The Consequences of Eating from the Tree of Knowledge

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The purpose of this study will be to examine the specific fulfillment of the consequences contained in the warning against eating of the tree of knowledge of good and evil. Before we look at that fulfillment, it will be beneficial to note the specifics of the promise.

THE PROMISE OF DEATH

The promise seems to be quite clear as God tells Adam and Eve, “in the day that you eat from it you will surely die” (Genesis 2:17). The Hebrew text literally says, “dying, you will die” (tWmT' tAm), though we should understand this, not as speaking of two deaths, but as a Hebraic figure of speech indicating the certainty of that which is promised. The translators of the NAS capture this idea when they render it, “You will surely die.”

Not only is the certainty of death given in this prophecy, but the time element in the prophecy is quite specific. This certain death would take place “in the day that you eat from it.” It should be noted that the term “day” had been previously defined in Genesis 1 as that which encompassed evening and morning. Though there have been a number of differing interpretations of the true meaning of the six days of creation, few have tried to attach such explanations to Genesis 2:17. Indeed, the serpent echoes this reference to the day by making the claim that “God knows that in the day you eat from it your eyes will be opened, and you will be like God, knowing good and evil” (Genesis 3:5). Thus we have a contrast between what God says will happen on the day that man eats versus what the serpent says will happen on the day in which man eats. Leupold takes this a step further to say that “the thought actually to be expressed is the instantaneous occurrence of the penalty threatened” (1975:128).

What would ta...

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...played out in the rest of the Old Testament
• The fulfillment of that promise culminated in the cross.

4. Conclusion.

The promise of death looked to an expectation of immediate fulfillment; it was to take place “on the day you eat.” When the Lord appears on the scene in the garden after Sadam and Eve had eaten of the forbidden fruit, the reader expects Him to carry out this promised sentence of death. Instead, He gives a promise that, in its final and complete form, looks to that sentence of death being meted out to the promised seed of the woman. We read that his heel would be bruised, even as he carried out his ultimate victory over the serpent. Though this would not take place for many thousands of years, there did take place on that very day a substitutionary death that served as both a type and a promise of the ultimate sacrifice that was to come.

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