The Tree(s) of Life
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Then the angel showed me the river of the water of life, bright as crystal, flowing from the throne of God and of the Lamb through the middle of the street of the city; also, on either side of the river, the tree of life” (Revelation 22:1-2a).
Grace to
you and peace from God our Father and the Lord Jesus Christ.
Each of
the last three weeks, our Epistle from Revelation has shown us a vision of the new
Heaven and Earth. In chapter 21, we heard of “the holy city, new Jerusalem,
coming down out of Heaven from God, prepared as a bride adorned for her
husband” (v 1-2). Last week, John saw “the Bride, the wife of the Lamb” and went
on to describe her beauty and radiance in detail (21:9 ff). Today, the depiction
of the new Heaven and Earth is reminiscent of the Garden of Eden.
To
better understand this depiction, we go back to Genesis 2, “And the Lord God
planted a garden in Eden, in the east, and there He put the man whom He had
formed. And out of the ground the Lord God made to spring up every tree that is
pleasant to the sight and good for food. The tree of life was in the midst of
the garden, and the tree of the knowledge of good and evil” (v 8, 9).
God
planted two trees in the middle of the garden—the tree of life and the tree of
the knowledge of good and evil. Not much is said about the tree of life in
Genesis since it never got to serve the purpose God intended for it. Judging
from what God said in Genesis 3:22, its purpose was to confirm Adam and Eve in
their physical life. Perhaps if they had not sinned by eating of the tree of
knowledge of good and evil, but had chosen to eat of the tree of life, they
would have lived forever. According to Revelation 2:7, when we one day live in
God’s presence in Paradise, we will eat of the tree of life, and nothing will
interrupt that perfect life.
The
second tree mentioned specifically is the tree of the knowledge of good and
evil. People who know how this story comes out have asked: “Why did God have to
put that tree with the forbidden fruit in the garden in the first place? Since
Adam and Eve weren’t permitted to eat of its fruit, why put it there at all?”
Rather than attempting to read God’s mind, let’s just let the text speak for
itself.
“You may
surely eat of every tree of the garden,” the Lord said. “But 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.” Adam had a wide range of foods to pick from, and the
command to abstain from one tree was not burdensome.
When
Adam received this command from God, He was, in the fullest sense of the term,
alive. He was bound to God by the most intimate bond of love and trust. If Adam
refused to obey God, by that act, he would separate himself from God. That’s
death. And as evidence that man had cut himself off from his Creator, he would
then also be subject to physical death, the separation of body and soul.
Since
that tree had such fateful consequences for Adam and the entire human race, why
did God plant it in the garden? Was it just to test Adam, to see what he would
do when facing temptation? That doesn’t seem right. Genesis 2 speaks of what
God did to make His children happy, and this special tree was no exception.
God
never designed human beings to be puppets or robots whom He regulates by
pulling strings or pushing buttons. You can’t love or be loved by a puppet or a
robot! By placing the tree of the knowledge of good and evil in the garden, God
was giving Adam the opportunity to obey God of his own free will. In so doing,
God realized the risk involved, that Adam might choose to disobey Him. God was
giving the man a chance to grow. When God created Adam, he was in a state of
innocence. By giving Adam the command not to eat, God was offering him the
opportunity to progress from created innocence to conscious holiness. God
wanted His highest creature to be holy by choice, not by accident.
Martin
Luther used an illustration that makes God’s intent clear.
This tree of the knowledge of good and evil was
Adam’s church, his altar, his pulpit. Here, he was to yield to God the
obedience he owed, to give recognition to the Word and will of God, to give
thanks to God, and to call upon God for aid against temptation.
That
tree in the middle of the garden was Adam’s place to worship God. He was
reminded of God’s goodness to him. There he could thank God for His mercy.
There he could respond by giving God glad obedience.
The
Creator had endowed Adam with a free will, an inborn freedom to do what pleased
God. God wanted him to exercise that free will. If Adam had done so, the
experience would have produced a knowledge of good and evil similar to that
which God Himself has. Adam’s intellect would have become more keenly aware of
what God wanted and what He didn’t want. His emotions would have found joy in
the Creator’s will and would have convinced him of what a dreadful thing it
would be to rebel against God. And Adam’s will would have consciously chosen to
follow God’s command to have nothing to do with the forbidden fruit.
Alas, he
did not, the consequences of Adam and Eve’s sin reverberated throughout all of
creation to this very day. The serpent was cursed, the ground was cursed, childbearing
and marriage would come with great pain and frustration, and Adam and Eve and
all their children would die and return to the dust from which they were
created. Even so, God promised a Savior, the Seed of the woman who would crush
the serpent’s head.
A
statement that God made toward the end of this episode may puzzle some. “Behold,
the man has become like one of Us in knowing good and evil” (Genesis 3:22).
Luther remarked, “God says this in holy irony.” After Adam and Eve had eaten
the forbidden fruit, they knew from experience what good and evil are, but that
knowledge was a caricature of the knowledge God had intended for them to have.
They now knew good as something they had forfeited and lost. They now
knew evil as something that permeated their whole being, a built-in enemy
against which they would have to struggle even after they had been brought to
faith.
It
follows then, that there was one more thing God had to do, and it required of
God what we sometimes call “tough love.” He had to drive the two people
out of the garden. God did not want them, in their sin-stained condition, to
eat of the tree of life, for that would have perpetuated their present form of
life. God didn’t want them to live permanently in bodies enslaved to sin, like
the damned in hell; that would have made Christ’s magnificent work of
restoration impossible.
To block
any attempt Adam and Eve might make to reenter the garden, God stationed the cherubim
with a flaming sword at the entrance. By doing so, God was announcing that life
in this world is no longer a continual paradise but a time of grace, a period God
gives us in which we can find our way back through Jesus Christ.
In
Revelation 22, the scene is similar, but not identical, to the Garden of Eden. In
the new Heaven and Earth, there is only the tree of life. As the tree of life grows
continuously, eternal life grows forever from grace. Confirmed in holiness; we
cannot sin so we cannot die. So, we will have continuous access to this tree.
Heaven
will perfectly restore the paradise we lost through the sins of Adam and Eve.
God cursed the ground because of Adam’s sin, and the Lord banished him from the
Garden of Eden. But now in the new Heaven and Earth, the tree of life produces
twelve crops of fruit, one crop each month. The tree of life provides healing
of the nations. All the suffering caused by Adam’s fall will be ended. “No
longer will there be anything accursed” (Revelation 22:3). Heaven is a place of
beauty, safety, perfection, and eternal life.
I don’t
have to tell you that you’re not in the Garden of Eden. Adam and Eve were
exiled from there a long time ago, and with them all mankind. You’re obviously
not in Heaven, either. You’re in a place with sin and sorrow, pain and death.
It’s not just around you; it’s in you. According to the Word of God,
you’re guilty of all the sins in this text. As one who doubts, you’re among the
dogs. As one who wants your own will over God’s, you are among the sorcerers.
As one who views God’s plan for sex with contempt, you are among the sexually
immoral. As one who does not love his neighbor, you are among the murderers. As
one who places trust in other things, you are among the idolaters. And as one
who all too frequently believes God loves you because of who you are, you are
one who loves and practices falsehood.
It’s no
fun to hear, but remember: to break one part of God’s law is to be guilty of it
all. You do not have to act to be a murderer or adulterer: you only have to
have hate or lust in your heart. It is important to acknowledge this because it
is true, and because it makes all the clearer the need for forgiveness.
You see,
you would be numbered among the wicked outside, but there is a crucial
difference. While you’re not yet in Heaven, while you’ve not yet come into the
glorious presence of Christ, Christ has come into this world and into your
presence. Your Savior, Jesus Christ, became flesh and dwelt among us. Between
Eden and Heaven, His is the tree of life. The Thanksgiving Prayer in the
Service of the Sacrament for Divine Service 4, links the tree of life in the
Garden of Eden to Christ and His cross. We pray:
In Your righteous judgment, You condemned the
sin of Adam and Eve, who ate the forbidden fruit, and You justly barred them
and all their children from the tree of life. Yet, in Your great mercy, You
promised salvation by a second Adam, Your Son, Jesus Christ, our Lord, and made
His cross a life-giving tree for all who trust in Him.
We give You thanks for the redemption You have
prepared for us through Jesus Christ. Grant us Your Holy Spirit that we may
faithfully eat and drink of the fruits of His cross and receive the blessings
of forgiveness, life, and salvation that come to us in His body and blood.
Jesus saved
us from death by dying in our place. He hung on the cursed tree of the cross so
that we who were accursed are blessed. On the cross, Christ suffered hell for
you so that you might be with Him in Paradise. In Eden and Heaven, there is the
tree of life planted by God so that His people may eat of it and live. On
Calvary, there is a tree planted by Roman soldiers. It has one crossbeam for
its branch. One precious fruit hung on that tree: the bloody, beaten body of our
dear dead Savior. That tree is the tree of life in this world, because by His
crucifixion Christ has redeemed you for Heaven. Now He is risen from the dead,
having borne on that tree the fruit of forgiveness and life.
And
before we move on, remember the penitent thief on the cross. Following his ill-spent
life of crime, he would be numbered among the transgressors. But by God’s gift
of faith, he believed that Jesus is his Savior. Repentant, he said to Jesus,
“Remember me when You come into Your Kingdom.” And Jesus responded, “Today you
will be with Me in Paradise.”
“Paradise,”
by the way, is a Persian word that means “garden,” most specifically the Garden
of Eden. Jesus, in effect, says to the thief on the cross, “Today you will be
with Me in Eden restored—you’ll be with Me in the new Heaven and Earth.”
Because
of sin, you are outside of Paradise, but Christ is with you. And by means of
His sacrifice on the cross, He has brought the tree of life and the hope of the
garden to you. You are no longer a thing accursed because you are blessed. For
the Lord says, “Blessed is the one who keeps the prophecy of this book.” So
blessed you are: for God has put His saving Word into your ears; and by the
grace and faith that He gives you, you keep His Word—you hold onto it and
gladly trust in Christ as your Savior.
He says,
“Blessed are those who wash their robes, so that they may have the right to the
tree of life and that they may enter the city by the gates” (Revelation 22:14).
So blessed are you: for your robe has been washed white in the blood of the Lamb.
The river of life flowed at the font at your baptism, where Christ joined you
to His death and washed your sins away. The fruit of the tree of life—the
forgiveness won at the cross—is still given to you in His Word and Supper. By
God’ grace, through these means, you are forgiven for all your sins in the name
of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit. Amen
Unless otherwise
indicated, all Scripture quotations are from the Holy Bible, English Standard
Version, copyright © 2001 by Crossway Bibles, a publishing ministry of Good
News Publishers. Used by permission. All rights reserved.
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