Eve opened her eyes at
the sound of someone approaching. She
raised her head to see an old man wobbling towards her, cane in hand. She smiled as Adam came to her and held out his
hand to lift her from the ground. This
was the same hand she had held for generations.
This was the only other person on earth that understood that other
life. They had walked together as they
broke every new barrier there was to break.
Everything they had done in their entire life had been a new
discovery. Even now, they were still
testing new limits. Just how long did
they have? How long could a man last? They were familiar with death. They had seen it time and time again, but it
was always from disease or childbirth or an accident. No one had ever just hit their age limit and
died. No one knew if there even was a
limit. If nothing interfered, would they
continue to live until the end of the world?
For surely there was an end.
Surely the Father would provide a path back to Eden. She felt it as surely as she felt
anything. He would not abandon
them. He would remain faithful where
they had been faithless – although they deserved far, far less.
Leaning into her lifelong partner’s side she walked back
to her tent. How she adored this
man. They had been through so much, and
yet here he still was, leading the way.
She smiled as she remembered their first days together…
He was so young then.
Ageless, really, for the passing of time had no meaning in that place,
not like in did here. Strength poured
from him in those days. He was so
confident and purposeful, having been created as the crowning glory of
creation, to rule over everything else.
Eve had loved him from the first.
It was true that she had known no different, but what did that matter?
One of her granddaughters had asked her once if she felt cheated because she
had never had any choice but Adam.
Cheated? Because she “had” to
spend her life with the one the Father had intended just for her? Never! And why did one need options when one had what
was perfectly right? She and Adam had
literally been made for each other, and their love was meant to be a reflection
of the Father’s love for them. Why look
anywhere else?
Not that it had always been easy. Nine centuries together had brought its share
of hardship. Birth, death, hunger,
thirst, greed, selfishness, and most of all, fear, had invaded their lives and
wreaked havoc over the years. The fear
had been the worst. The introduction of
fear into their lives had been the worst part of the Fall. She remembered the first time she had sensed
fear – that knawing sensation in her stomach, unlike anything she had ever
known. It was that fear and sham e that
nearly drove her and Adam apart in those first few weeks out of Eden.
That first day on the outside was the worst she had ever
experienced. It was like having a limb
ripped off her body. One moment she had
been in the very midst of perfection.
The next moment she was in the middle of seeming nothingness. There were plants, but they were mere shadows
of the lush vegetation she had known.
Animals roamed, but they didn’t seem to have the same vibrant life she
was used to seeing – and instead of trusting her and Adam, they ran from them
or bared their teeth and attached in defense.
The ground was hard, not workable like the ground of Eden. Within her new animal skins, Eve had shivered
and shivered – for the first time she felt the sensation she came to know as
“cold.” As time wore on, she would experience
both extreme cold and extreme heat.
Nothing at all like the perfect climate of Eden.
Her new animal skins.
Eve shuddered at the memory of the first blood she’d ever seen
shed. They needed something to shield
themselves from the new extremes of this horrible place; as well, there was
also a need, as God explained, for blood to be shed as a result of their
rebellion. That was the way it worked –
sin required the shedding of blood. Eve
would never forget the stench of that first dead animal…and the horror of
realizing that creation could perish.
Eden had not known death.
For the first few days, Adam and Eve had been too
stunned, too numb in their grief to really communicate with each other. They were also too desperate for
survival. Instead of the plants readily
giving full and mouth-watering provision, the food was dull-tasting and
hard. Eve refused to eat it at first
until finally she got so hungry it wasn’t possible to go without any
longer. Although the eventually learned
how to prepare food so it was more enjoyable, Eve never really enjoyed eating
again. Nothing could wipe away the
memory of what food was supposed to taste like.
Even though they had heard the curse, they were not
prepared for how difficult it would be to survive. They discovered that not everything was
edible. Some things were rotted – like
everything else in this accursed place, the plants died – and some caused great
sickness. The first time they became
sick was an awful experience. The
discovery that their physical bodies could suffer so much was shocking. They had to learn how to work the hard soil,
how to coax food out of the vegetation of the earth. They learned how to kill animals for meat and
clothing. They learned how to erect
dwellings to protect against the heat and the cold…and the wind. Oh, the wind!
It was nothing like the gentle, cleansing breeze of Eden. No, this was a harsh, destructive wind that
blew away their provisions and knocked over their homes.
Yes, life had suddenly become radically, horrifically
different. And their relationship had
suffered for it. After the initial shock
of their new surroundings came the anger.
They had never experienced anger before, and the sheer force of the
emotion nearly ripped them apart. Adam
was the first to lay blame, accusing Eve of listening to that damn
serpent. Why did she have to be like God
anyway? They knew better. She knew better. How could she have exposed them to such
ugliness? Why oh why had she sought more
than she had been given? Eve retorted
that he had been standing right there – why hadn’t he spoken up? Why hadn’t he tried to stop her? One word from him would have stopped her
hand. But no, he had just stood there,
silently giving his permission…and then he had sealed his approval by partaking
himself. How dare he accuse her!
And so on and on it went.
Anger turned into another new experience – bitterness. They went weeks without speaking to one
another. Eve would cry herself to sleep
every night – lamenting the life she had traded for nothing, yes, but also
pouring out the brokenness of her heart over the loss of the man she was
created for. Those were lonely, endless
nights. It was unbearable, facing the
darkness of this new world alone. Even cried out to the God she knew must be
there, somewhere –surely He hadn’t left them altogether? She couldn’t bear the thought of having lost
both her lovers forever.
Bitterness gave way to apathy, apathy to complacency,
until finally, one day, Adam approached Eve.
He asked her to put down her work and sit down with him. Then, in short, stilted words, he began to
explain all that he had been feeling – the anger, the bitterness, and the
loneliness. He, too, had spent too many
nights in anguish. But God had reached
out to him and shaken him out of his
bitterness to see that she had been hurting just as much and that there was
hope – if he, Adam, would lay down his pride and anger and take the lead. Then in a choked up voice that soon turned
into a flood of words and tears, he said he was sorry. He was sorry for not being there, sorry for
not speaking up, sorry for not defending her from the evil that had wooed her
away. His confession brought a flood of
tears and apologies from her as well, and suddenly they were in each other’s
arms. For the first time since The Fall,
they cried together over their fate, and as they forgave one another, they had
a strange sensation come over them. They
knew, at that moment, that the Father was still with them. He spoke to them – not in the same way He had
before, but still He spoke – and they knew that though they had given up the
privilege of seeing and touching God, He had not given up on them, and He never
would. The healing had begun. Together, they built an altar and made a
sacrifice to God, and then hand in hand with each other, armed with the
knowledge of God’s love and forgiveness in their hearts, they began their new
lives in a new world. No, they would not
get to go back to Eden, at least not in this life. But God had not created them and brought them
this far to abandon them now.
As Eve walked on the arm of the one who had walked her
through so much, she thought of their lives over the years. Together, they’d forged a new life in a
desolate world. They had learned to tame
animals that had once come to their beck and call, figured out what plants
could be eaten and which could not, learned about clothing, shelter, all they
needed for survival – while all the time being led and taught by their
Father. They longed for that personal
place they had once had at His side, but something told them that this
separation would not be forever. They
had often lain awake at night, discussing this sense they had, that they were
living towards something, that there was this hope in the depths of their
corrupted hearts, that this dark place was not their final destination. They had learned a little about God’s
character in the near-millennia of their lives – although the more they
learned, the more they realized they could never hope to fully, as the serpent
had tempted them, “be like God.” The Father was far beyond their limited
understanding. Yet over time they had
come to recognize His grace in their lives.
He could have let them wander the earth after their sin. He could have killed them outright. It was no more than they deserved. Instead, in His grace, He had killed for them, made them clothes, and shown
them how to survive. In time, they even
began to see the grace in their banishment, for He had kept them from eating of
the Tree of Life and live forever in their sin.
Such a God of grace would surely not forsake them forever. They knew, somewhere deep down, that this was
not all there was. There was more for
them and their descendants. God has
created them for His own pleasure, and even now, they knew He was making plans
to set things right again. They may not
see it in their lifetime, but they would see it in eternity. God would make a way back to Eden.
1 comment:
Sara Kate...I love this! I can't wait to read more. If it were a book I would buy it and read it in one day then buy one for my friends. Seriously sister, it is so beautifully written and makes me long for the days of Eden. I can't wait for the next installment!
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