As we have seen, God made different covenants with
mankind throughout Biblical history. The common element is our faith in Him, as reflected in three true Gospels. Faith is our belief in God Whom we
cannot see directly (Hebrews 11:1-3),
although His creation reflects His excellence (Psalm 19:1). Without
this faith it is impossible to please Him (Hebrews
11:6).
How do we demonstrate our faith in God? Faith is manifest in our obedience to Him (1 Samuel 15:22; James 2), yet each of us has
disobeyed God (Psalm 14:1-3; 53:1-3).
Sin, or disobedience, is always the result of pride and/or unbelief.
Thankfully, God can take the smallest seed of faith we can muster and grow it
into faith that could move mountains (Matthew
17:20; Luke 17:5-6). Paradoxically, He shows His love for us by
punishing us when we disobey, just as a loving Father does His children (Hebrews 12:5-11).
The specific requirements of what He asked the faithful to
believe and to do differed with each covenant, or promise that God made to His
chosen people (Hebrews 11). God
did not reveal His entire plan of salvation or Who He is all at once (Isaiah 55:9), nor will we able to
understand Him in His infinite glory until we see Him face to face (1 Corinthians 13:12).
Despite their disobedience that ultimately led to every
person being born with a sin nature (Psalm
51:5; Romans 5:18), I believe that Adam and Eve were saved
because they knew Who God was, and they obeyed Him before the Fall. They
recognized that He created them (Genesis
1:26-28; 2:7) and everything else, and that He provided for them
(Genesis 1:29; 2:9).
Before Adam and Eve disobeyed God, it appears that they
enjoyed daily fellowship with Him, speaking with Him as He walked in the garden
in the cool of the day (Genesis 3:8).
They obeyed God in that Adam named all the animals as God requested, and they
both kept and dressed the garden (Genesis
2:15,19-20).
Adam believed what God had done in creating a wife for
Him (Genesis 2:21-22), and he
recognized the significance of that creation and of their union (Genesis 2:23-24) as one flesh – a
forerunner or type of the union between Christ and His Bride the Church (Matthew 19:4-6; Ephesians 5:22-32).
Despite this blissful existence with God in the Garden of
Eden, Adam and Eve fell prey to Satan’s deception when the serpent convinced
Eve to disobey God by eating the fruit of the tree of knowledge of good and
evil (Genesis 3:1-6). God,
being holy and just, had to punish their sin (Genesis 3:16-19) and banished them from the Garden of Eden.
Yet their banishment from the garden was for their own
salvation, for had they stayed there and eaten of the Tree of Life, they would have
lived forever in their sinful, corrupted state, in their aging bodies subject
to sickness and pain (Genesis 3:2-24).
In a futile attempt to cover their own sin, symbolized by
their nakedness, with their own works, Adam and Eve sewed fig leaves together (Genesis 3:7). But God covered
their nakedness with animal skins (Genesis
3: 21), representing the blood atonement (Leviticus 17:11), or “scarlet thread,” that would culminate
in the shed blood of His Son (Matthew
26:28; Hebrews 9:22).
The perfect sacrifice of Jesus Christ, Lamb of God Who
takes away the sins of the world (John
1:29), not only covered sin but removed it as far as the East is from
the West (Psalm 103:12). When
God looks at all those who place their faith in Christ, He no longer sees their
sin, but only the perfect righteousness of His Son (1 Corinthians 1:30; Hebrews
1:8; Philippians 1:11; 3:9).
Although the first couple was cast out of the Garden of
Eden (Genesis 3:22-23), Eve continued to show her faith in God’s promise
that her seed would destroy the serpent’s seed (Genesis 3:15; 4:1, 25). Adam’s faith is not spelled
out, but he is mentioned in the genealogy of Jesus (Luke 3:38), suggesting that he was also saved by faith.
The disobedience of Adam and Eve resulted in all their
descendants being born with a sin nature (Romans
5:12-14). Except for Jesus Himself, all thereafter sinned and came
short of the glory of God (Romans 3:23),
and none has perfectly kept His commandments. So salvation cannot be based on
self-righteousness or works, or none would be saved (Isaiah 64:6; Ephesians
2:8-9). Rather, it is based on believing what God has revealed about
Himself at that point in history!
© 2013 Laurie Collett (reposted from the archives)
11 comments:
great post
Hi Laurie,
I am afraid I have difficulty with answering this question as my discussion on it would take hours and more. One thing I notice from Luke ch. 3 v.23:-
'Now Jesus Himself began His ministry at about thirty years of age, being (AS WAS SUPPOSED) the son of Joseph'
and in Matthew ch. 1 v. 18 it says:-
'This is how the birth of Jesus the Messiah came about: His mother Mary was pledged to be married to Joseph, BEFORE THEY CAME TOGETHER, she was found to be pregnant through the Holy Spirit'
So from these two verses, in all the Bible versions I have read, Joseph was not the father of Jesus, the Holy Spirit was.
I believe, as we are told that the scriptures are discerned spiritually, that there is a lot more to this subject, part of which is:-
' in which also He went and made proclamation to the spirits now in prison, who once were disobedient, when the patience of God kept waiting in the days of Noah '(1 Peter ch. 3 vs. 19 and 20)
God bless you Laurie, you have stirred this subject up in my mind again.
Dear Laurie
I fully agree with you that Adam and Eve were saved. And another good evidence of this was Abel, who showed faith in God above that of his older brother Cain. We can only assume that Abel's faith in God was taught by his parents.
About a hundred years after Creation, when there was a population large enough to build a city, Cain murdered Abel. When Adam was 130 years old, he became the father of Seth, of whom Eve said that he is to replace Abel (Genesis 4:25) - indicating that both Adam and Eve were aware of the Messianic line despite giving birth to many other children in between, and by believing, demonstrating saving faith.
An excellent blog, which happen to appear on the same weekend when I dealt with the complexity of Genesis 5 in my latest post.
God bless.
Thanks, Denise! God bless!
Laurie
Dear Brenda,
Thank you for sharing these Scriptures. I always appreciate your contributions, especially to topics such as these. I am blessed that this post encouraged you to consider this subject again.
May God continue to bless you richly,
Laurie
Dear Frank,
Thank you for sharing your insights on this -- we both appear to have similar beliefs on this subject, for the excellent reasons you have cited.
I enjoyed your latest post, and I always appreciate your posts and comments on this blog.
Many blessings to you and Alex,
Laurie
Now that is a question I have pondered. And also, Ananias and Sapphira. What do you think?
What a great question, Nonnie! At the end of Acts 4, it describes the apostles all being filled with the Holy Ghost. Assuming Ananias & Sapphira were part of that group (their names are first mentioned in Acts 5:1), I would have to say that they were saved, but that they fell prey to Satan's temptation. As our former pastor used to say, sometimes God can get more glory from a Christian's death than from his life, if he isn't living in accord with His will.
Thanks for your thought provoking question! May you have a great week in Him!
Laurie
Great post. Laurie. So many do not understand that while God only revealed his plan to mankind a little at a time, by the different covenants, it was complete before the world began. As you pointed out the key from the very beginning was faith in God. whether before to flood or after or before Christ came or after.
Thank you, Donald! Amen to salvation by grace alone through faith alone!
God bless,
Laurie
Thanks, Ken! God bless.
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