Read Genesis 2:8-14
Verse 8-14 -
The place fixed upon for Adam to dwell in, was not a palace, but a
garden. The better we take up with plain things, and the less we
seek things to gratify pride and luxury, the nearer we approach to
innocency. Nature is content with a little, and that which is most
natural; grace with less; but lust craves every thing, and is
content with nothing. No delights can be satisfying to the soul, but
those which God himself has provided and appointed for it. Eden
signifies delight and pleasure. Wherever it was, it had all
desirable conveniences, without any inconvenience, though no other
house or garden on earth ever was so. It was adorned with every tree
pleasant to the sight, and enriched with every tree that yielded
fruit grateful to the taste and good for food. God, as a tender
Father, desired not only Adam's profit, but his pleasure; for there
is pleasure with innocency, nay there is true pleasure only in
innocency. When Providence puts us in a place of plenty and
pleasure, we ought to serve God with gladness of heart in the good
things he gives us. Eden had two trees peculiar to itself. 1. There
was the tree of life in the midst of the garden. Of this man might
eat and live. Christ is now to us the Tree of life, Revelation
2:7. 22:2. and the Bread of life,
John 6:48,51. 2. There was the tree
of the knowledge of good and evil, so called because there was a
positive revelation of the will of God about this tree, so that by
it man might know moral good and evil. What is good? It is good not
to eat of this tree. What is evil? It is evil to eat of this tree.
In these two trees God set before Adam good and evil, the blessing
and the curse.
Return to
Outline