Genesis 2:4-7,15-18,21-25, 3:1-8
Several years ago, I saw a film about
Steve Jobs, the founder of Apple. He was
a fascinating person, a bit of an enigma.
What was it about Jobs that made him so successful? He was not
especially kind or likeable. He was not
a gifted programmer, like his partner Wozniak.
He was not a businessman. What
was he? What was his genius? He was a
creator.
There is one scene in the movie
where he obsesses about the dimensions of his new computer, the Next. It was a black cube, but apparently the
dimensions had to be off just a fraction of an inch for the human eye to
perceive it as a cube. The production staff
got it wrong, and Steve was not satisfied with the results. He actually had a million other problems more
urgent than this, but this was the one he obsessed about.
It had something to do with his
vision about what people want. He knew
that if he created things that were good for something – that is, useful – and
a delight to the eyes – that is, beautiful – people would desire them. Covet them.
Lust after them. He was right,
wasn’t he?
The trick was just to get the
price at a manageable level, something attainable. If Apple computers were a lot more expensive
than other computers, it was just too great a hurdle for most people, as badly
as they might want it. But when they
found the sweet spot, that price which was a little higher than the others, but
justifiable to the consumer, the sales would come rolling in.
We are irrational beings, but we
are rational too. We want what we want,
and then we want to justify our wants.
That’s the story of Adam and Eve
and the fruit.
Here they are in this beautiful,
perfect garden. They have everything
they need to be content. They have all
the food they need, they have every variety of plant and animal, and they have
each other. They are free to eat, sleep,
play, work – whatever they want whenever they want. And they have a close, intimate relationship
with God, their creator. What more could
they want?
Well, it turns out there is
something more, and it’s right in the middle of the garden.
They didn’t seem to pay it much
attention in the beginning. They had
what they needed; they were content. The
tree of the knowledge of good and evil was there, but it was not to be
touched. End of story.
But then here comes the serpent
with that nasty thought: Here is something nice that you don’t have. You want it, don’t you? It’s tasty, it’s beautiful, and it will make
you smart. This fruit from “the tree of
knowledge of good and evil” is pretty great stuff. Why shouldn’t you have it?
It took a minimal amount of
arm-twisting for Eve and Adam to find justification for taking the one thing
that had been forbidden. Unfortunately
for us all, it was kind of a deal-breaker.
We turn to the story of Adam and
Eve in the garden again and again to try to understand what went wrong and
why. Granted, it’s not a factual account
of creation. It’s not history. It’s a story – one that has much to teach,
but today I want to look at what it says to us about freedom.
The story of Adam and Eve is a
story of two people created for freedom – within the bounds of the garden. This garden, where God has dominion, provides
for all their needs. In this context,
Adam and Eve are free of want, free of fear, free of pain. They are free to love and free to enjoy.
But the moment they shift their
focus from what they have to what they do not have, their freedom doesn’t seem
like enough. Suddenly, they are bored
with every other fruit in the garden.
Suddenly, life is unfair because there is something they need, something
they have to have, something everyone else has so why can’t they have it too. Well, maybe not that last part, since there wasn’t
anybody else around back then. But we
all know what this feels like – to covet something.
It’s very hard for us to
distinguish our wants from our needs; this is something we learn at a very
young age. I remember once having a
little boy explain to me the difference between a want and a need; all the
while I was imagining his mother teaching him that very lesson in the
supermarket checkout line, the valley of temptation for all boys and girls.
We’re not good at knowing the
difference, and we spend a lot of time fretting about what we have and what we
don’t have, being anxious about having enough.
And when we are anxious about what we have or don’t have, we have lost
our sense of gratitude.
When we have lost our sense of
gratitude, when we have succumbed to the belief in scarcity, that we don’t have
enough, it is because of one thing: we have forgotten who is the Lord of our
lives.
To whom does this all
belong? To God. To quote Madeleine L’Engle, “Time is
God’s. We are God’s. Creation is God’s.” Everything we have is a
gift from God. From that perspective,
why ever not be grateful?
I’m not a doctor or a therapist,
but I can tell you this: Gratitude is an antidote to anxiety. Do you remember, a couple of years ago, when
we practiced a month of gratitude? We kept daily gratitude journals, where we
practiced writing down three things every day for which we were grateful. Before we started, I heard from some of you that
you doubted you would be able to come up with even one thing every day, let
alone three things. Soon we discovered
how easy it was. For many of us, this
one little practice improved our lives: the daily practice of gratitude.
Perhaps Adam and Eve simply
forgot that the garden of creation was God’s.
That they were part of God’s creation, and as such, cared for and loved
by their creator. What they definitely
were not, were the masters of the garden.
If they only could have remembered this important truth, they would have
danced through the garden day after day, enjoying the colors, the scents, the
tastes and the music surrounding them.
This would have been their worship.
A wise man, Abraham Joshua
Heschel, said that you are sure to lose your ability to truly worship when you
start to take things for granted. He
said, “Indifference to the sublime wonder of being is the root of sin.”
The sin that enslaves us – this
is what Jesus told us. But Jesus also
told us that he came to set us free again.
God made this good creation – and that includes us. God made us free for love and joy; for the
peace that passes understanding, for contentment.
We will always do battle with
sin. We will always be susceptible to
the fear of scarcity over the trust in God’s providence. This fear will prevent
us from giving the way our hearts really want to give. Our fears and false
beliefs will hold us captive. But the
truth will make us free, once again, free.
We are free to know the
Lord. And we are free to enjoy the Lord
– like the first words we say in the Westminster Catechism: that our purpose is
to love God and enjoy God forever. We are free to enjoy all that God provides
for us, and free to share. As Jesus said to his disciples as he sent them out,
“Freely you have received; now freely give.”
Ask yourself this question: What
are the impediments, the fears, that hold you back?
Give these to Jesus, the one who
makes us free … again.
Photo: Churchart.com
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