The Edenic Lie

I. The message of the Edenic lie.

A. What kind of lie, if believed about God, would break fellowship with

God, cause unbelief in the revealed Word of God, flood man’s soul

with darkness and cause eternal death and separation from God?

 

1. Scripture indicates that the LIE THAT MURDERED OUR FIRST

PARENTS was sown by Satan, the father of lies (Jn. 8:44). He

was a murderer from the beginninghis weapon was the LIE

perpetrated in Eden (GENESIS 3:1-7).

2. The lie was an attack upon the character of God and upon the

veracity and absolute authority of His holy Word. The premise

and conclusion found in the lie may be expressed in the

following expanded paraphrase:

The lie suggested that to make God’s glory one’s highest goal and

obedience to Him one’s life direction, would be to miss out on one’s

true potential for fulfillment, advancement and freedom. The lie

impugned God’s character – it called into question His goodness

and intentions toward mankind. As the lie suggested, if God’s

glory is not joined to man’s highest good, humans have a rationale

or justification for self-determination.

 

You may choose what you deem is best for yourself and you may

choose right and wrong for yourself – for God is not absolutely

trustworthy. If you choose this path of self-direction, your world

will not fall apart, you will succeed and you will not face death and

damnation in hell. God’s will expressed in His commandments is

not really in the best interest of your happiness. God’s threats are

exaggerated – actually they are idle threats to keep you under His

control.

 

B. Satan defamed God’s character before he made his offer to Eve.

1. Satan’s question, “Indeed, has God said . . . ?” casts doubt upon

God’s motives. Satan’s question also divorces the original

prohibition from its context.

2. The context of the prohibition was God’s bounty (Gen 2:16, 17).

By removing it from its context, Satan implies that the

prohibition is unreasonable.

3. Satan depersonalizes God into an uncaring abstraction. (It is

the personal covenant-keeping God who judges sin and

rebellion. Those who know God to be personal, revere Him as a

just God who is serious about the retribution of sin. Satan

denies that sin results in judgment.)[i][1]

C. Four aspects of Satan’s temptation:

1. Satan promised instant gratification. The satanic philosophy of

blessing views reward as independent of God’s power and

determination. Eve is to grasp “blessing” immediately through

her own power. The satanic mindset is fulfillment through

disobedience to God’s law, rather than the biblical way of

obedience and submission to God and trust in His providence.

2. The promise of “eyes opened” offered an expanded consciousness

that was not limited in knowledge, understanding and

perception.

3. Satan promised dominion through going beyond creaturehood

and finitude. The satanic way cancelled out obedience and

submission. The temptation offered metaphysical advancement;

Eve would be equal to God. She would no longer be dependent

upon Him for meaning, ethics and truth. With “divine” self-

sufficiency would come personal sovereignty; Eve would

determine reality for herself.

4. The promise to be like God involved the knowledge of good and

evil. The first couple would be like God in that they would

determine good and evil for themselves (Gen 3:22). Eve followed

Satan’s lead in that she assumed she lived in an impersonal,

non-determined environment. Based upon this assumption, her

method for achieving truth in a reliable fashion was to exercise

human autonomy.[ii][2]

II. Upon believing the lie, man ridiculed the truth of God. Man’s

reasoning processes became a function of pride.

A. All human pride is based upon ignorance.

1. Once the lie was believed and acted upon, our first parents

became alienated from the life of God. Their thought processes

were no longer capable of thinking correctly about God and

themselves. The lie obscured the true knowledge of God and

man.

2. Self love replaced love for God, for our first parents no longer

believed that God was trustworthy. They also ceased to believe

that God had their highest good in mind and that He loved them

perfectly. (Upon believing the lie, the life of God in their souls

and the knowledge of God in their minds were extinguished –

darkness replaced the light.) (See Rom. 1:22-25.)

B. The lie feeds man’s pride.

1. Satan’s self-deception regarding his creaturehood and

dependence upon God was in essence “passed on” to the human

race when the lie of Eden was believed.

2. Though the lie is based upon gross ignorance, it fuels man’s

pride because it allows man to live as if he is not a creature

utterly dependent upon God.

The natural man sears his conscience (1 Tim. 4:1-3).

The unbeliever is arrogant (2 Tim. 3:1-5).

The natural man is an enemy of God (Rom. 5:10).

The sinner does not seek or understand God (Rom. 3:11).

Man’s problem is ethical and moral, not intellectual (Jer. 9:6;

Luke 13:34).

3. Man’s ignorant pride is demonstrated in his view of creation:

 “It’s not enough to know that cows eat grass. True apprehension

of cows and grass reveals the providential power and care of God

and the task which was given to man to subdue every other

creature to God’s glory (Gen. 1:28). The distance between the

earth and the nearest star is truly to be understood only as its

disclosure of God is recognized, for the multiple light years of

distance is the mere work of God’s fingers ad displays to man his

need for humility before God and thanksgiving for His grace

(Psalm 81:5).”[iii][3]

III. The “Eve theory of knowledge” is now the way that man’s

darkened intellect is used to determine knowledge.

A. The non-Christian’s approach to knowledge.

1. The unbeliever does not want to talk about where he came from.

He avoids the subject of the source of his existence. He is

opposed to God’s moral authority and does not wish to admit

that he is accountable to God.

2. This refusal to retain God in his thoughts directly affects his

approach to knowledge.

3. The unbeliever seeks to answer the question of knowledge

without addressing the question of being. He claims to know

independent of God. (“If the Being of God is what, on the basis

of Scripture testimony, we have found it to be, it follows that

our knowledge will true knowledge only to the extent that it

corresponds to His knowledge.” [iv][4]

B. By believing the lie, Eve placed herself and God on the same level.

1. Eve sought to gain knowledge while ignoring the question of

being. She erased in her own mind the infinite distance between

Creator and creature – she forgot her creaturehood. (God is the

self-existent great “I am.” All existence is upheld every moment

by His thought and power. Eve was dust and clay, taken from

her husband’s side.

2. The lie functioned as Eve’s method of determining what was true

and false. (The lie became her working epistemology – her

method of determining and knowing truth.)

C. Every unbeliever duplicates Eve’s approach to knowledge.

1. Instead of seeing God’s revelation as His unbreakable,

authoritative Word and as life itself for the creature, Eve

accepted Satan’s prevarication.

2. The structure of Satan’s lying “logic” was as follows: there were

two “beings” with two differing opinions. God had one “opinion,”

the serpent had another. Therefore, it was up to Eve to decide

for herself (she would be an autonomous interpreter). She could

decide who was right. She would be the final court of appeal.

Her mind would be the final authority.

3. Eve assumed equal ultimacy of the mind of God, of her mind,

and the mind of Satan. Her reasoning excluded the exclusive

ultimacy of the mind of God. She denied God’s absoluteness

epistemologically.[v][5]

4. By reasoning and experimentation (by eating the fruit and seeing

its effects and reflecting upon those effects), she would

determine what was “true for her.” (Note what a clear picture

this is of modern man’s approach to moral choices.)

5. By being in control of truth and knowledge, she would be

number one,” she would be in the driver’s seat. Thus, the lie

was an offer to rise above creaturehood. It offered independence,

it offered autonomy, it offered omniscience, it offered divinity. In

seeking to have the impossible – what belongs to God alone – the

human race lost the glorious blessings they did have. They lost

their life in God and they lost their unity in God.

 

D. Through original sin, mankind lost unity in God.

1. By man’s apostasy from God, he has cut himself off from the

source of unity. Man’s unity has been ravaged by the

separations caused by sin.

2. There are four major separations that occurred as a result of the

fall. They are as follows:

a.) Theological – man became separated from God.

b.) Psychological – man became separated from or within himself (there is no unity in his thought nor in the components of his soul – conscience, will and intellect are antagonistic in the unbeliever).

c.) Sociological – man became separated from others.

d.) Biological – man became separated from nature (the curse).

3. Only through the redemptive work of Christ will these

separations be ultimately healed. False religion and manmade

philosophies attempt to find lasting solutions to these divisions

but they all ultimately fail and end in destruction because they

do not look to Christ’s Lordship over the universe.

E. The non-Christian’s god is a false god because he is finite like

himself. Like Eve, the non-Christian in his sin wipes out the

distinction between absolute and derivative thought. He makes

God a corroborator with man. Instead of thinking God’s thoughts

after Him, he, together with God, “thinks out thoughts that have

never been thought by God or by man” (as if God is stuck in time).

1. Non-Christian thought interprets reality in terms of an

existence independent of God (e.g. the non-Christian would

insist that there must be succession of moments in the

consciousness of God in order to think of God as appreciative of

the passage of time in the universe. As if God cannot relate to

time without being subject to it. The unbeliever explains God in

his own way).

2. A sinful conception of God is chosen by man in order to blunt

the truth of man’s utter dependence upon Him.

The unbeliever can’t think of a God who is above His creation.

He cannot conceive of a God who is transcendent and not part of

His creation.

3. By contrast, Christianity interprets reality in terms of the

eternally self-conscious divine personality. Truth and reality

have been eternally joined in the mind of God. By rejecting God’s

authoritative revelation, sinful man tears truth and reality apart

and plunges himself into irrationality.

4. The unbeliever holds to the ultimacy of the created universe and

of the mind of man. He denies the necessity of thinking God’s

thoughts after Him in order to interpret the creation accurately.

In this context, mistakes in the interpretation of God, man and

the creation are thought of as natural and to be expected – not

as sin.[vi][6]

IV. The lie sown in Eden was an expression of Satan’s own

sentiment toward God.

A. The lie was a version of Satan’s own deception.

1. He had tried to sin his way to independence, he had tried to

outgrow his creaturehood by rebellion against God. But the

result was that he corrupted himself, degraded himself and

deceived himself. He cut himself off from the love, light and life

of God.

2. He and his kingdom are now careening (like an accelerating

avalanche or meteor) toward eternal shame, destruction, ruin

and torment. (Jesus warned that those who remained in the

kingdom of darkness would share its founder’s fate, Matt 25:41).

B. Satan’s lie offered independence, but delivered death and bondage

(Gen 3:1-19).

1. In the garden, Adam was denied the fruit of the tree of the

knowledge of good and evil to test his obedience and prove that

he was willingly under God’s command.

2. The serpent contradicted God (“you shall surely not die”) and the

Creator-creature distinction (“you will be like God”).

3. When Adam ate the fruit, his sin was rebellion against

recognizing his dependence upon God. In reality, Adam was no

less dependent, but simply refused to acknowledge his

dependence. – “thinking themselves to be wise, they became

fools” (Romans 1:22; Proverbs 28:26; Ephesians 4:17,18).

4. Through this act, Adam’s sinful condition passed upon all men

(Romans 5:12-19; 1 Corinthians 15:22). The human race is

under the influence of Satan (Ephesians 2:2). Judgment day will

expose the great lie; sin did not create a new reality nor did it

produce human independence from God.

V. The lie our first parents believed is now reproduced in the minds

of all of their unbelieving offspring.

Note the passages that teach the present universality of the lie – John

8:32-36; Rom. 1:21; 3:10-18; 2 Cor. 4:3,4; Eph. 2:1-3; 2 Tim. 2:25-

26. (The lie is the darkness spoken of in the Scriptures.)

A. The lie drives the present world system with its philosophies of

human autonomy and rebellion – Col. 2:8; 1 John 2:15-17; 5:19.

(The lie provides the “justification” for loving the world and for

living a self-directed life.)

B. The lie sits enthroned in the sinner’s reasoning processes. The lie

drives the present reign of sin – Romans 5:12, 17, 21. The present

satanic world view bears a close resemblance to the lie sown in

Eden:

· The Word of God is vague and untrustworthy.

· Man can only achieve truth by forsaking the Word of God and pursuing truth autonomously.

· Freedom and blessing come through casting off God’s law-word.

· The path to power is not by submission to God but by determining right and wrong for oneself.

· Man’s problem is not ethical, but metaphysical. The solution is to become like God and shed one’s finitude.

· Man deserves godhood, blessings, power, enlightenment and salvation by right, not by grace.

· Sin and rebellion against God will be without consequences in history and the hereafter.[vii][7]

C. To repent is to acknowledge that we have been of the lie.

1. Repentance involves intellectual submission to the Word of God

– it is a turning away from self as the authority for our moral

choices.

2. Those who die without repenting of the lie shall die in their sins

and be eternally condemned (Mark 16:16; John 8:24). (God will

forever hang error on the gallows. The lie and those who

stubbornly remain subscribers of it will be an eternal object

lesson to the universe.)

 

VI. No one is delivered from the lie except by the power of the

gospel.

A. Jesus explained that He was the truth and the life (John 14:6).

Christ is the truth of God incarnate (John 1:1-3).

In Christ, all that was lost in Adam (the knowledge of God, the life

of God, the light of God and the love of God) may be recovered and

more. (Note that the justified believer has a higher status than

unfallen Adam!)

B. Consider the majesty and scope of God’s plan. By His sovereign

grace and power He will take the redeemed from dust to glory and

fashion them into a bride for His Son. In Christ, believers go from

death-bound slaves to free men (John 8:31-36).

C. The power of the gospel is necessary to restore man’s ability to

understand God (John 1:5,14,18).

1. When we see God in our nature, bleeding and dying in our place

that we may be forgiven and go free, we respond with

amazement at such infinite love and compassion.

2. The true knowledge of God comes ONLY through the Person of

Christ and His work on the cross (2 Cor. 4:6). The glorious

gospel of Christ’s substitutionary death and resurrection has the

power to dispel the ancient lie.

3. In Christ, God’s glory and man’s highest good are rejoined again

in man’s thinking – one believing look at Christ and a person’s

mind is renewed and he is saved for all eternity. (The enslaving

lie that attacks the character of God and the Word of God is

removed by faith in Christ.)

VII. The Christian view of knowledge.

A. The Bible has to be taken to be the final standard of truth. No

areas of known reality exist that may be compared to the Bible.

1. God is ultimate being and hence ultimate absolute authority. He is the final court of appeal. All we know is rooted in God’s objective truth. Because God knows about His creation, we can know about creation.

2. The question, “How do we know?” – knowledge – is based on “What do we know?” – being. The Christian’s true knowledge is only such as it is based on God’s knowledge. “In Thy light, we see light” (Psalm 36:9). “In Him (Christ) are hidden all the treasures of wisdom and knowledge” (Colossians 2:3).

B. Knowledge with correct interpretation is truth. Things “known”

without God constitute “false knowledge,” – facts without

understanding.

(e.g. Life flourishes on earth because of the abundance of water.

The unbeliever takes this for granted – even though water is a

precious and rare commodity in the universe. In seeking a

naturalistic explanation, the natural man postulates that myriads

of snowballs (comets) slammed into a cooling planet to make our

oceans. Like the tortoise upon which Atlas supposedly stood, the

unbeliever is always left with a fanciful solution to support his

invention. The non-Christian has a “false knowledge” of the blue

planet, see Genesis 1:1-10; 2 Peter 3:5.)

C. One cannot separate truth from God. To try to separate truth from

God is an attempt to make God dependent upon an external body of

truth existing by itself, outside of God (this would be pantheism –

God existing as one of the parts of the whole universe).

1. The Bible affirms that God’s knowledge of the world is based

upon His knowledge of Himself (Psalm 139). God knows Himself,

THEN He makes a dependent universe. (e.g. a man who writes

an autobiography constructs a piece of literature based upon

self-knowledge.)

2. Our knowledge is cumulative, finite and fallible. God’s

knowledge is of a completely different kind. His knowledge is

determinative – that is, His knowledge determines what shall be

and what is real. By God’s knowledge, we move, exist, reason,

work, plan and play. God has planted every human faculty and

body part that allows us to function.

D. Man can only know and interpret aright when he does so by God’s

revelation. Only in regeneration (the new birth), when man sees

himself as God’s creature does he once again receptively reconstruct

knowledge given him by God.

  1. Regeneration reestablishes the proper order for the standard of knowledge. “Whose knowledge, man’s or God’s shall be the standard of the other.” God’s knowledge must bedeterminative and man’s knowledge must be subordinate. One must be original, the other analogical of the original. The order is obvious.[viii][8]
  1. Man is created by God in His image (Genesis 1:27). Thus, man is like God and is assured of true knowledge of God. We are known of Him and therefore, we know Him and know that we know Him (Heb. 8:11; 1 John 2:3). Regeneration puts an end to speculation about God and man.
  1. The world is ONLY meaningful when it is interpreted by man to the glory of God (Romans 11:33). The whole of man’s environment, as well as man himself, is already interpreted by God. Man must know himself in relationship to his environment which is God.

E. Non-regenerate consciousness cannot know God, creation or self

apart from God’s interpretation.

1. In the anthropocentric world of the unbeliever, man develops his

own sense-perceived-truth in an “a posteriori” manner (inductive

truth – reasoning from particulars to the general or universal. It

is futility because unbeliever because he is committed to an

erroneous world view.)

2. By contrast, Christian epistemology is ultimate rationalism and

sets forth incomprehensible knowledge about man from God.

Non-Christian epistemology is ultimate irrationalism and sets forth

comprehensive knowledge about man and God from man.

 

3. Only by God’s common grace does man have a residual or

“shadow unity.” Without these remnants of unity, man would fall

into complete disintegration in his world. The sobering warning

from God in Scripture is that when man’s faculties are used to

serve sin, the consequence is disintegration of the image of God.

Complete disintegration follows in hell (Romans 2:1-11).

4. The Christian must recognize the seriousness of the non-

Christian’s dilemma. The unbeliever’s darkness places him in a

situation of total inability. His consciousness will not allow him

to accept the Christian position. Man is NEVER epistemologically

neutral. He either loves God or hates God. He is for Him or

against Him.

Endnotes:

[i][1] Brian Schwertley, The Temptation of Eve, (www.reformed.com), pp. 5-7.

[ii][2] Ibid., p. 8.

[iii][3] Richard L. Pratt, Every Thought Captive, Phillipsburg, P&R Publishing, 1979), pp. 14, 15.

[iv][4] Cornelius Van Til, The Defense of the Faith, (Phillipsburg: P&R Publishing, 1955), p. 33.

[v][5] Greg L. Bahnsen, Van Til’s Apologetic, (Phillipsburg: P&R Publishing, 1998), p. 152.

[vi][6] Cornelius Van Til, The Defense of the Faith, pp. 47, 48.

[vii][7] Brian Schwertley, p. 10.

[viii][8] Cornelius Van Til, The Defense of the Faith, p. 39.