Matthew 27:33 In the beginning
there was a garden. It was a place of
beauty and wonder and goodness. It was
fresh and new. There was no
ugliness. No lack. No hunger or violence or want. In a world that God called into being and
called “good”-- this garden was even more.
It was the place where God dwelt with man. They lived in perfect fellowship with one
another. No barrier between them. No hard feelings, guilt or shame.
In this garden were two special
trees. There was the Tree of the
Knowledge of Good and Evil. And there
was the Tree of Life. Both of these
trees worked in perfect agreement with their names because God himself promised
that they would. The Tree of the
Knowledge of Good and Evil provided that knowledge-- and the Tree of Life gave
life, full, unending, eternal life.
God’s Word attached to those trees gave them their power.
Dwelling
there with God in the garden was man:
Adam and Eve. God loved
them. He provided for them. He wanted to protect them from anything that
would harm them. And so he gave them his
law: you must not eat from the Tree of
the Knowledge of Good and Evil for the day you eat of it you will die.
You
know the rest of the story. You can tell
it as well as I can. What we struggle to
understand is what they did what they did.
In a perfect world, where they dwelt with God, when they had everything
they could possible need, why on earth would they reach out their hand to what
God had forbidden, take of it, and eat?
Part
of that answer of course is the devil.
He was there at the Tree of the Knowledge of Good and Evil,
contradicting everything that God had said.
“There is no curse here! There is
no loss here! There is only gain! You will be like God!”
That
is part of the answer of why Adam and Even did what they did—but it is only
part. The other part of the answer is
found in themselves: ears that were
willing to listen to the devil, eyes that were willing to look on forbidden
things, hands that were willing to take what didn’t belong to them, and hearts
that strayed from a God who loved them and desired to bless them.
When
we think about what happened in the garden that way, then it begins to make a
lot more sense. We begin to see our
story in their story. Eyes and
ears—hearts and hands-- that disobey. We
understand THAT story, don’t we? We know
how that story goes.
Adam
and Eve took fruit from the Tree of the Knowledge of Good and Evil and
ate. The tree worked just exactly how
God promised it would: there was
knowledge of good and evil but what a terrible curse that knowledge was!
They
knew that God was good in a way that they could never be—in a way they never
could have imagined. And they knew that
they were evil—evil in a way they never could have imagined—evil-- like the one
who tempted them, promising that they would be like God—but giving them instead
a hateful, evil image like his own.
Their
disobedience destroyed God’s creation.
Life was replaced with death—beauty with ugliness. Fellowship with God became fear of God.
There
was another tree there. The Tree of
Life. That tree had a promise of God
attached to it as well. It would give
life. Eternal, unending life. If Adam and Eve had eaten of that tree they
would have lived forever-- for God’s promise is true. But they would have lived forever as they
were: broken, sinful, alienated from God
and allied with the devil.
And
so God cast them out of the garden to keep them from that terror. You see he still loved them. Despite their sin. Despite their disobedience. Despite what they had done to his world. God loved them. He cast them out from the garden to keep them
from the tree of life and he promised that he would make things right once
again—that he would send the Seed of the Woman to save the world. He sealed that promise with the shedding of
blood.
We
can picture Adam and Eve being cast out of the garden. But what I want you to picture, is the line
of people who followed them. Their
children, and grandchildren and great-grandchildren and more and more. An unimaginably long, sad line of people
going forth throughout history, bearing Adam’s curse, cast out of God’s
presence.
That
sad line of people, if we are following it in our mind’s eye, brings us to
another place—a place called Golgotha. We
call it a garden in keeping with our theme—but it was nothing like the Garden
of Eden. It was a place of
ugliness. A place of death. A rough, rocky outcropping shaped like a
skull where crucifixions were carried out.
Golgotha
is where that sad like of broken humanity stretching back to Adam and Eve had
finally come—a place of death—just like God promised.
There
was a man in this Garden of Golgotha—a man who looked nothing like Adam in all
his glory. This man had suffered such a
horrendous beating that no one could bear to look at him. His face was so disfigured by the blood from
the thorns on his head and the brokenness of his beating that even his friends
could not recognize him. Nails had been
driven into his hands and feet. Every
breath was agony.
There
were other people there too. That long,
sad, ugly line of people that went all the way back to Eden had continued along
the Via Dolorosa and then out through the gates of Jerusalem and made its way up
to this hill of death called the skull.
There
were religious leaders who should have had words of life on their lips but were
agents of death. There were soldiers
whose life’s work was death. There were
criminals whose deeds were worthy of death.
There were loved ones of the condemned whose broken hearts already
mourned his death. Death. Death.
Death.
What
made this scene even more horrible was that the One who was beaten and shamed
and crucified was completely different than every other person in that sad line
of humanity stretching forth from Eden.
He
was innocent of any wrong-doing. He was
holy and sinless. He deserved nothing
that had happened to him. It was the height
of injustice that he had been sentenced to death. He shouldn’t have been in that line of broken
humanity at all—except that he chose to be there.
As
we gaze upon that scene—as our eyes follow that sad line of broken, sinful,
dying humanity that stretches forth from the Garden of Eden throughout history
right up to the cross and the death of this holy, innocent, sinless man—we
might think to ourselves: this is the
end—it simply cannot get worse than this--this is the culmination of ugliness
and sin—this is the undeniable fulfillment of God’s terrible wrath over what
man has done.
And
we would be right. The death of this
holy, innocent man is the culmination of evil.
It is the fulfillment of God’s wrath.
It is the inescapable end of human sin.
But
that is NOT ALL it is! It is also a
beginning. This place is a new start for
mankind. You see, the one who hung there
on that cross, the innocent, sinless man who shed his life’s blood there, is
the Seed of the Woman that God promised back in the Garden of Eden.
Into
the ground of Golgotha (whose very name means death) Jesus Christ, the Seed of
the Woman, the One who is life in himself-- was planted into a place of
death. He is that single grain of wheat
that falls to the ground and dies—and yet—from which, springs abundant life.
That
is why we CAN call this place of death the GARDEN of Golgotha—because the
beginnings of a new Eden were planted there.
In this Garden of Golgotha there is a tree—the tree of the cross. Back in Eden there were two trees: the Tree of the Knowledge of Good and Evil
and the Tree of Life. Here in the Garden
of Golgotha only one tree is needed for both.
At
the tree of the cross is the knowledge of good and evil. We see there, as in no other place, just
exactly what our sins have done—their evil—their ugliness. We see there, as in no other place, the
goodness of God and the holiness and sinlessness of Jesus, that even when he
was being treated in such an evil fashion the only words that came from his
lips were words of forgiveness- and care-and trust in his heavenly Father.
The
tree of the cross not only shows us good and evil. It is also the tree of life. Life is promised there. Rich, abundant, everlasting life that comes
through the promises God has attached to the cross. Where before man was forbidden to touch the
tree of life because of his sins, now God invites us to lay hold of it by faith
and live forever because we are forgiven.
We
should also be aware that just as in Eden so at Golgotha, the devil is there
with his lies. His voice is heard in the
scorners and mockers who stood there at the tree of the cross. “He saved others, let him save himself!” “If you come down from the cross, then we
will believe!”
The
devil’s mocking, scornful voice is heard throughout the world today, tempting
us this time to refuse to take hold of the tree of life that God calls us to in
the cross.
The
Bible says that: They came to a place called Golgotha (which means Place of a Skull). There was a procession of people who walked
with Jesus through the streets of Jerusalem, out through the city gates, to the
place called the skull.
Some
of them ridiculed him. Some mourned
him. Some would not desert him even in
death. Some crucified him. One helped him carry the cross. Some who left
Golgotha that day remained unbelievers.
Some who came there as God’s enemies left as his children.
That
procession of people is part of the great stream of humanity that came forth
from Eden and through Golgotha. We too
are a part of that group. We came out of
the Garden of Eden but what matters now is who we are when we leave the Garden
of Golgotha. Amen.
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