The hidden meaning of the tree of knowledge
AI Summary
Video Analysis & Structured Summary
Video Overview
Content Type: Educational/Lecture
One-sentence summary: A deep theological analysis of the Garden of Eden story revealing that the "knowledge of good and evil" represents moral autonomy rather than mere curiosity, and that understanding this reframes the entire biblical narrative of sin and redemption.
Target Audience: Christians seeking deeper biblical understanding, skeptics/atheists questioning the Genesis account, theology students, and anyone interested in biblical hermeneutics and ancient Near Eastern context.
Key Insights
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Moral Autonomy, Not Information: The Tree of Knowledge of Good and Evil isn't about gaining information but about claiming the right to determine morality independently from God. The Hebrew idiom "knowledge of good and evil" specifically refers to having moral authority and self-determination, not intellectual curiosity.
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The Fall as a Pattern, Not an Event: The Fall of Man wasn't an isolated historical moment but established a recurring pattern throughout Scripture where humanity repeatedly tries to define morality on their own terms rather than trusting God's authority—visible in Cain's rebellion, the Tower of Babel, and the corruption of Israel's kings.
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Ancient Israelite vs. Western Interpretation: Understanding the story requires thinking like a biblical Jew and grasping Hebrew idioms rather than reading it through a 20th-century Western lens. This cultural-linguistic context reveals layers modern readers typically miss.
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The Serpent's Half-Truth Strategy: The serpent didn't outright lie but twisted God's words and concealed the consequences. He reframed God's abundant freedom ("eat from any tree except one") as restrictive oppression, and promised "liberation" while delivering slavery.
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Redemption as Return to Relationship: The gospel isn't primarily about escaping judgment but an invitation to return to Edenic relationship with God—moving from self-determined autonomy back to abiding trust in God's wisdom and authority.
Key Terms & Concepts
Biblical/Theological Terms
- Tree of Knowledge of Good and Evil: Hebrew idiom representing the moral authority to determine right and wrong for oneself; not about information but independence from God
- The Fall: Humanity's rejection of God's moral authority and assertion of self-determination; the foundational pattern behind all human sin
- Moral Autonomy: The assertion of independent moral judgment apart from God; the core transgression in Genesis 3
- Abiding: Remaining in close relational dynamic with God, obeying not from obligation but from intimate relationship and love
- Spiritual Death: The severance of relationship with God; choosing not to know God who is the source of life
- Eden Reset: The promise throughout Scripture of reversing the curse through obedience, love, and return to God's authority
Key Characters & Entities
- Adam and Eve: The first humans who chose moral autonomy over trust in God's wisdom
- The Serpent: The deceiver who used reframing and half-truths to tempt humanity toward self-determination
- Jesus Christ: The savior who offers submission and rest as the antidote to the curse of self-determination
Related Biblical Concepts
- Wisdom (Biblical): In Scripture, wisdom comes exclusively from God and requires remaining close to Him; seeking wisdom apart from God is part of the original sin pattern
- The Curse of Sin: Not a distant past event but an ongoing participation in self-worship and moral self-determination that corrupts human nature
- Redemption: The restoration of right relationship with God through faith in Christ's sacrifice and return to God's authority
Timestamps & Notable Moments
- 0:00-2:00 - Opening: Atheist/skeptic objections to the Genesis account
- 2:00-5:00 - Introduction to the real meaning of the Tree and why most people miss it
- 5:00-10:00 - The creation account and God's boundary command
- 10:00-15:00 - The serpent's deception and the critical question: "Was the serpent lying?"
- 15:00-22:00 - Eve's motivation: seeking wisdom/insight without God
- 22:00-28:00 - Hebrew idiom explanation: "knowledge of good and evil" = moral authority
- 28:00-35:00 -
Transcript
📄 Transcript (31K characters)
This blows a lot of our minds because it appears that God has arbitrarily given some kind of weird command for no good reason. And atheists and skeptics have had a field day with this part of the story. >> If God didn't want her eating from it, why did he put it there? Why did he make it so appealing, so attractive? It says that the the tree looked like it was good for food. It was obviously very appealing. If God didn't want them to eat from it, why didn't he make it unappealing? Why did he make it tempting? If anybody is deceiving here, it's God. It seems like it wasn't Adam and Eve who bestowed upon humans a tendency to sin but God himself. Since that tendency was already there before the fool and indeed was responsible for the fool. And so if not sin or a proness towards sinning, what exactly was inaugurated by Adam and Eve's eating of the fruit? What if I told you that most people both in and out of the church miss the thrust of this story completely? The tree of the knowledge of good and evil isn't just about a forbidden fruit. It's about something far deeper. something that explains everything about who we are, why we sin, and why the whole story of the Bible unfolds the way it does. Are you ready to see it for yourself? Then let's dive in. [Music] Welcome back to Wise Disciple. My name is Nate and I'm helping you become the effective Christian that you are meant to be, which includes understanding what really happened in the Garden of Eden. Amen. Make sure to like, sub, and share this one around if it blesses you. All right. The story of the fall takes us to the very beginning in the Bible. Genesis chapter 1 and Genesis 1 tells us there was a creation of the whole world. And this creation was good. Look at this. In the beginning, God created the heavens and the earth. The earth was without form and void and darkness was over the face of the deep. And the spirit of God was hovering over the face of the waters. Verse 31. And God saw everything that he had made and behold it was very good. Now if you were like me growing up, you were taught this story in a very straightforward manner. And yet it was incomplete. Why? Well, because we typically don't learn this story the way that an Israelite would have heard this story. I can tell you I was taught this story from a 20th century western mindset. And that basically stays right on the surface level of understanding. You know, in other words, uh my pastor and my church spent time with the actual words on the page. Praise God. But they did not try to hear them as an early Israelite would. And I'm going to show you what I mean. So, we move forward in the story, right? God makes man in his own image, and he sets mankind in the garden to work and to keep it. But then he gives some interesting boundaries. Uh look at Genesis 2:15. The Lord God took the man and put him in the Garden of Eden to work it and keep it. And the Lord God commanded the man, saying, "You may surely eat of every tree of the garden." But here it is, "Of the tree of the knowledge of good and evil, you shall not eat. For in the day that you eat of it, you shall surely die." Now, right here, a lot of us tend to think like the atheist and the skeptic. you know, wow, look at God making up some silly rule, right? Why would he do that? Things don't look any better uh when this happens next. Genesis 3:1. Now, the serpent was more crafty than any other beast of the field that the Lord God had made. He said to the woman, "Did God actually say, "You shall not eat of any tree in the garden?" And the woman said to the serpent, "We may eat of the fruit of the trees in the garden, but God said, "You shall not eat of the fruit of the tree that is in the midst of the garden, neither shall you touch it, lest you die." But the serpent said to the woman, "You will not surely die. For God knows that when you eat of it, your eyes will be opened, and you will be like God, knowing good and evil." Here's a question. Was the serpent lying, or was he telling the truth? For those of us who know the rest of the account, Adam and Eve don't fall over dead once they eat the fruit. So, was the serpent telling the truth? Is God really the villain here? You see how these questions start to stack up if we don't do the work of understanding what's really going on in Genesis? By the way, uh you tell me. You know, maybe you're here cuz you're not a Christian, right? Maybe you're here and you used to go to church, but you you've left now and you're starting to come back around or or or maybe you are a Christian, but you don't fully understand the story either. What do you think is going on in the fall? What were you taught? All the elements of the plot are here, friends. You know, they're all set. You have a woman or excuse me, a man and a woman. Uh you've got a tree with a forbidden fruit. You've got the command by God not to eat of the fruit. And then you have a serpent who makes its way into the garden telling them to eat it and they'll be fine. Hey, what's going on, right? Let me know what you think in the comments. I think it's important that we discuss it, you know. Well, in order to figure this out, uh, we need to finish the story and then I'll show you what's really going on. Okay, watch this. Verse six. So when the woman saw that the tree was good for food, and that it was a delight to the eyes, and that the tree was to be desired to make one wise, she took of its fruit and ate. She also gave some to her husband who was with her, and he ate. Now notice that key phrase, to make one wise. That's what the tree could do. If you ate of that tree, it could make you Now, the word for wise in the Hebrew here has some uh connotation to it. You know, it includes this idea of being prudent. It includes this idea of having insight. So, in other words, Eve saw that the tree could give her insight or wisdom. Now, the question is, why does she need that? You know, if she continues to walk with God in the garden, um, as does her husband Adam, right? Shouldn't the all- knowing, all powerful God provide wisdom to them both as they remain in close relationship to him? Won't they gain wisdom and insight from him? The the thing that she's looking for from this tree now. Now, I if you're wondering why I'm thinking along these lines, it's because this is what the Bible goes on to teach us. As we read past the story of the fall, what the Bible teaches us is God is the source of wisdom. And so, to gain wisdom, uh to gain insight, one must remain close to God and obey him. As a matter of fact, uh the same root word in the Hebrew for wisdom here in Genesis chapter 3. So again, Eve is looking for that from this tree, this word is found all over the place in the Old Testament, and it's used to teach us something particular that wisdom comes from God. Watch how this plays out in Proverbs chapter 3. As a matter of fact, take note of the specific formula or the or the progression in Proverbs 3. All right. Verse one. My son, do not forget my teaching, but let your heart keep my commandments for length of days and years of life, and peace they will add to you. Let not steadfast love and faithfulness forsake you. Bind them around your neck. Write them on the tablet of your heart. So you will find favor and good success in the sight of God and man. Now, that phrase right there, good success, it takes us back to Genesis 3. It's the same root word for insight or wisdom. This is what Eve was looking for in Genesis 3. The proverb says you get it another way. if you obey God's commands. Um but also I mean do you notice that verse three uh more than that if you remain faithful and loving by reflecting God's character uh which I would argue comes out of the overflow of being in relationship with God. Well then you will have the type of insight and wisdom that Eve desired in Genesis chapter 3. That's the formula given to us in Proverbs 3. Okay. So, so let's just pull over for a moment. If you really think about what Proverbs 3 is saying, uh, and then obviously the picture given to us in Genesis, the Bible really is giving us a picture of two choices, you know, either the wisdom of God or the wisdom of the tree. Which will we choose? Genesis chapter 2 and 3 says if we choose the wisdom of the tree, we die. If we choose God, we live. But it's actually even deeper than that. All right. Uh Psalm 1 tells us the same thing, but uh but it does so by giving us a very familiar image. Uh see if you catch this. Look at this. Blessed is the man who walks not in the counsel of the wicked, nor stands in the way of sinners, nor sits in the seat of scoffers, but his delight is in the law of the Lord, and on his law he meditates day and night. So again, Psalm 1, these are the first two verses. Uh we have here this idea of obeying God's commands. But more than that, right, cuz love is involved. Do you see that? Um I it's not just that we obey, we delight in it, we find joy in it. You know that that's actually relational. That's so now I'm going to use a very particular Christian term here. That's abiding. Out of the overflow of our relational dynamic with God, we obey God. Amen. And guess what? That's Eden. That's what was originally happening with Adam and Eve before the fall. Psalm 1 says, "If we do these things, um if we delight in and and obey God's commands, this is what we will be like uh like." Watch this. Verse three. He is like a tree planted by streams of water that yields its fruit in its season and its leaf does not wither. In all that he does he prospers. H that's interesting. He will be like a tree that yields a certain kind of fruit that never dies. This is the fall, ladies and gentlemen. The fall is here. the the the imagery, the the concept, the idea, the theme. It's here in Psalm 1. You see how the fall is constantly played with in terms of imagery all throughout the scripture. Psalm 1 is saying, "Obey God, stay close to God, and out of that overflow, you will reverse the fall." This right here, this is an Eden reset, ladies and gentlemen. I mean, did So, did you notice this, right? Blessed is the man who walks not in the counsel of the wicked. Wait a second. Which wicked counsel would that be? The serpent. See, it's not that we're given the story of the fall uh in Genesis one time and we never engage these concepts ever again in the Bible. The opposite is actually true. Something so dramatic has happened in the Garden of Eden that it keeps getting brought up over and over and over again in order to teach the same important lesson. And in order to understand this lesson, we need to know what really happened in the garden. You know, now as it turns out, um the clue here that's really going to help us figure this out, it's in thinking more like a biblical Jew. Uh when we go to the story itself, and I'm going to show you what I mean. It's in looking at it as if uh we were biblical Jews. Now, did you know that the phrase the knowledge of good and evil is a Hebrew idiomatic expression? And it has a very particular meaning. It refers to having the moral authority to determine right and wrong for oneself. In other words, u the fall of mankind was not based on learning morality but determining morality. Do you understand? The the tree was not about information. It was about independence. How do we know that? Well, there's a principle in biblical hermeneutics called the rule of first usage or the law of first mention. All right? The idea is that the first time a concept shows up in scripture, that initial context establishes its foundational meaning. You know, which then carries forward throughout the rest of the biblical story. You know, there's actually a really great example of this uh with regard to the first use of the word faith. And you should take a look at that. Actually, it's a I can't go into it. a separate Bible study. It comes from Moses. So, think of this, right? It comes from Moses faithfully keeping his hands raised during battle in Exodus. That's the first time that we find the word faith in Hebrew. When it comes to uh this phrase that we're concerned about, the knowledge of good and evil, we see that it's actually uniquely defined in other places of the scripture. All right. Now, um, I'm not going to show you every single example of this, but take a look at 2 Samuel with me, all right? With with there's an example here with King David. So, in this passage, there is a woman of Takcoa who praises King David for his ability to discern good and evil, but the concept is exactly the same. So, let me start in verse 17. Look at this. And your servant thought, this is a woman speaking, "The word of my lord the king will set me at rest. For my lord the king is like the angel of God to discern good and evil." And just so she makes herself clear, she repeats the same sentiment again in verse 20, but she uses slightly different words. Look at this. Uh, but my Lord has wisdom. Here it is again. like the wisdom of the angel of God to know all things that are on the earth. What is she saying? She's saying David has wisdom to know all things, good and evil. In other words, he has the ability to determine what is right and wrong in the same way that a divine being like an angel of God does. She's saying that's David's ability. Why? Well, because he's king. Uh, because he's wise. Because he can make those moral judgments with authority. Are you starting to see how this phrase is idiomatically understood? This is about having the discernment to determine what is right and wrong for oneself and not only for oneself, but you know, very often for others as well. All right, look at this. So in this passage, Solomon asked the Lord for an understanding mind so that he can perform uh his duties as a king in a very specific way. And here comes that phrase again. It says, "Give your servant therefore an understanding mind to govern your people that I may discern between good and evil. For who is able to govern this your great people?" It's the same concept in the Hebrew, friends. Knowledge, in this case, applied knowledge or discernment between good and evil. It's not that Solomon has no idea of what good and evil really was. It's that Solomon wants to determine what is right and wrong with authority. Wait a second. Wait a second. Would you look at that? Solomon did it the right way, did he not? Remember what was the fall? Remember seeking moral autonomy uh seeking moral authority to determine right and wrong uh apart from God. Right? What does Solomon do? He rejects the tree and he goes to God. Amen. He wants to lead his people well as king. And so he goes to God for that kind of moral authority. To be clear, you know, um this phrase is not merely reduced to moral autonomy. So in other places in the scripture, you know, if you keep doing your studies, uh you'll find it describing moral maturity. Um the point is, the point that I'm making is in Genesis, this is elevated to the level of divine prerogative, the right to define good and evil. All right? Now, what I'm telling you right now uh is also what biblical scholars have noticed, both Christian and Jewish biblical scholars, by the way. So, Bruce Walty says uh says it like this in his commentary on Genesis. The tree is good, but it belongs exclusively to God. Sin consists of an illicit reach of unbelief, an assertion of human autonomy to no morality apart from God. The creature must live by faith in God's word, not by a professed self-sufficiency of knowledge. Treer Longman agrees in his commentary. This is what he says. The point is that by eating of the fruit, Adam and Eve actually partake in evil. They also assert their own moral independence from God. In essence, through their act, they say to God, "We will not allow you to define what is right and what is wrong, but we will make our own ethical judgments." Here's what John Walton says as well. The wisdom represented in the tree of the knowledge of good and evil is not itself the source of wisdom. God is. They were to gain their wisdom. Adam and Eve were to gain their wisdom from him perhaps through the tree eventually, but only as and when they were ready for it. All right. But it's not just Christians. Okay. The medieval Jewish commentator Nakmanades points out that the will or the determination to choose is what was awakened in the garden. Watch this. The fruit of this tree gives birth to the will and desire that those who eat it should choose a thing or its opposite for the good or the bad. This is why it is called the tree of the knowledge of good and evil because daat in our language refers to will or intention. All right. Now to be fair spoke at a time before the enlightenment. Uh so terms like autonomy, moral autonomy, they were not a thing. Um, so you're not going to find that particular phrase here, but it is understood that this is precisely what Nakmanades is talking about. He's talking about moral self-determination. Now, he goes on to link other concepts as well to the tree, but the consistent thread of moral autonomy is understood here in this story. That's why we find this over and over in the scripture, ladies and gentlemen. It's because the sin of Genesis chapter 3, it didn't end in the garden in Eden. It actually set the pattern for all human rebellion. It redefined good and evil on our own terms. And once you see that, you can't unsee it. It's all over the place in the scripture. So in Genesis 4, instead of trusting God's way of worship, Cain decides what's acceptable for him. The result, he murders his brother. He's exiled and he's alienated. Right? In Genesis 11, humanity unites to create a tower of Babel, not under God's rule, but to make a name for ourselves. Do you see that? This is moral autonomy in the form of an ancient ziggurat. Right? In the age of the judges, everyone did what was right in his own eyes. Are you seeing the pattern? This is the Hebrew equivalent of saying, "Everyone determined for themselves what was good and what was evil." Then we get to the anointed kings of Israel from 1st Samuel to 2 Kings, right? These men were supposed to administer God's justice. Instead, they redefined it. They exploited others. Uh they worshiped idols of their own making. This is why we get to the prophets and we find Isaiah saying this. Isaiah 5:20, "Woe to those who call evil good and good evil, who put darkness for light and light for darkness, right? The fall and that uh tree of knowledge is behind all of this. This is even why we find the prophet Jeremiah saying this Jeremiah 17:9, the heart is deceitful above all things and desperately sick." Who can understand it? Right? Humanity's internal uh moral compass is broken precisely because we took God's place as moral authority. Do you understand? Now, a moment ago, I asked the question, was the serpent lying? You know what I mean? Again, let's uh let's take a look at this. Now, the serpent was more crafty than any other beast of the field that the Lord God had made. And he said to the woman, "Did God actually say you shall not eat of any tree in the garden?" Let's stop right here. Okay, you see how the serpent takes something that God said and flips it upside down. Okay, look at what God actually says uh in chapter 2:1 17. The Lord God said, "You may surely eat of every tree of the garden, but of the tree of the knowledge of good and evil, you shall not eat." You see how this statement is actually filled with freedom and options. You can eat of every single tree. Look around you. It's all there for you except for one. That's the way that God frames it. The serpent reframes this to did the did God actually say you shall not eat of any tree in the garden? You see how now God appears to be restrictive and limiting? Which by the way, you can't eat of any tree? That's a ridiculous question because if they don't eat anything, they're going to starve, right? So, that's not even what God said at all. But what the serpent did was he took the elements of what God said and then he twisted it around to be reframed in a manner that was advantageous to him to his purposes. Okay? That's what the Bible is talking about when it says that the devil is a liar. You with me so far? Uh verse two. And the woman said to the serpent, "You may we may eat of the fruit of the trees in the garden." But God said, "You shall not eat of the fruit of the tree that is in the midst of the garden, neither shall you touch it, lest you die." But the serpent said to the woman, "You'll not surely die. For God knows that when you eat of it, your eyes will be opened, and you will be like God, knowing good and evil." Again, a part of this is true, and a part of it isn't. When Adam and Eve chose moral autonomy over God, they broke their relationship with him. they severed it. That means they could no longer remain in that dynamic, that relational dynamic they once had. And so God sent them away from his presence. But that's the thing, to be away from God, to be severed in this way relationally, is to not know him in a biblical sense. And choosing not to know God who is the creator God. He is the God of life and of flourishing. choosing not to know him in this intimate way is death. That's what the Bible is communicating. This is spiritual death. This is um the opposite of eternal life, right? And what they'll gain is what the serpent said would happen. Their eyes will be opened. They will display a form of moral autonomy like God. This is literally what God says in verse 22. Behold, the man has become like one of us, knowing good and evil, right? Determining morality for themselves. So that is true. But at what cost? That's the question. At what cost? The serpent makes Eve believe that there is no cost. What there is on the other side of this is liberation, freedom from the restrict restrictions of God. The Bible tells us that there is a devastating cost. That is separation and alienation from what is truly good. And that has brought the curse of death upon the whole world. Ladies and gentlemen, this story is the the fall is behind so much of what the Bible is teaching us. Like I said, if you continue to go past Genesis chapter 3, you're going to find this as the backdrop of so much of what the Bible is teaching people, you know, and once you see it, you can't unsee it. So, a moment ago, I was in uh Proverbs chapter 3, you know, but here's how the whole thing finishes. Watch this. So, again, verse one, my son, don't forget my teaching, but let your heart keep my commandments for length of days and years of life and peace they will add to you. Let not steadfast love and faithfulness forsake you. Bind them around your neck. Write them on the tablet of your heart. So, you will find favor and good success in the sight of God. Again, good success is that same root for wisdom that we find Eve reaching for in Genesis 3. But now watch this verse 5. Trust in the Lord with all your heart and do not lean on your own understanding. In all your ways acknowledge him and he will make straight your paths. Be not wise in your own eyes. Fear the Lord and turn away from evil. Do you see the fall here? Is that not what Adam and Eve did in the garden? Do you understand? This is everywhere. Be not wise in your own eyes. Fear the Lord and turn away from evil. It will be healing to your flesh and refreshment to your bones. So if you obey the Lord, but again more than that, you know, it's not mere obedience. If you uh love and and you let love and faithfulness um if you let that carry with you uh in this dynamic you have with God, you will have proper wisdom and you will have uh healing in your flesh and bones. That's that's that's an interesting way to say that right? Until we understand uh what Proverbs is communicating is a reversal of Eden again. It's the reversal of the curse again. Why? Because the backdrop uh behind this particular teaching is the fall. What we have here is a promise of restoration. You know, the reversal of the curse of sin in the fall. It's right here in the Proverbs, which a lot of us, we go to the Proverbs and we're looking for, you know, principles that we can just go about our daily lives. It's still here. The wisdom of God is all over the place in Proverbs, ladies and gentlemen. Who knew, right? I'm not The point is I'm not overstating how much we find this in the scripture. Let me show you one more and and then I'll close. I'm going to I'm going to read this with you. But again, I want you to uh put your Garden of Eden glasses on, you know, and and tell me what you see as I'm reading this. Watch this. Romans 1 21. For although they knew God, they did not honor him as God or give thanks to him. But they became futile in their thinking, and their foolish hearts were darkened, claiming to be what? Wise. They became fools and exchanged the glory of the immortal God for images resembling mortal man and birds and animals and creeping things. Who is Paul talking about here? They knew God. They knew the truth, but they did not honor him as God. But instead, they chose their own wisdom. Does this sound familiar to you? Verse 24. Therefore, God gave them up in the lusts of their hearts to impurity, to the dishonoring of their bodies among themselves, because they exchanged the truth about God for a lie. Hm. And worshiped and served the creature rather than the creator who is blessed forever. Amen. You see how do do you understand? You see how the choice of the tree over God leads to uh moral autonomy, self-determination, and ultimately, and this is Paul's point, self- worship. Because if you are your own moral judge, you get to say what is right and wrong in your own in your own mind, in your in your own life, you walk around long enough pretending to be uh this type of person with this kind of authority. You are the one who sits as king and presides over your entire life. And when that happens, guess what happens? You leave God out of it. You deny the truth because God is the king of the universe. And the longer you sit in this posture of self-determining self- worship, your mind becomes warped. Your thoughts become corrupted, and you do what you ought not to do. And the expressions of this are manifold. You know what I mean? They become manifold over time. This is that's the whole point. Like if you thought and were taught that the curse of sin is some event, guys, it took place a long time ago that has nothing to do with me today. I'm walking around in the after effects of something that has nothing to do with me. You are sorely mistaken. The tree of knowledge was not about information but independence from God. The fall was not over curiosity. It was over control. Humanity said, "We are going to entrust ourselves to our own moral compass, not you, God." And mankind continues to do this to this very day. We are all participators in this curse. Ladies and gentlemen, the Bible leaves no person exempt from participating in this type of curse. We are all guilty. From Genesis to Revelation, the story of sin is always the same. Humans reach for the right to rule themselves, to be their own moral authority as if like fruit, and every time it ends in ruin. This is why we need a savior, ladies and gentlemen. We need a God who loves the world that he made so much that he gave his only son so that whoever would believe in him would not perish but have eternal life. Actually, let me say the same thing using different words. This is why the God who loves his people, the people that he has created for himself would not let us go. He invites all who are willing to come back to him to come back to return to that edenic style relationship in the garden before everything went wrong. And that's the gospel actually. The gospel of Jesus is an invitation to be with him, to know him again, to love and to serve him, and to abide in him the way that we were originally designed to be. And in this divine relationship, in this uh return to the garden, we will find redemption. We will find peace. We will find rest. As Jesus offers all of us who are willing to lay down our lives, you know, in our own self-determination, and our own autonomy, this is what he says. Come to me all who labor and are heavy laden, and I will give you rest. Take my yoke upon you and learn from me for I am gentle and lowly in heart and you will find rest for your souls. That's Matthew 11. The irony is that the serpent offered freedom and gave slavery. Jesus offers submission and gives rest. And you can receive that now. You can have that today. Amen. Romans 10 says it like this. If you confess with your mouth that Jesus is Lord and believe in your heart that God raised him from the dead, you will be saved. For with the heart one believes and is justified, and with the mouth one confesses and is saved. Here's the bottom line. If you have not repented of your sin and committed to following after Jesus in this way, I encourage you, don't waste another moment. You think you have all the time in the world, and you don't. Now is the time. Now is the time for you to be the person that God created you to be. And I encourage you to grab a Bible and to go find a church that teaches that Bible. Well, if you need help, uh, I have friends in the comments, you know, who can guide you, uh, who I trust, you know, who are part of my smaller community over on the Patreon. They're going to help you if you have questions. All right? I will I will ask them to come alongside you, uh, if you post these these kinds of questions. Uh, also, you can come find me on the Patreon. You know, there's a free Bible study that I do every weekday, Monday through Friday with about 16,000 people now. There's another channel uh where I I'm going through the Gospel of Matthew currently, okay? Passage by passage. We're going through the Gospel of Matthew. It's called Every Word. I encourage you to avail yourself of these things. All right? But at the end of the day, here's what it is. Stay close to the Lord. Stay close to his word and go find his people and fellowship and worship with them. All right. All right. That's enough out of me. If you enjoyed the insights here, why don't you check out the Patreon? I'm there every day, uh, with exclusive videos, access to videos like this before they come to YouTube, and so much more. If you want to meet one-on-one with me, we can do that, too. Uh, go ahead and click the link below for the Patreon. If you're into Bible study, I've been reading the Bible here using my Logos app. Logos is going to give you two months for free if you go check it out using my link. So, go to logos.com/wisdisciple and just try it out, you know? Uh, download the app, try it out. Hey, if you're interested in learning uh the original biblical languages, I encourage you to do that. It's not easy. Uh but there is an app that actually makes it fun. Go check it out. It's called Biblingo. I've also partnered with them and Logos because I think they're going to level up your uh studies of God's word. So, click on the link for Biblingo below. Use my special code wise disciple 10 at checkout. All right, friends. I will return soon with more videos. But in the meantime, I'll say bye for now.
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