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Good And Evil Ii Series
Contributed by Glenn Pease on Mar 12, 2021 (message contributor)
Summary: Satan will use the truth and nothing but the truth, and he will offer you the very best if he can persuade you to get it by disobeying God.
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Oliver Wendell Holmes said, "Pretty much all the honest
truth-telling there is in the world is done by children." This does not
mean, however, that their truth telling is always pleasant. Especially
if you have guests, or if you are like the Sunday School teacher who
asked too many questions. One Sunday she told the story of the Good
Samaritan, and she made it very vivid so the children could realize
clearly what had happened. Then she asked, "If you saw a person
lying on the roadside all wounded and bleeding what would you do?"
A thoughtful little girl broke the hushed silence and said, "I think I'd
throw up."
The truth is not only not always pleasant, but it can even be used
to promote evil. William Blake wrote, "A truth that's told with bad
intent beats all the lies you can invent." Satan is the father of lies, but
he reveals right from the start that he recognizes that truth can often
be even more effective than lies in accomplishing his purpose. If you
think the devil never tells the truth, then you have not read Gen. 3
very closely. In verse 5 the subtle serpent tells Eve that when she eats
of the forbidden fruit her eyes will be opened, and she will be like God
knowing good and evil. No one can call this statement a lie without
also accusing God, for in verse 22 God says the serpent's prophecy
was literally fulfilled, and man did become like God knowing good and
evil. Satan is not fussy. If the truth can be used to get men to disobey
God, why bother inventing lies?
Truth is never an adequate reason to justify disobedience to God's
revealed will. Satan will use the truth and nothing but the truth, and
he will offer you the very best if he can persuade you to get it by
disobeying God. Just because something is new does not mean that it
is right, or that it is God's will. Adam and Eve assumed that if they
could become more like God by disobeying God it must be the right
thing to do. They got a good thing, but they paid too great a price,
when by obedience they would have gotten not only the knowledge of
good and evil, but eternal life as well. There is no doubt that God
intended Adam and Eve to eat of both the tree of life and the tree of
the knowledge of good and evil, but it was to be only in His good time.
This seems clear if we look closely at God's words in verse 22. These
are really quite startling words, and they have led to some very
radical developments in the history of theology.
God says, "Behold the man has become like one of us, knowing
good and evil." Many have looked at these words and said that it
doesn't sound like a fall, but rather a rise. Man's first sin made him
more like God than he was when he was innocent. That is an
improvement, and it made man greater than he was before. Fallen
man is more divine than innocent man, and so the fall must have been
good. Many conclude that God intended man to fall just because it was
the way for Him to become more godlike. They do not see
tragedy in man's fall, but rather the beginning of the struggle of man
to climb to the heights of perfection. What they are failing to see,
however, is the fact that man got this good by disobedience, and so fell
from a perfect relationship to God. It is true that eating of the
forbidden fruit made them more godlike, and that is why it is
reasonable to believe that God would have let them eat of it eventually
after they had proven their loyalty to Him.
When God finished creation He said that all was good. That
included the tree of the knowledge of good and evil. The tree was not
evil, nor was it bad to have the knowledge of good and evil. God has
it, and no one can be like God without it. Animals do not have it, and
so they are not moral beings. Man does have this knowledge and is a
moral being, and is responsible for choosing good and avoiding evil.
The Bible refers to the knowledge of good and evil as a precious gift.
God admits here that it is a quality of His own nature, and so to have
it is to partake of the divine nature. In I Kings 3:9 Solomon prays,
"Give thy servant therefore an understanding mind to govern thy
people, that I may discern between good and evil." In II Sam. 14:17 it