Adam and Eve

Open Your Bible

Genesis 1:27, Genesis 2:4-9, Genesis 2:15-25, Genesis 3:1-24, Joel 2:26-27

In any study of biblical people, it’s tempting to take the easy route and look at the humans in the story and say, “Yeah! Do what they did!” or, more frequently, “Don’t do what she did, oh no!” We long to take a moral from the stories of their lives. Resist this urge. Look instead, in every story, at what God is doing. Even in the stories where we don’t see His name mentioned, He is working and remembering His people. He is putting the gospel story on display in their individual stories—and in our own.

Adam and Eve give us a glimpse of what pre-fall humanity looked like as untarnished image-bearers of God (Genesis 1:27). At the start, they are righteously naked—naked like babies. I imagine they are just delighted to be alive, living freely in healthy, functioning bodies alongside their Creator. But after the fall, Adam and Eve are tarnished image-bearers of God, and their nakedness bears shame instead of pure and innocent glory.

Truly, Adam and Eve’s original state is hardly recognizable to us. Since the fall, we now see all things from the perspective of our own fallenness. Every nook and cranny of our world now hides a tinge of that original sin. So it’s tough to imagine righteous nakedness, but I am definitely on board for the new heaven and the new earth where shame and sin no longer smudge the image of God we bear.

Adam and Eve, realizing their sin and shame, attempt to hide and cover up. First they use their own hands to craft garments from fig leaves; they are attempting a man-made, physical solution to a spiritual problem. This is insufficient.

Then God clothes them in animal skins, but this requires the first shedding of blood—the loss of life and spirit of an animal—signifying that a God-created, spiritual solution is needed to solve the problem of sin and shame.

We need God to clothe us as He clothed Adam and Eve. Our spotless righteousness was lost in the fall. Now, we must be clothed with His robes of righteousness, which can only be granted by the shedding of blood—Jesus’s blood. When we are clothed in His righteousness, we can once again find freedom from shame and guilt.

We still try to find our own way to righteousness, to free ourselves from shame, either by declaring our sins to be virtues—or by ignoring them altogether. We try to deny that we are fallen at all and laud our shame as admirable (Romans 1:28–32). But these efforts are just more fig leaves.

The only solution is Christ. He does not return us to the past, to Eden, but raises us to a new and greater Eden, which cannot be lost. He does not merely restore us to pre-fallen righteous nakedness, but grants us the new and more glorious clothing of Christ’s righteousness. In Him alone we find the fullness of what it means to be made in the image of God: to be like Christ. And “we know that we shall be like him, because we shall see him as he is” (1 John 3:2).

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152 thoughts on "Adam and Eve"

  1. Julia Kaufman says:

    This was amazing thank you

  2. Alyssa Annis says:

    I am really excited for this study after reading through this first day. I’ve probably read through this passage a dozen times before but never have gotten the insight of the fig leaves being a “man made physical solution to a spiritual problem” until now. What a thought that God has provided a real lasting fix to our sin with his own Son. I am blessed and looking forward to the rest of this study!

  3. Elisabeth Glunk says:

    Love it so far!

  4. Sherree Hunsberger says:

    Just now starting this study. Looking forward to growing closer to Him and learning through these men and women of the OT.

    I love to think about God’s creation before the fall. The beauty of sinlessness is comforting. Looking forward to heaven!

    Adam and Eve didn’t take long to sin. We do the same!

  5. Karin Carlson says:

    “This is us”
    At first I thought of the show “this is us” and the brokenness and mess of this family unit. We are all broken as humans.
    Then the great posts on “who is us” and the Trinity. Had not caught that before…thank you.

  6. KuuleiSionenenoaKahoku says:

    “The only solution is Christ”, couldn’t have said it any better. The Grace of God through Jesus Christ cleanses any and every sin! No sin is greater than another and all sin, once asked for forgiveness is thrown into the deepest of the deepest depth in the sea, lost forever Micah 7:19. What an amazing God we serve. I pray that his word touches everyone’s hearts and changes the way we see, act & do things. Let’s see and do everything through Gods eyes

  7. Irina Shampay says:

    What a wonderful promise to restore all that is broken and all that is wrong and make it new and right!

    1. sumin kim says:

      Yes!

  8. Emily Terwilliger says:

    I really appreciate the call to look at what God is doing in every story and not just boil Bible stories down to moralistic lessons. God is at work at we miss it when we’re only looking for a lesson.

    1. Krystal Weiss says:

      I agree. That holds great promise for me as I look at my own narrative also. Instead of celebrating my own success or complaining about my own failure, I should instead look for what God is up to in my life and what the bigger picture is.