October 15
Gods, Too by John W. Ritenbaugh
“Now the serpent was more cunning
than any beast of the field which the LORD
God had made. And he said to the woman, Has God indeed said, You shall not eat
of every tree of the garden? (2) And the woman said to the serpent, We may eat
the fruit of the trees of the garden; (3) but of the fruit of the tree which is
in the midst of the garden, God has said, You shall not eat it, nor shall you
touch it, lest you die. (4) Then the serpent said to the woman, You will not
surely die. (5) For God knows that in the day you eat of it your eyes will be
opened, and you will be like God, knowing good and evil." Genesis 3:1-5
The word “shrewd” more closely
captures Satan's character than "cunning." Shrewd means “sharp
and clever in a selfish way.” Though “cunning” is not incorrect, “shrewd” has
clearer connotation.
To be cunning and shrewd like Satan
indicates malevolent brilliance—with the emphasis on malevolent. He is seeking to kill. His cunning is like that of a tiger, silently
padding through the jungle with eyes malevolently seeking something to kill and
eat.
Consider how clever his tactic
was. He subtly made a suggestion rather
than an argument to discredit God's authority, casting doubt about God's
credibility. Satan asked, "Has God
indeed said, You shall not eat of every tree of the garden?”
Through the tone and inflection of
his voice, Satan implied that there was doubt that God told them the truth.
This is shown by the way Eve replied; she corrected him. She knew from the
inflection of his voice that he was really asking a question and casting
doubt. When she replied, she
over-corrected.
Like a good salesman, the serpent
got his victim to agree with him, getting the victim to say Yes, yes, yes, and
then, I'll buy it! Eve was already
influenced when she gave her reply because she over-corrected.
Satan successfully magnified God's
strictness in her mind, reminding her that the way is narrow. She began to
agree with him, thinking about God in terms the serpent wanted her to think.
She began to agree, saying “Yes, yes, yes” to the salesman's ploys.
Satan immediately minimized the
penalty, saying an outright lie, "You shall not die" (3:4). Then to
clinch the sale, he offers her a reward: "You shall be like God" (3:5).
What a price she paid! Satan offered a reward that must have seemed so big to
Adam and Eve that they could not afford to reject it. What he offered was
enough to reorient their lives.
They did not catch the complete
significance of what he offered, but enough to know it was big. He offered the
self to become the dominating focus of life; You shall be God. He
completely reoriented their lives by turning their focus away from obedience to
God toward obedience to the self. He gave them the right to choose and to set
the standards of right and wrong. They bought it hook, line, and sinker.
From that point on, mankind has
viewed God as a rival and competitor rather than a friend—Someone with whom to
compete and outwit rather than cooperate, for they were now gods too!
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