... Pt. II.
A continuation of A Tale of Two Kingdoms.
It is in this perfect paradise
that Satan enters as a serpent. He sows deceit into the pure sanctuary and
brings forth death. As a result, all of creation is cursed. The woman saw the
fruit was pleasing and desirable. She was being tempted to find pleasure
outside of God. She is being told she does not have full pleasure in God. They
turned from the Pleasure-giver and tore from Him. They were no longer filled
with Him. Instead, they feel shame. They both hide in the trees that were to
bring them pleasure.
However, it is at this bitter
time that God makes a promise to restore his people back into his kingdom made
clear by the appearance of His Son. Imagine that moment. You are full of shame,
God curses things, you watch God kill and skin an animal and you are kicked out
of the Garden, your home, the place you know you are meant to belong because
you are with God and in a right relationship with Him. God tells them to get in
this dead and bloody thing and they will be okay. Their shame will be covered.
Later, God tells us to get in a dead and bloody thing that is now risen and
alive and our shame will be taken away. We get the upgrade, the new and
improved. Just as a lamb was slaughtered in the Garden to clothe the man and
woman and cover their shame, so the final Lamb was slaughtered to remove their
shame.
God curses the serpent and says
one day you will be crushed by the descendant of a woman. Jesus was the
descendant of a woman. He did not have an earthly father. Romans 16: 20 says,
“And the God of peace will soon crush Satan under your feet.” We are one with
Christ and get to take part in crushing Satan under our feet.
Fast-forward to Exodus. God
brings His people out of the land of slavery and into the desert where He gives
them a new identity as children of God. They are no longer slaves. It is in the
desert that he washes away the identity of slavery and restores to them to
their proper identity as children of God. They definitely don’t get it all the
time and God gives them a picture example. He has them make the tabernacle. The
tabernacle was made to look like the Garden of Eden—fruit everywhere, vines,
cherubim covering the walls (Ex 36:8). He has them make the Ark of the
Covenant. The base wood of the ark and the tabernacle is acacia, a thorn bush.
It was not originally part of creation. God covers it with gold. The thing that
was a curse is now covered in gold and used for something royal instead of
firewood.
On top of the Ark of the Covenant
are two cherubim, just like there are cherubim guarding the way to Eden. God
will meet us between the two cherubim (Ex 25:22). Every year a priest was to
put blood between the two cherubim on the ark on the Day of Atonement (Lev 16).
This was when they offered a sin offering and a burnt offering and did the
scapegoat. The amount of blood between them would look like someone tried to
enter Eden and was slaughtered. Fast forward to the New Testament for a moment.
Jesus did meet us between the cherubim and took the first blow to make a way.
He was massively obedient and made a way.
The veil covered with cherubim
was torn at crucifixion. Where cherubim once kept us from entering the garden
of pleasure, the garden of fellowship, they could no longer do so. Before, only
the high priest could only enter the Holy of Holies once a year. Jesus came to
destroy the works of the devil (1 Jn 3:8). The first thing God does is remove
the veils with the cherubim; a way to God and the tree of life in Eden is
reopened. The Garden of pleasure is where people can fellowship with God. A way
back into the kingdom of God was made.
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