(So I was watching a vlog at matthewlucio.com about whether or not God unfairly cursed Eve over Adam after they sinned, and about half way through a light bulb exploded in my head. Shrapnel everywhere. Any similarities between this blog and that vlog are entirely uncoincidental. I blame him... and the Holy Spirit.)
The
curses that God speaks of after Adam and Eve fall are fascinating to me. I think Lucio explained them well. John Eldredge has also been very influential
in my understanding of that whole scene in Genesis 3. My sister, Beth-Anne, has also given me some
insight, especially regarding how the curse effects Eve. This scene is key to human history, which
means it is key to the God-human relationship.
And something new (at least to me) hit me about that tonight.
There
is a lot of cursing in the Bible. “Cursed
is anyone who makes an idol. … Cursed is anyone who dishonors their father or
mother. … Cursed is anyone who leads the blind astray on the road. …Cursed is
anyone who withholds justice from a foreigner, the fatherless or the widow.” Cursed… cursed… cursed.
Back to
Genesis and the first curse. Greatly simplified:
everything that would have been painless and pleasurable has now, because of
sin, become full of pain. And so God
lays out the consequences of our disconnection from Him. We cut ourselves off from life and death
followed. The curse.
So this
is when it hit me. See, lately I’ve been
trying to read/hear/see everything through one filter: God is love. If God truly is love, then everything (and I
mean everything!) He does is part of
that love. So as I was listening to
Lucio, I was trying to figure out where the love was in the curses. To be sure, we brought it on ourselves and
fully deserved our suffering. And
normally that would be fair enough. But
love, true love, is bigger than simple cause-and-effect justice. And at first glance, the pronouncement of the
curse(s) seems pretty dim. And so I wondered: where is the love in the curses?
This verse
flashed into my mind: “Christ
redeemed us from the curse of the law by becoming
a curse for us” (Galatians 3:13).
Jesus became the curse. He took the curse fully upon Himself.
To me, this was an expansion beyond my typical
understanding of Jesus dying for my sins and the sins of the whole world. The idea that He became the curse for us
implies that He died, not just with all our sins on Him, but with all the pain
and anguish that came with them… and not only that, but all the suffering we
experience (that all humans everywhere have ever experienced) as a natural
result of our disconnection from God. The
labor pains and unfulfilled desires, the thorns and painful toil. All of it, every anguish that came as a
result of the first sin, it all rested upon Jesus from Gethsemane to
Golgatha. The curse given in Eden, and
every curse since then, weighed upon His soul.
Furthermore,
check this out. Back in Genesis, the curse is bracketed by two important
statements:
- Prefacing the curse upon the humans is the curse upon the serpent, which concludes with the promise of a redeemer: “He will crush your head, and you will strike his heel.”
- And following the curse is the first living (dying?) metaphor: “The LORD God made garments of skin for Adam and his wife and clothed them.” The first animal is sacrificed by God himself… Jesus gives us the first picture of Himself as redeemer.
The
curse is sandwiched between promises that the curse will one day be undone! In
fact, in a way, the curse itself is also a promise of a redeemer to undo the
curse!
When
all of this converged (and exploded) in my mind, it entirely changed the way I
see the pronouncement of the curses to Adam and Eve (not to mention all the
rest of the curses and punishments pronounced by God throughout the rest of the
Scripture). Every curse that Jesus
describes to them is a curse that He
will one day take upon Himself. Every
pain that He pronounces is a pain that He
will suffer in order to rescue us from ourselves. More than passing a sentence upon them/us, He is
passing a sentence upon Himself. This is
the price He is promising to pay to redeem us.
The
pronouncement of the curses is not God saying “This is how much you’ve disappointed Me and this is how you’ll pay for your sin” but rather, “This is how much I love you. This is how I am going to pay for your sin. This
is how far I am willing to go to
bring you back to Me.”