The Serpent and You
"Why not have everything?" he asked Eve. She knew that God had said, "You must not eat fruit from the tree [the fruit of this one tree], and you must not touch it, or you will die" (Genesis 3:3). But the serpent was quick to plant a seed of doubt: "Did God really say that? And if he did say it, why? The fruit is good. Why listen to the unreasonable commands of God that prevent you from fully experiencing life?" Eve was persuaded after a little manipulation of her conscience. When she brought the idea to Adam, he accepted it and also ate of the forbidden fruit. This story has overtones for us today. That serpent was not confined to the Garden of Eden. The same serpent (Revelation 12:9) and the same seductions come sliding up to us every day, presenting us with the idea that we know better than God. And dissatisfaction with life is an attitude Satan still offers us. "Are there appetites you have been commanded to control? Why not indulge them?" he asks. "Are there forbidden desires just out of reach? Why not find some way to grab hold of them?" These are thoughts we must reject. Some desires, were they to be fulfilled, would hurt us. There are some ambitions that God, in his wisdom, does not want us to gratify – not to limit us, but to help us avoid trouble we cannot foresee. Life itself also throws up its own restrictions. To acknowledge that we cannot always have everything our way is a mark of maturity. Jesus Christ told us that to inherit the kingdom of God, we must humble ourselves and become like little children (Matthew 18:3-4). We must maintain an attitude of humility in our relationship to God and his way of life. The apostle Paul understood this concept from experience. He believed it. He lived it: "I have learned to be content whatever the circumstances" (Philippians 4:11).
Satan is pictured as a serpent in a detail from James Tissot’s 19th-century watercolor titled God’s Curse (left). Snakes also decorate an ancient pottery stand found in a Canaanite temple at Beth-shean (top). Images of serpents were sometimes associated with gods or deities of the underworld and may have symbolized winter, sometimes called the "season of death."
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