Eve and with the Lord's love in us, husbands are to love their wives: “Husbands, love your wives, just as Christ also loved the church and gave Himself up for her,” we are taught in Ephesians 5:25.

Verse 24. "For this reason a man shall leave his father and his mother, and be joined to his wife; and they shall become one flesh.”

There is no doubt that the first marriage in humanity is recorded within these verses. The man emphatically said “I do” and "I will" in relation to the woman given to him by God. He KNEW she was God’s gift, and he was very grateful. And so should we all be grateful if God has given us to someone and them to us. “Love” is listed as one of the “fruits of the Spirit” in Galatians 5:22-23. In other words, love comes from God. When we are open to Him, we become open to His love.

It is reflected in Genesis 1:28 that God commanded these first humans to “be fruitful and multiply, fill the earth…” Would the method of procreation that we know today be the same as it was intended in the beginning? Maybe, maybe not. We do know that the pain of childbirth did not exist until after the fall of mankind, as recorded in Genesis 3:16. It may be there were other differences as well. But whatever the method, the children that resulted were to “leave father andmother,” and “be joined” to one another; leaving one family and forming another. God has indicated his blessing on marriage and the family, right from the beginning. Some do misuse the gift of marriage, but marriage between a man and a woman is from Him.

Verse 25. "And the man and his wife were both naked and were not ashamed."

It’s interesting that Adam and Eve wore no clothing and yet they had no shame at all. They were innocent of any wrong and so they were “not ashamed.” Corrie Ten Boom, the Dutch woman who survived a Nazi death camp, often said about us: “We feel guilty because we are guilty.” At the moment of this verse, Adam and Eve were not guilty. There is nothing wrong with our bodies, including our reproductive organs. And the answer to the question - should we then run around naked? is – no we should not. It would be confusing to others and it would not be proper.

There is a reason why we are ashamed. From the moment of the sin of Adam and Eve, they tried to cover themselves. They “knew they were naked” and inadequately tried to cover themselves with leaves sewn together. The parts of themselves they covered were their reproductive organs. They knew their sin not only involved themselves, but it also included every person of every time who would come from them. They were ashamed of the great harm they had done to the human race and wanted to cover the very parts of their bodies that would bring us forth. You can see the vestigial remnant of their shame by merely going to the beach and looking at sun bathers. What parts of them are covered? Their reproductive organs. - Subconsciously, we all understand, and in response, we cover ourselves.

Father, You give us rest, companionship and fulfillment.  We turn to You, confessing our sins and we place our trust in Your Son.  We surrender, knowing that we can safely give our lives to You.  Thank You.  We praise Your Holy Name.  In Jesus Name. Amen.

Ron Beckham, Pastor
Friday Study Ministries

www.FirstChurchOnTheNet.org
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Write to:
Ron@FridayStudy.org
"While we were yet sinners, Christ died for us" (Romans 5:8)
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