The
Slippery Slope
by Lois Tverberg
"The
LORD saw how great man's wickedness on the earth had become, and
that every inclination of the thoughts of his heart was only evil
all the time. The LORD was grieved that he had made man on the earth,
and his heart was filled with pain." Genesis
6:5-6
We
think of the point at which sin enters the world as when Eve takes the
first bite of the apple. Some of us quickly leap next to the Gospels to
read God's answer to the problem. But
it is interesting that if we keep reading we can get a lesson about sin
and its consequences.
We
see sin's effects even after Adam and Eve are sent out from the
garden. Within a few years, one of their own sons commits the
first murder - a drastic worsening from Adam and Eve's small act
of rebellion of eating forbidden fruit. Cain is a man who doesn't
care about his brother and is prone to jealousy. His anger intices
him to murder, just as the serpent led Eve to sin. A
few generations later, in Cain's line, we see a man even more
vengeful than Cain - his descendant Lamech. Lamech said the following:
I have
killed a man for wounding me, and a boy for striking me;
If Cain is avenged sevenfold, then Lamech seventy-sevenfold." Genesis
4:24
Not
only was Lamech more violent than Cain, he was even proud of it! Finally,
evil reached its peak a few generations later in the generation of the
flood. The scriptures say that this was a people whose only thought was
of evil all the time, and God was sorry He made them. He wiped them all
out with a flood, but the first thing that man did after the flood was
to build the tower of Babel -- it was clear that the flood hadn't washed
the sin out of their hearts.
At
this point, God began a much more long-term answer for sin in the heart
of man.
In
the very next chapter, God chose one faithful man, Abram, and promised
that through him He would make a people that would bless the whole world.
Through him would come a
nation that could be taught God's way to live, and even if they struggled,
could be a light to the nations around them. And God could use this nation
to bring His final answer to sin - Jesus.
Through
this we can see the amazing power of sin that starts out small and quickly
grows powerful and ugly. But we can hope in the fact that while God's
answer also starts out small, it ultimately will triumph with redemption.
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