Now the serpent was more subtil
than any beast of the field which the Lord God had
made. And he said unto the woman, Yea, hath God said, Ye shall not eat of every
tree of the garden? (Genesis 3:1)
I have wondered for a while why the writer of Genesis used a
serpent to represent Satan in the story of the Fall.
Lately, because of some experiences I’ve had, I’ve realized
why. As Genesis says, the serpent was more subtle than any beast, and Satan is
also subtle. Satan will slither
into our thoughts just like a snake when we don’t notice and he will try to
plant some lie there. If we’re not aware, we will believe it, and then we’ll
make choices based on the lie, which will get us into trouble.
So what do we do? We have to do our best to club him to
death when we are presented with his lies or notice them sneaking in.
When God confronts Satan for tempting Adam and Eve, He says
this:
And I will put enmity between thee
and the woman, and between thy seed and her seed; it shall bruise thy head, and
thou shalt bruise his heel. (Genesis 3:15)
That bruising the serpent’s head expresses beating down the
lies and not listening to them. Satan keeps trying to tempt us though, so we
have to kill the lies over and over again.
In the temple narrative, however, God says something
slightly different. Instead of saying that the seed of the woman would bruise Satan’s head, God says the woman’s
seed will crush the serpent’s
head. To me that prophesies of
several things: 1) how Christ would resist every temptation presented to Him,
2) that Christ would defeat spiritual death with the atonement, 3) that Christ
would overcome physical death so we would not be endlessly dead and subject to
the devil, and 4) that with Christ’s help we will be able to resist temptation.
I take great comfort in that bit about crushing the serpent’s
head. If I can keep beating down the lies as they are presented, by the grace
of God, someday they will be crushed, never more to rise again.
3 comments:
Snakes also have a split tongue, which is why when he says that eve will not die but be as the gods it is half lie and half true. His words are deceptive.
Isn't it best to discuss the temple narrative only inside the temple?
Does it seem like I'm breaking any promises to write what I did?
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