The comedienne Lily Tomlin once said that humans
developed language to satisfy our deep inner need to complain.
There may be truth in that because it’s undeniable that
human beings love to complain. It does seem to be part of our
nature. No matter what’s going on, we’re
never satisfied. Things are never quite right. They’re never quite good enough. We always want more. We always want better. It’s just the
way we are.
Now, it could be argued that there’s an upside to
that. After all, much of what we call progress has come out of a desire
to want more, or to want better. Many of our greatest inventions have
come because we wanted a better, easier way to do things.
But there’s a downside to it, too. This feeling that
things are never right, that they’re never good enough, can keep us from
appreciating what we have. We cannot just be happy to be what we are and
to have what we have. We always feel
like we’re missing something, like there has to be something better out there,
and that we cannot be happy until we get whatever that something is.
That’s one of the lessons we can take from our reading from
Genesis tonight. God had put human beings in paradise. Literally, paradise. Adam and Eve had everything they could ever
need. They had peace. They had
joy. They had happiness. They had each other. What else could anyone want?
Well, what they wanted was the one thing God had told them
they were not supposed to have. And is that not just like human
beings? If we’re told we cannot have one
thing, that one thing is the only thing we want. It’s the only thing we
can think about. It’s sort of like if
you told me I cannot have pork chops. I
don’t eat pork chops very often, but if you told me I could never have them
again, all of a sudden they’d be all I could think about. I’d want them
all the time.
And that’s how Adam and Eve were
with the tree of the knowledge of good and evil. Now, maybe you say, hey,
wait a minute. They did not get tempted
to eat from the fruit of that tree until the serpent started telling them about
it. And there’s truth in that. But
at the same time, if they had not been thinking about that tree, if they had
not been thinking about how cool it would be to eat some of that fruit, what
the serpent said would’ve had no effect on them, right? I mean, no matter
how great you told me life would be if I started eating Brussels sprouts
regularly, I would not be tempted to do it, because I don’t like Brussels
sprouts. You can only tempt someone to
do something if they’re already thinking it’d be cool to do it.
That’s how the serpent was with Adam and Eve. And
that’s how evil attacks us, too. It hits
us at our weak points. It hits us on things that, on some level, we’d
really like to do anyway. And it tells us, oh, go ahead. It won’t hurt anybody. Nobody’s going to know. And if they
did, nobody’s going to care. It’s not
really bad. Just go ahead and do
it. Whatever “it” happens to be.
That’s what the serpent said to Adam and Eve. Go
ahead. Eat the fruit. It won’t hurt anybody. Nobody will
know. It’s not really bad. Just go ahead and do it.
Adam and Eve had everything
they needed. But they were not satisfied with it. They wanted more. And by wanting more,
they ended up losing what they had.
But think about this: why did Adam and Eve want
more? Why were they not satisfied with what they had? Why did they
desire the one thing that God had told them they could not have, rather than
being grateful for the hundreds and thousands of things that God had given
them?
It comes down to a matter of trust, really. Adam and
Eve did not understand why God would tell them they could not have this one
thing. And when the serpent gave them a reason, they accepted that
reason.
Think about what that reason was. The serpent basically
told Adam and Eve that the reason God would not let them have that one thing
was because God was trying to keep something from them. God was trying to
keep them down. God was preventing them
from being what they could be. If they
just stopped listening to God, and what they wanted to do, they’d be so much
better off.
And they believed it. That’s sad, isn’t it? God had given them so much. Again, God
had given them everything they would ever need. But despite that, they
could not trust God. They could not
believe that God must have a good reason for not wanting them to eat the fruit
of that one tree. When the serpent told them God’s reasons were not good
at all, they believed him.
And that’s just like human beings, too, isn’t it? God
gives us so much. God gives us
everything we could ever need. And yet, if God tells us we’re not
supposed to have something, we have a hard time trusting God. We have a
hard time believing that God must have a good reason for telling us we’re not
supposed to have things. And when someone tells us, or when we tell
ourselves, that God’s reasons are not good at all, we believe it.
You know, contrary to popular belief, there are not a whole
lot of things in the Bible that God has told us not to do. And when God
does tell us not to do certain things, there are reasons. It’s not because God is trying to keep
something from us. It’s not because God is trying to keep us down or keep
us from being what we could be. It’s
because God understands life better than we do. And God knows we’ll be
happier if we live our lives God’s way rather than living them our own way.
I said that it comes down to trust, and it does, but it
comes down to something else, too. Why do we have trouble trusting
God? Because of our arrogance. We don’t want to accept that God knows better
than we do. We don’t want to accept that anyone knows better than we do. After all, nobody has a right to tell ME what
to do. I’ll do whatever I want.
And we do.
I suspect you’ve done that at times. I know I
have. When you did, how’d it work out
for you? It sure has never worked out for me. It may have seemed like it did, for a little
while. When Adam and Eve first ate the fruit, they probably thought it
was going to work out for them, too. Hey, we know all this stuff we did
not know before! It was only later, when
they had to accept the consequences for what they’d done, that they found out
that doing things their own way was not going to work out for them at all.
You know, arrogance is one of those sins we don’t talk
about a whole lot. And yet it’s all over the Bible. It may be the sin that the Bible talks about
the most. The desire to do things our own way. The belief that--whether we’d ever put it
this way or not--that we know more than God. The feeling that God’s rules
are old-fashioned, that they’re a relic of the past. Those rules were written thousands of years
ago--they don’t apply today. They certainly don’t apply to ME. I’m a free human being. I can do whatever I want. Who is God to tell me what to do? Who is anybody to tell me what to do?
And the thing
is, God will let us do that. God will
let us act out of our arrogance. God
will allow us to ignore God and do things our own way.
But think how God must feel when we do. I don’t have any children, of course, but I
often think that one of the hardest things about being a parent is when you see
your child making decisions, going down a road, and you just know that it’s not
going to work out well for them. You
know that the decisions they’re making, the road they’re going down, is only
going to lead to sadness. And yet,
there’s nothing you can do about it. All
you can do is let them know you still love them, and be there to pick up the
pieces when it falls apart as you know that it’s going to.
I suspect that’s how God feels about us, many, many
times. God sees the decisions we
make. God sees the road we’re going
down. And God knows that what we’re
doing is not going to work out well for us.
But God does not stop us. What
God does, though, is continue to love us.
And God will be there to pick up the pieces when things fall apart.
But how much easier, how much better our lives would be
if we just listened to God in the first place?
How much easier, how much better our lives would be if we put aside our
arrogance? How much easier, how much
better our lives would be if we stopped insisting on doing things our way and
instead started doing things God’s way?
Yes, God has given us rules for living. But not because God is trying to keep us down
or keep anything from us. God gave us
rules for living because God loves us.
So let’s put aside our arrogance and start living our lives God’s
way. Let’s trust God, because God always
knows best.
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