Nourish Reading for June 14th – The Choice That Confronted Adam

Greetings friends,

last Sunday Martin mentioned Eve’s temptation in the Garden of Eden and how we all need to cling to God’s word to keep ourselves from being deceived – it was a timely message for the day we live in – for any day!  And so as I was thinking about what we might study at Nourish this week I remembered that Watchman Nee has something helpful to say on this topic of the choice Eve (and Adam) made in the garden. I believe it helps fill out more of the picture of our predicament as sons and daughters of Adam and Eve and the solution.  The quote below comes from the second half of ch 7 of Nee’s Normal Christian Life which ironically, is where we paused some nourishes ago.  I hope it fuels some more lively discussion for us as we look at God’s amazing salvation through Jesus our Lord. See you at the next study – Glenn.

The Choice That Confronted Adam

God planted a great number of trees in the garden of Eden, but “in the midst of the garden” — that is, in a place of special prominence – He planted two trees, the tree of life and the tree of the knowledge of good and evil. Adam was created innocent; he had no knowledge of good and evil. Think of a grown man, say thirty years old, who has no sense of right or wrong, no power to differentiate between the two! Would you not say such a man was undeveloped? Well, that is exactly what Adam was. And God brings him into the garden and says to him, in effect, `Now the garden is full of trees, full of fruits, and of the fruit of every tree you may eat freely. But in the very midst of the garden is one tree called “the tree of the knowledge of good and evil”; you must not eat of that, for in the day that you do so you will surely die. But remember, the name of the other tree close by is Life.’ What, then, is the meaning of these two trees? Adam was, so to speak, created morally neutral — neither sinful nor holy, but innocent — and God put those two trees there so that he might exercise free choice. He could choose the tree of life, or he could choose the tree of the knowledge of good and evil.

Now the knowledge of good and evil, though forbidden to Adam, is not wrong in itself. Without it however Adam is in a sense limited in that he cannot decide for himself on moral issues. Judgment of right and wrong resides not in him but in God, and Adam’s only course when faced with any question is to refer it to Jehovah God. Thus you have a life in the garden which is totally dependent on God. These two trees, then, typify two deep principles; they represent two planes of life, the Divine and the human. The “tree of life” is God Himself, for God is life. He is the highest form of life, and He is also the source and goal of life. And the fruit: what is that? It is our Lord Jesus Christ. You cannot eat the tree but you can eat the fruit. No one is able to receive God as God, but we can receive the Lord Jesus. The fruit is the edible part, the receivable part of the tree. So — may I say it reverently? — the Lord Jesus is really God in a receivable form. God in Christ we can receive.

If Adam should take of the tree of life, he would partake of the life of God and thus become a `son’ of God, in the sense of having in him a life that derived from God. There you would have God’s life in union with man: a race of men having the life of God in them and living in constant dependence upon God for that life. If on the other hand Adam should turn the other way and take the fruit of the tree of the knowledge of good and evil, then he would develop his own manhood along natural lines apart from God. Reaching a peak of attainment as a self-sufficient being, he would have the power in himself to form independent judgment, but he would have no life from God.

So this was the alternative that lay before him. Choosing the way of the Spirit, the way of obedience, he could become a `son’ of God, living in dependence upon God for his life; or, taking the natural course, he could put the finishing touch to himself, as it were, by becoming a self-dependent being, judging and acting apart from God. The history of humanity is the outcome of the choice he made.

Questions to consider

What is the goal of life? 

Who’s life am I living most of the time? 

How do you feel about being dependent on God? 

How might God be developing a greater dependence on Him in this season of your life? 

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