Theology in the Raw - Old Testament in the Raw Week 4: Genesis 3:15
Episode Date: February 27, 2020This week in OT in the Raw, we continue looking at the fall in Genesis 3, God’s promise of redemption in 3:15, how this promise works itself out through genealogical lines, the story of Cain and Abl...e, and other figures like Lamech, Enoch, and Noah. Oh, and we also talk about angels having sex with women to make huge giants. Support Preston Support Preston by going to patreon.com Connect with Preston Follow him on Twitter @PrestonSprinkle Check out his website prestonsprinkle.com If you enjoy the podcast, be sure to leave a review.
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🎵 Okay, so welcome to Old Testament in the Raw.
This is a recording, so I've got to make it kind of official.
Yeah, in case you don't know, I release these recordings on a podcast that I do. So if you ever do miss one or
if you guys want to catch up on some older
ones. I think this is week
four. Is that correct?
Something like that. Week three
or four. So
yeah. Let me
There was one time when I recorded this
and it didn't work out right. So I'm just going to make sure
it
keeps going here and it looks like work out right. So I'm just going to make sure it keeps going here
and it looks like I'm good. So welcome back. We took two weeks off. Well, I was gone for
two weeks, so it's been a few weeks. So why don't we start by going back and just reviewing
some things. We're in the middle of Genesis 3.
We're going to quickly be in Genesis 4, 5, 6.
Well, my goal is to get through Genesis 1 to 11 today.
We'll see how that goes because there's some interesting stories that we're going to look at.
The one that I really want to drill down is this whole thing with the Nephilim in Genesis 6.
It's one of the weirdest passages in the Bible, I think, hands down.
So I do want to spend some time there.
But we did kind of a deep dive into Genesis 1 and 2, and we saw how that sets the stage for...
Genesis 1 and 2 reveals fundamental aspects about who God is. Genesis 1
emphasizes God's sovereignty over creation. Genesis 2 emphasizes God's, if I can say, intimacy or
nearness to creation. So God is far, he's far above everything in Genesis 1, but then he's
almost quite literally, you know, intimately involved with this creation.
He's, you know, forming Adam from the dust of the ground. And he had these two, I'll say,
different, almost contrasting portraits of God. One emphasizing his transcendence. The other one
in Genesis 2 emphasizing his personalness, his nearness. And everything's going great in Genesis 1 and 2, but everything kind of goes south in Genesis 3.
So we have this serpent that is introduced in chapter 3.
And I don't know if you remember from three weeks ago, we said that we as Christians, we know that the serpent is Satan.
The book of Revelation makes that connection explicitly,
but there's nothing in the actual text of Genesis or even the entire Old Testament
that explicitly connects the serpent to Satan.
So it's kind of interesting.
Like you got to think the first readers reading Genesis 3,
they wouldn't have thought like, oh, this is clearly Satan and have this,
you know, real filled out picture of who Satan even is. They just, there's a snake and he's
talking to the woman and he leads the woman astray by telling her that she can go against,
you know, God's command. It's not going to hurt you. And this, I mean, it's really interesting to look at Genesis 3, 1 to 7.
And it just kind of reveals the heart, like the heart of what sin is.
And, you know, these are some things we talked about three weeks ago.
I'll just say last time instead of saying three weeks ago.
But, you know, Satan leads the woman
to question God's word.
God made a command.
And there's actually, I mean,
a ton of freedom in God's rules.
Think about it.
All these trees you can eat from.
I mean, how many are there?
Hundreds? Thousands? I don't know.
I mean, all these things you have the freedom to do, but there's this one
tree that I don't want you to eat from.
And, you know, why doesn't God want
Adam and Eve to eat from this tree? We don't know.
There's nothing, it's not like the tree's poisonous. In fact,
we know that it looks good.
He says, wow, it looks so good.
The fruit looks so beautiful and luscious.
And so, so God gives them freedom to eat from all these trees and says no to this, this one tree doesn't give them a reason.
I mean, think about that.
Like sometimes things that are wrong, things that are sin, we look and we're like, well, why is that so bad?
Like, it makes me happy. You know, I desire that thing, that person, that whatever. You know,
why is this wrong? Like, it's in the heart of humanity to question why God said this and why
God said that. And we see this already in the first sin here in Genesis 3 sometimes God calls us to do things or not do things and he
doesn't give us an explanation why sometimes he does tell us why I mean
that there are some you know do's and don'ts in the Bible where we can kind of
figure out why God would would say don't do this and don't do that and other
times it's just it's he's the creator and he tells us what to do and
what not to do. Morning. We're just, we're reviewing kind of where we've been a few weeks ago when we
left off. And so this is, this is where we left off last time. You have an interesting phrase here,
you know, being like God in verse five, the Satan, the serpent says, God knows that when you eat of this fruit,
your eyes will be opened and you will be like God, knowing good and evil. That's an interesting
phrase because that seems like a good thing, like to know right from wrong. But within the context
here, it does seem to be more of the sense of determining good and evil.
Like instead of trusting God to tell us what is right, what is wrong, what is good, what is evil,
Adam and Eve are sort of taking it under their own authority to determine what is right and wrong
by going against God's command and eating the fruit.
We don't know what kind of fruit it was.
fruit. We don't know what kind of fruit it was.
In most pictures or children's Bibles or whatever, they usually picture it as an apple.
But there's no, it just says fruit. It could have been a watermelon.
Well, it's from a tree, so it wouldn't have been a watermelon.
But it could have been any kind of fruit. It could have been a kind of fruit that's not even around today.
We don't know. It doesn't really matter.
It could have been any kind of fruit. It could have been a kind of fruit that's not even around today.
We just we don't know. It doesn't really matter.
OK, so let's go and jump in then for today.
I want to talk just briefly, just briefly about a few more things in Genesis 3.
And I want to camp out on Genesis 3.15. I think it's incredibly important.
So that's kind of where we're headed,
is this really profound statement of Genesis 3.15.
But just to highlight a few things,
I mean, the results of the fall,
God said in Genesis 2,
if you eat from this tree that I told you not to eat from,
you will surely die.
Or in the Hebrew, it's, you know, dying, you will die.
In the Hebrew language, if it wants to emphasize something,
it just kind of says the same word twice.
You know, dying, you will die.
You will die, die, is kind of how it says in the Hebrew. Which, you know, we don't, you know,
and this is the difficulty with Bible translation.
Sometimes phrases in the original don't translate exactly over into the English. So you will surely die might be the best way to
render, you know, dying, you will die. So death is a result of the fall. Now they don't die
immediately. You would almost expect, again, if you're just reading this for the first time,
you would almost expect, you know, Eve, you know, eats the fruit, gives it to Adam, and they
both just keel over and die. But that doesn't happen. However, from the, you know, at the end
of the chapter, and we'll get to that, we'll return to this, but they are kicked out of the Garden of
Eden. Remember, we said the Garden of Eden is a place where God's presence dwells. The Garden of Eden is a place where God's presence dwells. The Garden of Eden is where the Tree of Life is.
And here's what's interesting.
Look at 3.22.
God says,
Since man, or mankind, has become like one of us, knowing good and evil,
like they're now making up their own rules.
He must not reach out and take from the tree of life, eat and live forever.
And then so this is why they get kicked out of the Garden of Eden, so that they won't live forever in a sense.
Forever, in a sense, this is what's interesting about this is it seems to suggest that living foreverness is not inherent to human nature. Like we are dependent upon God and in a sense, creation to live forever.
So once they are kicked out of the garden, they now don't have access to the tree of life.
And this sort of begins the death process.
the tree of life and this sort of begins the the death process um i know it's it's some people assume that you know to be human is to be sort of immortal like like uh some greek philosophers
plato in particular and his followers would you know talk about you know the human soul is
intrinsically immortal like it cannot die but you don't get that sense from from scripture
from genesis at least um it um you know for us to live forever we we are dependent upon god and so
now we because we sin we have there's this death cycle that's introduced to humanity and the only
way to reverse that is to well go to the Testament, have faith in Jesus, and it's through faith in
Jesus that we now are given eternal life. Eternal life is a gift. It's not intrinsic to human nature.
So death is one of the results. It doesn't happen right away, but it happens when they are separated
from God's presence, and that begins the death cycle once they're kicked out of the Garden of Eden. Another result, a broken relationship.
You know, when God comes into the garden, they're now running
around scared. They're hiding themselves.
There's a lot of shame as a result too.
They're covering themselves because they're naked. And so there's this
broken relationship between Adam
and Eve and God. There's also
a broken relationship between
each other. Remember, you know,
Adam's, you know,
Adam's blame shifting Eve, you know.
You know, placing the blame on
Eve. You know, it's, you know,
God's like, why did you do this, Adam?
He's like, well, you gave me the woman. I mean,
it's her fault.
And so there's this rift between the two.
So we got to figure out how God's going to, you know, reconcile that relationship there.
There's also, you know, we can almost say broken rule.
Last time we talked about how God is ruling over
creation through humanity.
We're not ruling over creation independently,
but you're mediating God's rule over
creation. But now,
now that there's
sin in the world, now
we're going to have a hard time mediating
God's rule over creation.
Let's, I mean, there's a lot more
we can dig out there,
but let's, I want to go to Genesis 3.15.
And if you have a Bible or something,
a phone or whatever,
I do, I want to spend some time on this
because it becomes,
well, this statement here,
proto-euangelion.
That's a Greek word that means
a foreshadow of the gospel
or the first gospel,
the proto-euangelion.
This is a word that some
historical theologians have used to describe Genesis 3.15.
Translations may vary here.
I don't even know what translation this blue one is here.
This is spoken from God to the snake.
And God, speaking to the snake. And God speaking to the snake says, I will put enmity,
tension, animosity between
you and the woman and between your seed
and her seed.
And this seed is, this is a
I mean seed in both English and the Hebrew can be singular or plural.
Kind of like the word sheep, right?
If you see one sheep, say there's a sheep.
You see ten sheep, there's a bunch of sheep.
It's both singular and plural.
But here, given the context, it's referring to the plural seed, descendants.
Between your descendants and her descendants. Now, it's kind of weird
right now, right? So, like a bunch of snakes, you know,
the literal offspring of the snake, is that what's going on here? Or is there something, maybe a
deeper meaning? And between her descendants. But then,
look at how the language changes here to a singular.
He shall bruise you, you snake, on the head,
and you shall bruise him, another singular, on the heel.
Now, if the Bible ended here,
we would have kind of no clue what's going on here.
Okay?
It's a lot of ambiguity.
It's very hazy, very ambiguous, but this seems to
lay the foundation for what will later grow into what we now call the gospel, the good news.
Let me illustrate it this way. I got this cool little
thing here. Somebody else, I don't even know how this was put.
Somebody else created this slide for me many years ago,
and I think it does a good job making sense of what's going on.
So I will put enmity between you and the woman, okay?
Between Satan and between Eve.
Between your seed, plural, and her seed, okay?
But then from that,
I'll say genealogy,
from that line of descendants,
there will be one
who will crush the head of the snake.
And in the process of crushing the head of the snake,
sure, I can't. well, I can't circle,
you can see the little line there,
in the process of crushing the head of the snake,
he's going to bruise your heel,
now, if I had the choice between getting my head crushed,
or my heel bruised, I would pick the bruised heel,
so there's going to be,
some descendant of Eve is going to deal a death blow
to Satan, to evil.
And yet in the process,
he's going to be hurt,
but it's not going to be terminal.
But he's still going to,
you know, in the process,
he's going to bruise his heel.
Now, again, this is very ambiguous,
but we're Christians.
We have the rest of the Bible.
We can kind of see what's going on here.
And we will see, I mean, through the unfolding of Genesis, especially how this promise plays out in various passages and various stories. of God working through a genealogical line to bring, to conquer evil,
ends up making sense of so much in the Old Testament.
I mean, just think right now.
I mean, if you've been reading along in Genesis,
and again, I would highly encourage you
as we're doing this to,
if you don't have a Bible reading plan or whatever,
to read ahead, read along during the week you as we're doing this to, if you don't have a Bible reading plan or whatever, to, you know,
read ahead, read along during the week as we interact with the text. But if you've read along
in Genesis 1 to 11, you probably came across several chapters, several passages that you
skipped over. I'm calling you out. You probably skipped over them because it's a list of
genealogies.
I mean, just look ahead to like, you know, chapter four.
Chapter four, you have, you know, the Cain and Abel story.
And this one's kind of engaging, really interesting.
But then in the last half of chapter four, you get these, you know, a list of Cain's descendants.
I'm going to guess that you probably read really quickly through verse 17 through verse 25.
Like, oh, okay, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
Okay, let's get to the good stuff.
And then you get to chapter 5 and you're like,
oh, no, here's another genealogy.
In fact, the whole chapter is genealogy.
Ah, Jared is talking, okay, some long lives in Enoch.
Oh, there's something interesting there.
And oh, I see Noah there.
And beyond that, there's nothing really interesting here.
I will admit,
even though I love the Bible,
I love the Bible, okay?
You read through chapter 5 of Genesis
and you're like,
that's kind of boring.
Like, do we need this here?
Chapter 5 is all about
God fulfilling His promise.
Every time you see a genealogy in the Bible,
it is a loud proclamation that God is faithful
in fulfilling His promise,
a promise that started in Genesis 3.15,
that there's going to be a genealogical line,
and it's going to be through that genealogical line
that I'm going to send some figure,
some individual who is going to crush evil
and end up, in a sense,
bringing us back to Eden,
back to God's presence.
And we'll see another genealogy in...
Let's see, there's one in... Well, chapter 11 is a really important one. At the end of chapter 11,
we see a genealogy that leads to Abraham. All throughout the rest of Genesis, you know,
there's like stories for several chapters, and then there's a long genealogy. Story, story, story,
long genealogy. Those genealogies are not just there just to tell us who was born to whom. Like,
They're not just there just to tell us who was born to whom.
They are documenting that God is faithful,
God is fulfilling his promise to send an individual through a particular genealogical line.
You guys remember the old comic strip BC?
You guys ever? My kids don't.
I thought this was really fascinating.
This is from several years ago.
Oh, it was on Easter.
It was on Easter Sunday.
Where back when we had newspapers and comic, you know, the comic pages.
I used to wake up every morning.
Well, yeah.
Usually on Sundays I'd wake up and go grab the paper, the newspaper that was in my driveway.
This is like, so back in our day, we had this,
the news,
there was no internet.
And so they,
Paperboy put a piece of paper,
a bunch of papers
with all the news.
And inside that,
there was a comic strip.
And every kid would,
you know, look at,
well, maybe I'd look at the box scores
of the Dodger game too,
but I would go and look
at the comic strip.
And in that was a comic strip
called BC.
And it had kind of, you know, Christian or religious themes to it.
Well, this one, you know, you have the tomb breaks open,
and the stone rolls through this guy's house.
This guy gets up.
He sees that, man, there's some, what's going on here? There's this
big stone, you know, rolled
away from this room. So he goes and
looks and he sees footsteps coming out.
So he follows the footsteps down the hill
across the water.
But I thought this was
really good.
Across the water. But I thought this was really good. Across the water, steps on the head of the snake.
Now, I would dare to guess that few people understood the significance of this, which this is why I love how creative it is. But this, you know, Kevin, Trevor Hart, Kevin Hart,
creative it is um but this you know kevin trevor hart kevin hart not kevin hart at least trevor hart huh johnny hart johnny hart the author of bc the bc comic strip um i i think he's
drawing back on genesis 315 here um uh so so yeah again this this i'm going to keep coming back to
this promise of Genesis 3.15
because this,
one of the things in this class
that I want to help us all to see
is how the Old Testament unfolds
with a coherent storyline.
It's not just a bunch of random events
like, oh, here's a genealogy
and then this happened
and that happened. It's not just a bunch of random events like, oh, here's a genealogy and then this happened and that happened.
It's not just a bunch of random historical events.
Everything is connected to a particular theme on some level.
So even things that seem so boring and irrelevant like genealogies are there to document the unfolding of God's promise that begins in Genesis 3.15.
of God's promise that begins in Genesis 3.15.
Any questions so far?
And I've got to remember to repeat your question for the audio here.
I forgot to do that last time.
Any questions so far?
Does this make sense?
All right.
I want to just briefly look at a few verses at the end of Genesis 3
just to kind of illustrate how seemingly random statements and events
are actually part of the storyline of Scripture.
So in Genesis 3.19, this is again as God was pronouncing
promises and curses and judgment
on the three parties involved here,
the snake, the woman, and the man,
Adam and Eve.
When he's speaking to Adam,
he says the ground's going to be cursed
because of your sin.
And which shows that all creation is affected by this, this act of rebellion against God.
We will lay, you know, in the new, well, the word that theologians use to describe what's going on here in Genesis 3 is the fall.
We talk about the fall of humanity. We fell from
God's presence. We fell into sin, but that fall ends up affecting all of creation. I mean,
specifically here, you know, verse 18, well, verse 17 and 18, the ground's cursed, and now it's going
to be really hard to work the ground. I mean, I only, I often wonder,
you know, what was it like being a gardener before the fall? You know, you just kind of
pop a seed down and boom, you know, huge apple tree just, you know, blows up, no weeds or anything.
Everything just, you know, everything is just flourishing in ways that we don't even, we can't
even imagine. And you have a statement in Romans chapter 8 where Paul talks about all creation groaning
and longing to be redeemed. God's redemption obviously is centered on redeeming people,
bringing us back to himself. But even all of creation has been affected by sin and you
know in the new testament we we see passages that talk about like a renewal of creation that
you know god's going to bring a new heavens and new earth and renew creation so the scope of god's
redemption um again is centered on humanity but it goes beyond that to include all of creation. But here in verse 19, God tells Adam,
you know, you will eat bread by the sweat of your brow until you
return to the ground since you were taken from it, for you are dust.
And you will return to dust.
Think about it. There's been no death so far. Adam doesn't even know what that means.
He doesn't know what death means.
He has no concept of not being alive anymore.
What does that even mean, returning to the dust?
And then, so what does he do?
Well, he turns around and names his wife.
Adam named his wife Eve because she was the mother of all living.
Well, that's kind of odd.
Like if somebody told you you were going to die and even though you didn't know what that
meant, well, what's the next thing I'm going to do?
Well, I guess it's a good time to name my wife.
And then in verse 21, then the Lord God made clothing out of skins for Adam and his wife
Eve and he clothed them.
These three verses, 19, 20, 21 seem completely disconnected.
Like there's no, these are just random verses jumbled together
and thrown onto a page is how it feels.
But if you look at what's going on here,
there's something deeply theological.
News of Adam's death, punishment for sin.
And then he says,
I'm going to name you Eve because you are the mother of all living. and then he says, you're must be,
I'm going to name you Eve
because you are the mother of all living.
What that means is,
he says, well, you must bring forth a child.
Why?
Because God promised that, right?
Remember 315.
I'm going to fix everything.
I'm going to conquer evil.
I'm going to usher in redemption.
I'm going to bring us back to the garden.
And we're going to be in relationship with each other through a genealogical line.
So if Adam and Eve die childless, then God lied.
And so here Adam is expressing faith in God's promise by saying,
you are the mother of all living.
You must bring forth life because God said so. So now, unlike
earlier in the chapter when they didn't trust God's word,
now Adam and Eve are
expressing faith in God's promise. And in
response to that faith commitment, God makes a
sacrifice. He covers them with the skin,
with skins, which had to have come from an animal, which means an animal had to have been killed to
get the skins to form the clothing to cover, I mean, to physically cover Adam and Eve. But I also
think there's almost like a double meaning here of like, he's cover Adam and Eve, but I also think there's almost like a double meaning here of like he's covering Adam and Eve physically,
but he's also covering their sin, their shame.
Remember, they were shamed because they were naked.
Well, now he's covering their shame.
He's covering their sin.
So here you have, you know,
what we might call the first salvation experience.
Punishment, faith, and sacrifice for redemption. Yeah.
I'm sorry, I forgot my Bible.
It doesn't actually say an animal was killed
because the animal's not a perfect animal.
Right. It doesn't, yeah. So the question is it doesn't
actually say that an animal's killed.
It's implied, I would say.
Yeah.
Yeah.
The Lord God
made clothing out of skin
yeah so it's implied
oh like could he have taken a
it doesn't say explicitly
yeah that's good
any other thoughts before we
alright
Genesis chapter 4 before we... Alright. Alright.
Genesis chapter 4, verse
1.
It says, Adam,
my translation,
this is the Holman Christian
Standard Bible translation.
It's kind of a...
It's a...
Yeah, translation is not very popular, but I really like it. But if I read statements It's kind of a translation.
It's not very popular, but I really like it.
But if I read statements that might look different than yours, it's probably because I'm the only one in the room with this kind of translation.
Adam was intimate with his wife Eve.
Some translations will say Adam knew his wife.
Or if it's a looser translation, it might say Adam slept with his wife.
And she conceived and gave birth to Cain.
And then Eve said, I have had a male child with the Lord's help.
I used to read out of the New American Standard Bible, which is a really good literal translation. And I'll never forget this translation, it always jumped out at me because it said, the New American Standard says,
I have gotten a man-child from the Lord. I always thought that was a man-child. What's a man-child?
A picture of this real hairy, you know, newborn. It's just like, wow, oh my gosh you look like a man but um but what so what's
going on here uh again this is linked to this is linked to the promise eve this isn't just oh i'm
so i've been longing for a son and the lord blessed me with a child that that's that's probably
happening but there's something theological here. I have gotten this child
that God promised will be part of the line through which God will
bring us back to Himself. Eve is expressing excitement
over at least a down payment in God beginning to fulfill
His promise. Then she gives birth again,
and Abel is born.
So here we have Cain and Abel. Abel becomes a shepherd of flocks, but Cain
worked the ground. I'll just keep reading here through.
I'll just keep going through verse 9 or 10 here.
In the course of time, Cain presented some of the land's
produce as an offering to the Lord,
and Abel also presented an offering.
Some of the firstborn of his flock and their fat portions.
The Lord had regard for Abel and his offering, but he did not have regard for Cain and his offering.
Cain was furious, and he looked despondent.
Verse 6, Then the Lord said to Cain, Why are you furious, and why do you look despondent. Verse 6, Then the Lord said to Cain,
Why are you furious
and why do you look despondent?
If you do what is right,
won't you be accepted?
But if you do not do what is right,
sin is crouching at the door.
Its desire is for you.
You must master it.
That's a fascinating statement
about the nature of sin. I mean,
love. I love and hate. Genesis 4
7, that sin is depicted as almost this
ravenous creature, this beast that is
aggressively trying to conquer you.
It's almost like sin has this force of its own.
And yeah, I mean, you see throughout the Bible,
especially the New Testament,
sin spoken of as something that comes from within us,
this internal impulse.
Sometimes sin is described as almost having this power of its own,
this outside of us kind of power.
And I think it's kind of a both and.
Martin Luther used to talk about the world, the flesh, and the devil.
We have the sin of our flesh comes from within.
We have sin from the devil,
demonic forces pushing us to sin.
But then also the sin of the world.
There's almost like this structural sin
that's just kind of part of the fallen creation.
And all three of these kind of aspects of sin
may overlap with each other, but they're all kind of part of the fallen creation. And all three of these kind of aspects of sin may overlap with each other,
but they're all kind of different aspects
of how we're given into not obeying God.
But here, this picture, I think,
just really captures that idea
that sin is crouching at the door
and we must master it.
You know, it's fascinating. So so this i've been doing some research on like uh on neuroscience neurology i'm not a scientist at all i'm not a
brain surgeon but doing a lot of reading on on how our behaviors re rewire our brain like our
habit the habits we do in life reconfigures your brain. And we just knew
about this recently, like in the last couple of decades, I think. And the more we study the brain,
the more technology advances, the more we know what's going on in the brain. It's really
fascinating how our brain is affected by the things we do. In fact, they did a study on New York cab drivers.
Their brains look different than everybody else. If you're a New York cab
driver, your brain has been so rewired because it's, you know, it's
really hard to be a cab driver in New York. There's like major tests you have
to take. Like you have to have like basically the whole, all of New York kind
of just memorized almost. And every day you're driving, you're driving, you're driving it.
And as you're doing this, this thing over and over and over, it's just kind of reshaping your brain.
And so that sometimes bad habits we do over and over and over and over and over,
rewire our brain to almost do bad things.
This is why some people, especially if you've dealt with an addiction or something, and it's almost like you're a robot. Like I cannot not
do this thing because your brain's so rewired. Or both bad habits, but also good habits. When you
start doing good habits, your brain becomes rewired to where when you wake up and let's
just say you run every single morning at 7 a.m. every morning for three months, four months,
and let's just say you run every single morning at 7 a.m. every morning for three months,
four months, five months,
pretty soon it's almost like you can't not do that anymore
because you've rewired your brain.
Why do I say that?
What's fascinating is the Bible sometimes gets accused
of being so outdated, ancient, unscientific.
But it's interesting that you read statements
like Genesis 3, 7,
its desire is for you, but you must rule over this.
You must cultivate good habits to overrule the bad habits.
And I'm not saying Genesis 4, 7 is giving us all we need to know about neuroscience or whatever.
But it does resonate. I mean, something as old as Genesis 4-7 does kind of resonate
with what we now know in the 21st century about behavior and brain structure and so on.
Again, I'm not saying it's specifying all that.
It's just it does resonate with what we know about habits and behaviors.
We must master sin.
We must get in the habit of saying no, no, no to sin
and replace that with yes, yes, yes to right behavior.
Okay, so verse 8, Cain said to his brother Abel,
let's go out to the field.
And when they were in the field, Cain attacked his brother
and Abel killed him.
Then the Lord says to Cain, where is your brother Abel?
And Cain says, I don't know.
What am I, my brother's guardian or my brother's keeper?
And then, you know, God jumps in and rebukes Cain for killing Abel.
One question that comes up is, yeah, what's the main...
Oh, wait, so no, I was going to jump ahead there, but yeah, I just want to point out in Genesis 4 that there's something deeply theological going on
here. This isn't just a story that we should use to help our kids to be nice to their siblings,
kids. It's true. Be good to yourself, don't kill your brother, okay? That is
a moral lesson you can draw from this, but that's not the only reason why Genesis 4 is here.
Here we have, okay, we have Cain. Wait, is Cain the promised seed? Is he the one that's going to
crush the head of the snake? Oh, and then Abel? Wow, Abel's kind of, seems like Abel's on the side of God and Cain is
on the side of, of the snake. But then Cain kills Abel, the good one. Now we're left with nothing
but the genealogy of the snake because it's people who, somebody who's kind of following in the ways
of evil. So now we have a major dilemma here. We have God's promise
is now on the line.
He said, I'm going to send
the snake-killing seed through
a genealogical line. It seems like it's
going to be Abel, but
now he's
dead. But if you look at the end of the chapter,
yeah, the end of the chapter it says in verse 25, Adam was intimate
with his wife. Again, she gave birth to a son named him Seth for, she said, God has given me
another child in the place of Abel since Cain killed him. A son was born to, uh, then a son
was born to Seth and on and on and on. It says, um, you know, people began to call him the name of Yahweh.
So here, verse 25 and 26, God comes through and replaces, well,
he continues on the genealogy through a different person that wasn't able because he got killed.
It ends up being Seth.
Why did God reject Cain's sacrifice? Some people say, well, he offered grain while
Abel offered blood, an animal. I used to think that this is why Cain's offering wasn't accepted.
But I think it's a little problematic.
I mean, it says that Abel happened to be a shepherd of flocks
and Cain was, you know, he worked the ground.
Okay, so they each just offered something
from their own vocation, their skill set.
Like, I don't think there's anything intrinsically wrong with Cain's sacrifice.
I don't think there's anything wrong with the fact that Cain didn't offer an animal.
He wasn't a keeper of animals.
And plus, we see in Leviticus, a few books later, when Leviticus 1-7 spells out all the
different types of sacrifice, a lot of different sacrifices that we're honoring to God
were grain offerings, were different kinds of offerings. They weren't all
blood sacrifices. Some people say,
well, he didn't offer it in faith. I'm not even sure
I know what that means.
What does that mean?
If he gave an offering to God,
his grain,
then he believed God exists.
And he's giving something to God.
That is an expression of faith.
I think that's a little too ambiguous to say he didn't offer it in faith.
The only thing in the text
that stands out
is this statement in verse 4.
It says, in verse 3,
He gave some of his produce.
But then verse 4 says,
We know from Leviticus that the, some of the firstborn of his flock
and their fat portions.
We know from Leviticus that
the fat portions are the good portions.
And even in other cultures today,
you know,
I've never had to be in this situation,
but in some cultures today,
you know, they might bring out like a big,
you know, steak,
like a luscious porterhouse steak, right?
But if you're the guest, they want to honor you and they don't give you, steak, like a luscious porterhouse steak, right? But if you're the guest, they want to honor you.
And they don't give you the steak.
They give you the chunk of fat.
They're like, we want to give you the fat.
You're like, oh my gosh, can I just have the porterhouse,
the lean, you know, tri-tip or whatever?
But yeah, so the fat portion of the meat back then
in the Bible is kind of the best of the best.
And, you know, this is the firstborn of his.
He didn't just give an offering. He gave the best of the best. And, you know, this is the firstborn of his. He didn't just give an offering.
He gave the best of what he had.
So it does seem to be a heart issue here.
He wasn't just going through the motions.
He wasn't just giving to God
something of his vocation, his life.
He was giving the best that he had.
Any questions so far?
Good, yes.
Yes.
Hebrews 11.4
says, by faith,
Abel offered to God a better
sacrifice than he did.
If you believe he obtained the testimony
that he was righteous,
not testing his gifts.
Yeah, okay. I'm certain that God had given them not testing his gifts. Through faith, though he is dead, he still speaks.
Yeah, okay.
I'm certain that God had given them instructions on how to do this sacrifice.
God's not going to say, okay, it's up to y'all.
Right.
Okay, now that's good.
And for some reason,
it had to do something with the faith of Abel.
His faith was acceptable to God
and whatever deficiencies
of faith that King
had made it unacceptable.
That could be through behavior,
it could be attitude, it could be lots of things.
But Hebrews 4
tells us a little
insight. That's great. I forgot about Hebrews
11. So the just for the audio.
Yeah, Hebrews 11.4 refers to the story and does talk about faith here.
No, that's good.
That's good.
So in a sense, that would show that faith isn't simply believing that God exists.
Clearly, Cain believed God exists because he's offering something to God.
But faith is more than just believing that God exists,
but is actually trusting and obeying God
and believing what he said.
And I think it's very valid.
I think we got to be careful when we assume things
about the text that aren't there,
but I think it's a pretty valid assumption to say that,
as you said, they had probably been given instructions here. Genesis 4
doesn't tell us this, but
yeah. God wouldn't
expect them to
obey or not, you know, to
obey without telling them what it is they had to
do, so.
God knows the man's heart.
There's gratitude there.
Right.
Right, yeah. Yeah, no, that's good good all right uh g i really wanted to get to genesis 6 as time's flying but um okay so g so then we have a genealogy well we have um uh oh we've got to replace a few of these here.
So we have Cain here.
So Cain is, so I didn't make this point earlier.
The seed of Satan I don't think is literal snakes.
I don't think it's literal offspring of the serpent.
I think it's a general idea of there's going to be a group of people,
a line that's going to be opposing God's promise.
So Cain, and he may not even think about it this way,
but by killing off Abel,
the line through which God's going to redeem the world and crush evil,
he is opposing what God is doing in the world.
So there's Cain. We have Abel over here know, he is opposing what God is doing in the world. Okay, so there's Cain.
We have Abel over here on this team.
Then we have a genealogy that leads from Cain to Lamech.
And it gets progressively worse.
I mean, Lamech, you know, he's got two wives.
He is incredibly violent and vengeful.
Cain is given a measure of grace.
That's actually a really beautiful part of chapter 4 that some people miss.
Cain says, my punishment is too great.
What if I'm out wandering the world and people kill me?
And so God actually extends a level of grace to Cain by putting a mark on him so that nobody can touch him and says, you know, I will punish somebody who touches Cain.
I mean, Cain deserves nothing, right?
But he's given a measure of grace here, which is just a picture of what we see throughout the Bible.
God giving grace to people who don't deserve it.
Cain doesn't deserve anything,
and yet God does give some kind of protection on him.
But then you have one of his descendants,
Lamech, is now saying,
well, gosh, if Cain will be avenged
if somebody kills him,
then I'll be avenged 70 times 7
because I'm even worse than Cain.
So the line gets progressively worse.
Seth is born. So Abel is whacked.
So he's gone. So now we have Seth replaces the line that Abel
would have been in. So Lamech
over there. Then you have Enoch.
In chapter 5, you have Seth.
And then you have...
Enoch is singled out.
We know hardly anything about Enoch.
It says in verse 23, chapter 5, verse 23,
Enoch's life lasted 365 years.
And then you have this strange statement.
Enoch walked with God.
Then he was not there because God took him.
There's only two places in Scripture where we see something like this happen.
One with Enoch.
He doesn't die.
He's just taken directly.
It just says God took him.
And we assume, okay, taken to heaven or whatever, taken to the presence of god and that's probably
that's probably where god took him but it just says you know he was there and then he wasn't
god took him who's the other character in the bible well technically there's two more but uh
who's the next character in the bible that is taken away without dying. Anybody remember?
Elijah, yeah, Elijah.
So you have Enoch taken away,
Elijah is taken away before he dies,
and then I was going to say Jesus is raised from the dead and taken up
to God the Father.
I do wonder if there's something
kind of just giving us a little
glimpse of what God's ultimately going to do for all of us.
He's going to preserve us through death.
I mean, for us, it's through death, but we are not going to simply die and remain dead.
And then Enoch, and then you have Noah is also singled out.
Let's see.
Verse 28, Lamech was 182 years old when he fathered a son,
and he named him Noah, saying,
This one will bring us relief
from the agonizing labor of our hands
caused by the ground the Lord had cursed. will bring us relief from the agonizing labor of our hands caused
by the ground the Lord had
cursed.
So here, Lamech, this is a different Lamech.
It's hard. Bad Lamech and a good
Lamech. This is a good Lamech.
I'm sure he wasn't perfect.
I mean,
Lamech is again expressing faith
in the Genesis 3.15 promise.
Because remember, part of the curse, part of the punishment
is that the ground is going to be cursed,
and there's going to be a snake-killing seed
who's going to lift the curse.
And Lamech thinks Noah is the one.
This is the one.
This is going to be the one who's going to step on the head of the snake.
He's going to be the one through whom God's going to redeem the world.
And in a sense, given how the next few chapters really linger on Noah
as a symbol of a redeeming figure,
God does use Noah to rescue all of creation
because it's through his line on the ark that's preserved and begins the
genealogical line again. So Noah ends up being, if I can use a phrase, almost like an archetype
of Christ, a foreshadow of Christ, a symbol of a single redeeming figure in that genealogical line
through whom God works to preserve
and ultimately save his creation.
And so Noah gives us a little sign
of what it's going to be like
to be that seed who's going to crush
the head of the snake.
But then after the flood,
as we'll see probably next week,
after the flood, as we'll see probably next week, after the flood, Noah fails, right?
He gets off the boat, he plants a vineyard, he gets drunk,
and then something shady happens in his tent.
And we kind of see, well, this probably isn't the ultimate seed then,
the ultimate snake-killing seed.
We're still waiting for somebody else to come.
All right, before we...
We still have about 10 minutes or so.
All right, let's get to Genesis 6.
I'll just read...
Or does somebody else want to read?
Four verses, Genesis 6, 1 to 4.
Anybody want to nice and loud read Genesis 6, 1 to 4?
So I can take a sip of coffee.
Don't be shy.
Now it came about when the yin began to multiply
on the face of the land, and
daughters were going to them,
that the sons of God saw that the daughters
of men were beautiful,
and they took wives for themselves whomever they chose.
Then the Lord said, My spirit shall not strive with men forever, because he also is flesh.
Nevertheless, this day shall be one hundred and twenty years.
The Nephilim were on the earth in those days, and also afterwards.
When the sons of God came into the daughters of men
and they bore children to them,
those were the mighty men who were of old,
men of renown.
All right, so here's where we get a bit of a
kind of a sci-fi story going on here.
This passage, I mean, is this layer, there's layers of questions and, well,
this passage has spawned throughout Jewish history and Christian history, all kinds of
various interpretations and, you know, ideas on what's going on here. Interestingly, this passage was
one of the most quoted and referred to and talked about passages in what we can call, you know,
intertestamental Judaism or even first century Judaism. So if you were a Jew walking around in
Jesus's day, and as you thought about Old Testament passages,
this was one that was one of the
most written about, talked about,
discussed passages in first century
Judaism.
Okay,
so who are
the sons of God
and the daughters of men?
And then another question is, who are
these Nephilim?
And then who are the, in the Hebrew,
it's a gibberim, or most translations say
the powerful men of old,
the very last part of verse 4.
So sons of God, daughters of men.
Let me just give you three possible suggestions.
These are three views that people have proposed
in terms of who are these sons of God.
Some people say, well, these were kings.
These were royal rulers.
And sometimes kings were referred to as sons of God
or a son of God.
Others say, no, this is the line of Seth. The sons of God or a son of God. Others say, no, this is the line of Seth,
the sons of God and daughters of man
represents these two kind of genealogical lines,
which kind of makes sense with, you know,
of what we've been talking about,
where you have these two genealogical lines
now being merged, which creates problems.
But I think this third view is actually what's going on here.
That sons of God is another name for, I'll just say, angelic beings.
And let me give you reasons why I think that.
In Job 38, I think it's verse 6, 5 or 6.
We talked about this last time, I think.
Anyway, Job 38, 5 or 6 says,
When God laid the foundations of creation,
the sons of God sang for joy.
And we see other references throughout Scripture with the phrase sons of God sang for joy. And we see other references throughout Scripture
with the phrase, sons of God.
It can refer to various groups of people,
but it can also refer to angelic beings.
The reason why I think this third view is correct
is because we have several references
in the New Testament
that seem to point back
to this story. I'll just read
one here in 2 Peter.
Let me throw these on here.
2 Peter 2.4
For if God did not spare the angels who sinned,
but threw them down into...
My translation says Tartarus is a
Greek word here. Hades
some translations might say. Some might say
hell. I think that's
not the best translation.
Tartarus or Hades.
Threw them down into Hades
and delivered them to be kept
in chains of darkness
until judgment. But then if you
look at the rest of the passage,
verse 5 says,
And if he did not spare the ancient world,
but protected Noah.
Okay, so you have Noah, verse 5.
And then you have Sodom and Gomorrah, verse 6.
You have Lot being rescued, verse 7.
So you have this chronological progression.
So whatever's going on in 2 Peter 2.4,
chronologically, it is right before the story of Noah.
So it seems that 2 Peter 2.4 is referring to this incident.
And here he explicitly says angels who sin.
You have something very similar in Jude 6
and in 1 Peter 3, 19 and 20. Now,
I said just a few minutes ago that this passage is one of the most talked about passages in
the first century and in the intertestamental time period. Well, how did first century Jews interpret Genesis 6?
It was unanimous. There was no debate.
It was angels.
Some sort of
angelic beings came
down, had relations with
women,
and according to Jewish
tradition,
they produced some kind of
offspring that were giants. This is a weird, okay, so 1-E-N.
This comes from a first century, well, early, let's just say, first century B.C. Jewish book called
1 Enoch. It wasn't written by Enoch. Nobody believed that, But it was one of the most influential Jewish
books around the first century.
It would be like the...
Oh, I'm blanking on the name. Give me a famous
non-scripture
but famous Christian
book that's very influential.
Crazy Love by Francis Chan
or what's the one by
the guy down at Saddleback?
Purpose Driven Life.
One Enoch was like the purpose driven life of the first century.
Is purpose driven life inspired? Well, no.
But, you know, 25 million copies sold,
it's pretty influential. Like a lot of Christians,
the way they think about Christianity and the way they think about
whatever has probably been shaped by the purpose driven life or whatever, whatever
your favorite, you know, C.S. Lewis, mere Christianity. Okay. One Enoch is like a mere
Christianity of the first century. Okay. So not inspired. It's not part of the Bible,
but very influential for how first century Jewish people think. Now, one Enoch, I was just reading it this
morning again, talks about this passage in great detail. Angels came down, had relations with women,
and they produced these offspring called the Nephilim. And one Enoch says that they were 450
feet tall. And then they started eating and devouring the land. And so God had to take care
of them because they were kind of ruining creation.
Now, again, none of this is inspired.
This is not in the Bible.
Don't quote me.
Don't say like, wow, is that true?
I don't know.
All I know is unanimously first century Jews believe that angels had sexual relations with humans,
produced some kind of demigorgon kind of offspring.
There were giants called the Nephilim.
Nephilim, the word Nephilim just means fallen ones.
Here's what's a little problematic, though,
is we do see the term Nephilim one other time in Scripture
in Numbers 13.33.
in scripture in Numbers 13.33.
Numbers 13.33,
when the spies, the Israelite spies,
go in and spy out the land of Canaan.
Remember, they're about to enter the land of Canaan.
They send 12 spies.
They look and they're like,
oh my gosh, the Nephilim are here.
And we feel like we're grasshoppers in their sight.
I don't know if that means they were 450 feet tall.
And maybe they just saw people that were more like a Goliath.
You know, Goliath is totally human, but pretty big dude, right?
So maybe they were more just, you know feet tall but not 450 feet but either way the the nephilim there in that reference refers to somebody who is very big and strong this is all we know
we don't have any other details in scripture so i know this sounds very kind of outrageous and
scientific sci-fi or whatever but i i think this third view is probably what's going on here
there just seems to be too much biblical and traditional evidence to support it. We don't
know any, I mean, after verse 4, then all of a sudden we
move into Noah and the flood, and we're not given any more details about this.
So I think there's a good argument that could be made
that this is the fall
of a portion of the angelic realm.
That the beings that we now call demons became demons.
They were formerly angelic beings.
And this is their fall.
Because 2 Peter and Jude says God punished them.
They committed the sin.
God punished them. They committed the sin. God punished them.
And again, I'm not going to take a bullet for that.
I'm not going to say without a doubt or whatever,
but where did demons come from?
Where did these spiritual beings come from
that follow the serpent?
We don't see them up until this point.
I think this is probably how they got here.
Questions, thoughts? point I think this is probably how we how they got here questions thoughts I can give you nightmares okay who says the Bible is not interesting right you
know your questions Josie questions thoughts Josie's been doing a lot of research on the Nephilim.
There is another passage in the Bible that mentions them as the fallen ones. Which one's that? I forgot. Oh, Ezekiel
32. I think so. Ezekiel 32 talks
about people in the afterlife, and I think they're called the fallen ones. I think it might
be a different word, but it's, yeah, that's right.
Yeah, I just saw that this morning, yeah.
No more questions?
Yeah, okay.
So where does the dinosaurs fit in?
Where do the dinosaurs fit in?
I was waiting for...
So my thought is that dinosaurs were around before the flood.
And we didn't get to the flood.
We'll get to that next week.
And after the flood, the flood wasn't just a lot of water.
It was like a whole rearrangement of creation.
Some people think this is where the continents that were all kind of together,
you know, kind of divided and where we get the layout of creation now
might be as a result of the flood.
But the whole ecosystem has changed before and after the flood.
So the theory that I find plausible is that dinosaurs were around before the flood.
After the flood, the ecosystem
was so different that they slowly ended up dying off because they couldn't, they didn't
survive that new ecosystem. Now, this is way out of my realm. I'm not an anthropologist
or whatever, biologist or whatever, zoologists. But that's what I think.
Do you have any thoughts on that?
Or anybody else that's done some research on dinosaurs?
And this would fall into the whole problem
of the dating of creation.
How long ago are these events?
And dating the fossil record and all that's above my pay grade
that I can't really mention.
There was a movie, is it just Noah with Russell Crowe?
You ever see that?
And they reference, if there's those giants in that movie,
that movie is drawn on 1 Enoch 6 to 11.
They're drawing on the description there in 1 Enoch
of the Nephilim and these giants as part of that movie.
I know some people were like,
this movie is so unbiblical.
And it might be.
But it's actually a pretty thoughtful movie
the way they have these giants
that were running around in the movie.
All right, let me close with some prayer
and we can go to the church.
God, thank you so much for revealing yourself to us
through your word and for always being faithful
to your promises, Lord.
Every genealogy we look at, every story we look at, Lord,
is a testimony to your faithfulness
to fulfill your promise to redeem us, to bring us back to you, to fulfill your promise, to redeem us,
to bring us back to you,
to restore that Eden-like relationship
that we once had with you.
We just ask for your blessing
on the rest of the morning.
In Christ's name, amen. Thank you.