So if we know what relationships are supposed to be like (see post one), how they are designed by God for Creation, then why are they so hard? I think the answer is found in Genesis 3, where we encounter how sin is brought into the marriage relationship. The hearts of Adam and Eve were turned away from God when they sinned against him, and Satan’s goal was realized. After Eve was deceived and ate of the forbidden tree, Adam was faced with a dilemma, and he must make a choice that is only possible when living in a world where sin has entered. “He must, he thinks, either obey God and lose his beloved Eve or enter with her into rebellion and lose his own standing before God. The choice was between the gift and the Giver, between Even and the blessed Creator.” Adam ate the fruit, and the choice was irrevocably made.
I don’t think Adam was right, though. We don’t have to choose between the gift and the Giver. Instead of turning in faith to God to help him, Adam turned away from him and that’s why he fell into sin. “He gave Eve the place in his life reserved for God alone. He made her the ultimate object of his worship… Eve was not designed to do this. She was made to be a suitable helper for him, not a goddess.” They listened to a lie; despite what Satan tempted them with—-that they would be like God—-they found that only God can be the source for blessing in our lives. His love is given to us with the intent that we enjoy it, but their rebellion ruined what was once good.
More effects of sin:
1. Alienation: The man and the woman could no longer be in a right fellowship with God, and could therefore no longer enjoy the intimate fellowship and love they previously had with each other—-no longer were they pure and innocent. Genesis 3:7 says, “Then the eyes of both were opened, and they knew that they were naked. And they sewed fig leaves together and made themselves loin cloths.” “Gone were the days of open disclosure; Adam and Eve now had something to hide, something to cover up, something wrong at the core of their beings.”
2. Fear: God enters the scene, Genesis 3:8-9: “And they heard the sound of the Lord God walking in the garden in the cool of the day, and the man and his wife hid themselves from the presence of the Lord God among the trees of the garden. But the Lord God called to the man and said to him, “Where are you?”’ Adam states that he was afraid, and then he hid himself from the Lord. The presence of the holy God was a threat to him, when in a right relationship with God, His presence should be loving and Fatherly.
3. Self-centered concern for oneself instead of commitment to another. Adam is the first blame-shifter in a “long, long line of men to put down his wife for his own sin.” He points fingers both at Eve and at God. When questioned by God about his sin, Adam replies, “The woman whom you gave to be with me, she gave me fruit of the tree, and I ate” (Gen. 3:11-12). Adam is desperate to remove his guilt from himself. And when God demands an answer from Eve, she too does not respond completely truthfully: “The serpent deceived me, and I ate” (Gen. 3:13).
How often we blame others-—and even circumstances-—for our sin. Instead of owning up to our own hardness of heart, we try to push God’s wrath onto other things. I think if we really saw our sin for what it was, and openly admitted to it, relationships would be so much easier. We wouldn’t be trying to cover ourselves up and hiding all the ways in which we sin. “Sin corrupts intimacy with shame and offers secrecy in its place. It twists commitment into selfishness, intimacy into secrecy and shame, and interdependence into conflict.”
Next: The curses God put individually on all men and women, and what that means for today.
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