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												Verse 1Genesis 3:1. The serpent was 
												more subtle, &c. — Some would 
												render the word נחשׁ, nachash, 
												here, monkey or baboon, and the 
												word ערום, arum, intelligent: 
												but it may be demonstrated from 
												divers other passages of the Old 
												Testament, where the same words 
												are used, and from several parts 
												of the New, where they are 
												referred to, that our 
												translators are perfectly right. 
												The former word is used 
												concerning the fiery serpents 
												which bit the people in the 
												wilderness, which certainly were 
												neither monkeys nor baboons, and 
												concerning the serpent of brass, 
												by looking at which the 
												Israelites were healed. See 
												Hebrew, Numbers 21:6-9. It is 
												also used Isaiah 65:25, where, 
												in allusion to Genesis 3:14 of 
												this chapter, it is said, Dust 
												shall be the serpent’s meat; but 
												surely dust is not the meat of 
												monkeys. The word is also 
												everywhere rendered οφις, ophis, 
												in the Septuagint and in the New 
												Testament, which means serpent, 
												and nothing else. The latter 
												word, ערום, also, is rightly 
												translated, meaning primarily, 
												subtle, or crafty, from ערם, 
												caliditate usus est, and is so 
												rendered Job 5:12, and so 
												interpreted 2 Corinthians 11:3, 
												where the word πανουργια is 
												used, which certainly never 
												means intelligence, but always 
												craft or subtlety. Than any 
												beast of the field — Serpents, 
												in general, have a great deal of 
												subtlety. But this one had an 
												extraordinary measure of it, 
												being either only a serpent in 
												appearance, and in reality a 
												fallen angel, or the prince of 
												fallen angels, Satan; or a real 
												serpent possessed and actuated 
												by him. Hence the devil is 
												termed the old serpent, 
												Revelation 20:2-3. He said unto 
												the woman — Whom it is probable 
												he found alone. In what way he 
												spake to her we are not 
												informed: but it seems most 
												likely that it was by signs of 
												some kind. Some, indeed, have 
												supposed that reason and speech 
												were then the known properties 
												of serpents, and that, 
												therefore, Eve was not surprised 
												at his reasoning and speaking, 
												which they think she otherwise 
												must have been: but of this 
												there is no proof. Yea, hath God 
												said, &c. — As if he had said, 
												Can it be that God, who has 
												planted this garden with all 
												these beautiful and fruitful 
												trees, and hath placed you in it 
												for your comfort, should deny 
												you the fruit of it? Surely you 
												must either be mistaken, or God 
												must be envious and unkind. His 
												first object was by his 
												insinuations either to beget in 
												them unbelief, as to the reality 
												of the prohibition, and to 
												persuade them that it would be 
												no sin to eat of the fruit of 
												the forbidden tree, or to 
												produce in them hard thoughts of 
												God, in order to alienate their 
												affections from him. And such 
												are generally his first 
												temptations still. What! has 
												God, who has given you various 
												appetites and passions, 
												forbidden you to gratify them? 
												Surely he has not: but if he 
												has, he must be an unkind being. 
												And how then can you trust in or 
												love him?
 
 Verse 2-3
 Genesis 3:2-3. The woman said — 
												With a view to defend the 
												conduct of her Maker toward 
												them, against the insinuations 
												of the tempter. We may eat of 
												the trees of the garden — Of all 
												the trees except one. It is only 
												concerning one that God hath 
												said, “Ye shall not eat of it.” 
												But when she adds, Lest ye die, 
												it is evident her faith begins 
												to waver, and she inclines to 
												doubt whether God would fulfil 
												his threatening, which was not, 
												“Lest ye die,”
 
 but, “In dying ye shall die;” 
												that is, “Ye shall surely die.” 
												She seems also to have intended 
												to intimate, that if they died, 
												it would not be so much through 
												any particular interference and 
												severity of God in executing his 
												threatening, as through the 
												natural, pernicious effects of 
												the fruit, against which God had 
												only kindly warned them.
 
 Verse 4-5
 Genesis 3:4-5. The tempter, 
												finding that the woman began to 
												doubt whether eating this fruit 
												was a crime, and if it were, 
												whether punishment would follow, 
												now became more bold in his 
												attack, and, giving God the lie 
												direct, asserted roundly, “Ye 
												shall not surely die.” So far 
												from it, you shall have much 
												advantage from eating of this 
												tree. He suits the temptation to 
												the pure state they were now in, 
												proposing to them, not any 
												carnal pleasure, but 
												intellectual delights. 1st, Your 
												eyes shall be opened — You shall 
												have much more of the power and 
												pleasure of contemplation than 
												now you have: your intellectual 
												views shall be extended, and you 
												shall see further into things 
												than now you do. 2d, Ye shall be 
												as gods — As Elohim, mighty 
												gods, beings of a higher order. 
												3d, Ye shall know good and evil 
												— That is, every thing that is 
												desirable to be known. To 
												support this part of the 
												temptation, he abuseth the name 
												given to this tree. It was 
												intended to teach the practical 
												knowledge of good and evil; that 
												is, of duty and disobedience, 
												and it would prove the 
												experimental knowledge of good 
												and evil; that is, of happiness 
												and misery. But he perverts the 
												sense of it, and wrests it to 
												their destruction, as if the 
												tree would give them a 
												speculative knowledge of the 
												natures, kinds, and originals of 
												good and evil. And, 4th, All 
												this presently; In the day ye 
												eat thereof — You will find a 
												sudden and immediate change for 
												the better.
 
 Verse 6
 Genesis 3:6. When the woman saw, 
												(or perceived) — But how? 
												Certainly by believing Satan and 
												disbelieving God. Here we see 
												what her parley with the tempter 
												ended in; Satan, at length, 
												gains his point; God permitting 
												it for wise and holy ends. And 
												he gains it: 1st, By injecting 
												unbelief respecting the divine 
												declaration. 2d, By the lust of 
												the flesh: she saw that the tree 
												was good for food, agreeable to 
												the taste, and nutritive. 3d, By 
												the lust of the eye, that it was 
												pleasant to the eye. 4th, By the 
												pride of life, a tree not only 
												not to be dreaded, but to be 
												desired to make one wise. In a 
												similar way Satan still tempts, 
												and too often prevails: by 
												unbelief and their own lusts, 
												men, being tempted and drawn 
												away ( εξελκομενος, drawn out of 
												God, James 1:14) from his fear 
												and love, and obedience to his 
												will, are enticed, insnared, and 
												overcome.
 
 She gave also to her husband 
												with her — It is likely he was 
												not with her when she was 
												tempted; surely if he had been, 
												he would have interposed to 
												prevent the sin; but he came to 
												her when she had eaten, and was 
												prevailed with, by her, to eat 
												likewise. She gave it to him; 
												persuading him with the same 
												arguments that the serpent had 
												used with her; adding this, 
												probably, to the rest, that she 
												herself had eaten of it, and 
												found it so far from being 
												deadly, that it was extremely 
												pleasant and grateful. And he 
												did eat — This implied unbelief 
												of God’s word, and confidence in 
												the devil’s; discontent with his 
												present state and an ambition of 
												the honour which comes not from 
												God. His sin was disobedience, 
												as St. Paul terms it, Romans 
												5:19, and that to a plain, easy, 
												and express command, which he 
												knew to be a command of trial. 
												He sins against light and love, 
												the clearest light and the 
												dearest love that ever sinner 
												sinned against. But the greatest 
												aggravation of his sin was, that 
												by it he involved all his 
												posterity in sin and ruin. He 
												could not but know that he stood 
												as a public person, and that his 
												disobedience would be fatal to 
												all his seed; and if so, it was 
												certainly both the greatest 
												treachery and the greatest 
												cruelty that ever was.
 
 Verse 7
 Genesis 3:7. The eyes of them 
												both — Of their minds and 
												consciences, which hitherto had 
												been closed and blinded by the 
												arts of the devil; were opened — 
												As Satan had promised them, 
												although in a very different 
												sense. Now, when it was too 
												late, they saw the happiness 
												they had fallen from, and the 
												misery they were fallen into. 
												They saw God was provoked, his 
												favour forfeited, and his image 
												lost. They felt a disorder in 
												their own spirits, of which they 
												had never before been conscious. 
												They saw a law in their members 
												warring against the law of their 
												minds, and captivating them both 
												to sin and wrath; they saw that 
												they were naked — That is, that 
												they were stripped, deprived of 
												all the honours and joys of 
												their paradise state, and 
												exposed to all the miseries that 
												might justly be expected from an 
												angry God; laid open to the 
												contempt and reproach of heaven, 
												and earth, and their own 
												consciences. And they sewed, or 
												platted fig leaves together — 
												And, to cover at least part of 
												their shame one from another, 
												made themselves aprons — See 
												here what is commonly the folly 
												of those that have sinned: they 
												are more solicitous to save 
												their credit before men, than to 
												obtain their pardon from God!
 
 Verse 8
 Genesis 3:8. They heard the 
												voice of the Lord God walking, 
												&c. — It is supposed he came in 
												a human shape; in that wherein 
												they had seen him, when he put 
												them into paradise. For he came 
												to convince and humble, not to 
												amaze and terrify them. And they 
												hid themselves, &c. — A sad 
												change! Before they had sinned, 
												if they heard the voice of the 
												Lord God coming toward them, 
												they would have run to meet him; 
												but now God was become a terror 
												to them, and then no marvel they 
												were become a terror to 
												themselves.
 
 Verse 9
 Genesis 3:9. The Lord God 
												called, (probably with a loud 
												voice,) Where art thou? — This 
												inquiry after Adam, may be 
												looked upon as a gracious 
												pursuit in order to his 
												recovery. If God had not called 
												to him to reduce him, his 
												condition had been as desperate 
												as that of fallen angels.
 
 Verse 10
 Genesis 3:10. I was afraid, 
												because I was naked — He 
												confesses his nakedness, which 
												was evident; but makes no 
												mention of his sin. This he 
												wished rather to hide, feeling, 
												indeed, the shameful effects of 
												it, but not yet being truly 
												penitent for it.
 
 Verse 11
 Genesis 3:11. Who told thee thou 
												wast naked? — That is, how 
												camest thou to be sensible of 
												thy nakedness as thy shame? Hast 
												thou eaten of the tree — Though 
												God knows all our sins, yet he 
												will know them from us, and 
												requires from us an ingenuous 
												confession of them, not that he 
												may be informed, but that we may 
												be humbled; whereof I commanded 
												thee — Not to eat of it; I thy 
												Maker, I thy Master, I thy 
												Benefactor, I commanded thee to 
												the contrary. Sin appears most 
												plain and most sinful in the 
												glass of the commandment.
 
 Verse 13
 Genesis 3:13. What is this thou 
												hast done? — Wilt thou own thy 
												fault? Neither of them does this 
												fully. Adam lays all the blame 
												on his wife; nay, tacitly, on 
												God. The woman whom thou gavest 
												to be with me as my companion, 
												she gave me of the tree. Eve 
												lays all the blame on the 
												serpent. The serpent beguiled 
												me.
 
 Verse 14
 Genesis 3:14. God said unto the 
												serpent — In passing sentence, 
												God begins where the sin began, 
												with the serpent, which, 
												although only an irrational 
												creature, and therefore not 
												subject to a law, nor capable of 
												sin and guilt, yet, being the 
												instrument of the devil’s wiles 
												and malice, is punished as other 
												beasts have been when abused by 
												the sin of man, and this partly 
												for the punishment, and partly 
												for the instruction of man, 
												their lord and governor.
 
 Upon thy belly shalt thou go — 
												And “no longer on thy feet, or 
												half erect,” say Mr. Henry and 
												Mr. Wesley, (as it is probable 
												this serpent, and others of the 
												same species, had before done,) 
												“but thou shalt crawl along, thy 
												belly cleaving to the earth,” 
												the dust of which thou shalt 
												take in with thy food. And thou, 
												and all thy kind, shall be 
												reckoned most despicable and 
												detestable, (Isaiah 65:25, Micah 
												7:17,) and be the constant 
												objects of the hatred of 
												mankind. But this sentence, 
												directed against the serpent, 
												chiefly respected the infernal 
												spirit that actuated it, and his 
												curse is intended under that of 
												the serpent, and is expressed in 
												terms which, indeed, properly 
												and literally agreed to the 
												serpent; but were mystically to 
												be understood as fulfilled in 
												the devil; who is “cursed above 
												all irrational animals; is left 
												under the power of invincible 
												folly and malice, and, in 
												disgrace, is depressed below the 
												vilest beasts, and appointed to 
												unspeakable misery when they are 
												insensible in death.” — Brown.
 
 Verse 15
 Genesis 3:15. I will put enmity, 
												&c. — The whole race of serpents 
												are, of all creatures, the most 
												disagreeable and terrible to 
												mankind, and especially to 
												women: but the devil, who 
												seduced the woman, and his 
												angels, are here meant, who are 
												hated and dreaded by all men, 
												even by those that serve them, 
												but more especially by good men. 
												And between thy seed — All 
												carnal and wicked men, who, in 
												reference to this text, are 
												called the children and seed of 
												Satan; and her seed — That is, 
												her offspring, first and 
												principally CHRIST, who, with 
												respect to this promise, is 
												termed, by way of eminence, her 
												seed, (see Galatians 3:16; 
												Galatians 3:19,) whose alone 
												work it is to bruise the 
												serpent’s head, to destroy the 
												policy and power of the devil. 
												But also, secondly, all the 
												members of Christ, all believers 
												and holy men, are here intended, 
												who are the seed of Christ and 
												the implacable enemies of the 
												devil and his works, and who 
												overcome him by Christ’s merit 
												and power.
 
 It shall bruise thy head — The 
												principal instrument of the 
												serpent’s fury and mischief, and 
												of his defence; and also the 
												chief seat of his life, which, 
												therefore, men chiefly strike 
												at, and which, being upon the 
												ground, a man may conveniently 
												tread upon and crush to pieces. 
												Applied to Satan, this denotes 
												his subtlety and power, 
												producing death, which Christ, 
												the Seed of the woman, destroys 
												by taking away its sting, which 
												is sin.
 
 Thou shalt bruise his heel — The 
												part which is most within the 
												serpent’s reach, and on which, 
												being bruised by it, the serpent 
												is provoked to fix its venomous 
												teeth, but a part remote from 
												the head and heart, and 
												therefore wounds there, though 
												painful, are yet not deadly nor 
												dangerous, if they be observed 
												in time. Understood of Christ, 
												the seed of the woman, his heel 
												means, first, his humanity, 
												whereby he trod upon the earth, 
												and which the devil, through the 
												instrumentality of wicked men, 
												bruised and killed; and, 
												secondly, his people, his 
												members, whom Satan, in divers 
												ways, bruises, vexes, and 
												afflicts while they are on 
												earth, but cannot reach either 
												Christ their head in heaven, or 
												themselves when they shall be 
												advanced thither. In this verse, 
												therefore, notice is given of a 
												perpetual quarrel commenced 
												between the kingdom of God and 
												the kingdom of the devil among 
												men: war is proclaimed between 
												the seed of the woman and the 
												seed of the serpent, Revelation 
												12:7. It is the fruit of this 
												enmity, 1st, That there is a 
												continual conflict between God’s 
												people and him. Heaven and hell 
												can never be reconciled, no more 
												can Satan and a sanctified soul. 
												2d, That there is likewise a 
												continual struggle between the 
												wicked and the good. And all the 
												malice of persecutors against 
												the people of God is the fruit 
												of this enmity, which will 
												continue while there is a godly 
												man on this side heaven, and a 
												wicked man on this side hell. 
												But, 3d, A gracious promise also 
												is here made of Christ, as the 
												deliverer of fallen man from the 
												power of Satan. By faith in this 
												promise, our first parents, and 
												the patriarchs before the flood, 
												were justified and saved; and to 
												this promise, and the benefit of 
												it, instantly serving God day 
												and night, they hoped to come.
 
 Verse 16
 Genesis 3:16. We have here the 
												sentence passed on the woman: 
												she is condemned to a state of 
												sorrow and subjection: proper 
												punishments of a sin in which 
												she had gratified her pleasure 
												and her pride. I will greatly 
												multiply thy sorrow — In divers 
												pains and infirmities peculiar 
												to thy sex; and thy conception — 
												Thou shalt have many, and those 
												oft-times fruitless conceptions 
												and abortive births. In sorrow 
												shalt thou bring forth children 
												— With more pain than any other 
												creatures undergo in bringing 
												forth their young: a lasting and 
												terrible proof this that human 
												nature is in a fallen state! Thy 
												desire shall be to thy husband — 
												That is, as appears from Genesis 
												4:7, where the same phrase is 
												used, Thy desires shall be 
												referred or submitted to thy 
												husband’s will and pleasure, to 
												grant or deny them as he sees 
												fit. She had eaten of the 
												forbidden fruit, and thereby had 
												committed a great sin, in 
												compliance with her own desire, 
												without asking her husband’s 
												advice or consent, as in all 
												reason she ought to have done in 
												so weighty and doubtful a 
												matter, and therefore she is 
												thus punished. He shall rule 
												over thee — Seeing for want of 
												thy husband’s rule and guidance 
												thou wast seduced, and didst 
												abuse the power and influence I 
												gave thee, by drawing thy 
												husband into sin, thou shalt now 
												be brought to a lower degree; 
												and whereas thou wast made thy 
												husband’s equal, thou shalt 
												henceforward be his inferior, 
												and he shall rule over thee — As 
												thy lord and governor.
 
 Verse 17
 Genesis 3:17. Because thou hast 
												hearkened to the voice of thy 
												wife — Obeyed her word and 
												counsel, contrary to my express 
												command. He excused the fault by 
												laying it on his wife, but God 
												doth not admit the excuse: 
												though it was her fault to 
												persuade him to eat, it was his 
												fault to hearken to her. Cursed 
												is the ground for thy sake — It 
												shall now yield both fewer and 
												worse fruits, and not even those 
												without more care and trouble to 
												thy mind, and the minds of thy 
												posterity, and more labour to 
												your bodies than otherwise would 
												have been requisite. The earth, 
												for the sin of man, was made 
												subject to vanity; fruitfulness 
												was its blessing for man’s 
												service, and now barrenness is 
												its curse for man’s punishment.
 
 Verse 19
 Genesis 3:19. In the sweat of 
												thy face shalt thou eat bread — 
												His business, before he sinned, 
												was a constant pleasure to him; 
												but now his labour shall be a 
												weariness. Unto dust shalt thou 
												return — Thy body shall be 
												forsaken by thy soul, and become 
												itself a lump of dust, and then 
												it shall be lodged in the grave, 
												and mingle with the dust of the 
												earth.
 
 Verse 20
 Genesis 3:20. God having named 
												the man, and called him Adam, 
												which signifies red earth; Adam, 
												in further token of dominion, 
												named the woman, and called her 
												Eve, that is, life. Thus Adam 
												bears the name of the dying 
												body, Eve, of the living soul. 
												Though for her sin she was 
												justly sentenced to a present 
												death, yet, by God’s infinite 
												mercy, and by virtue of the 
												promised seed, she was both 
												continued in life herself, and 
												made the mother of all living. 
												Adam had before called her Isha, 
												woman, as a wife; here he calls 
												her Evah, life, as a mother. 
												Now, 1st, If this name were 
												given her by divine direction, 
												it was an instance of God’s 
												favour, and, like the new naming 
												of Abraham and Sarah, it was a 
												seal of the covenant, and an 
												assurance to them, that, 
												notwithstanding their sin, he 
												had not reversed that blessing 
												wherewith he had blessed them. 
												Be fruitful and multiply. It was 
												likewise a confirmation of the 
												promise now made, that the seed 
												of the woman, of this woman, 
												should break the serpent’s head. 
												2d, If Adam did it of himself, 
												it was an instance of his faith 
												in the word of God.
 
 Verse 21
 Genesis 3:21. Unto Adam and his 
												wife did God make — By his own 
												word, or by the ministry of 
												angels; coats of skins — Of 
												beasts slain, either to show 
												them what death is, or rather, 
												as is more probable, in 
												sacrifice to God, to prefigure 
												the great sacrifice which, in 
												the latter days, should be 
												offered once for all. Thus the 
												first animal that died was a 
												sacrifice, or Christ in a 
												figure. God clothed them: 1st, 
												to defend them from the heat and 
												cold, and other injuries of the 
												air to which they were now to be 
												exposed: 2d, to remind them of 
												their fall, which had made that 
												nakedness, which was before 
												innocent and honourable, an 
												occasion of sin and shame, and 
												therefore it needed a covering. 
												God also, by this act of 
												kindness, probably intended to 
												show his care even of fallen 
												man, to encourage his hopes of 
												mercy through a Mediator, and 
												thereby to invite him to 
												repentance.
 
 Verse 22
 Genesis 3:22. The Lord God said 
												— In his own eternal mind: 
												Behold, the man is become as one 
												of us — See what he has got, 
												what advantages, by eating 
												forbidden fruit! This is said to 
												humble them, and to bring them 
												to a sense of their sin and 
												folly, that, seeing themselves 
												thus wretchedly deceived by 
												following the devil’s counsel, 
												they might henceforth pursue the 
												happiness God offered, in the 
												way he prescribed.
 
 Here is another evident proof of 
												a plurality of persons or 
												subsistences in the Godhead. 
												Compare Genesis 1:26; Genesis 
												11:7. If it be said that God 
												speaks this of himself and the 
												angels, it must be replied that 
												no mention has yet been made of 
												the angels, and that it is 
												unreasonable to think that the 
												great God should level himself 
												with angels, and give them, as 
												the expression intimates, a kind 
												of equality with himself.
 
 Lest he take also of the tree of 
												life — The sentence is 
												defective, and, it seems, must 
												be supplied thus: Care must be 
												taken, and man must be banished 
												hence, lest he take of the tree 
												of life, as he took of the tree 
												of knowledge, and thereby 
												profane that sacrament of 
												eternal life, and persuade 
												himself that he shall live for 
												ever. To prevent this, (Genesis 
												3:23,) the Lord God sent him 
												forth — Expelled him with shame 
												and violence; from the garden of 
												Eden — So as never to restore 
												him to that earthly paradise.
 
 Verse 24
 Genesis 3:24. So he drove out 
												the man — This signified the 
												exclusion of him and his guilty 
												race from that communion with 
												God which was the bliss and 
												glory of paradise. But whither 
												did he send him when he turned 
												him out of Eden? He might justly 
												have chased him out of the 
												world, Job 18:18; but he only 
												chased him out of the garden: he 
												might justly have cast him down 
												to hell, as the angels that 
												sinned were, when they were shut 
												out from the heavenly paradise, 
												2 Peter 2:4; but man was only 
												sent to till the ground out of 
												which he was taken. He was only 
												sent to a place of toil, not to 
												a place of torment. He was sent 
												to the ground, not to the grave; 
												to the workhouse, not to the 
												dungeon, not to the 
												prison-house; to hold the 
												plough, not to drag the chain: 
												his tilling the ground would be 
												recompensed by his eating its 
												fruits; and his converse with 
												the earth, whence he was taken, 
												was improvable to good purposes, 
												to keep him humble, and to 
												remind him of his latter end. 
												Observe, then, that though our 
												first parents were excluded from 
												the privileges of their state of 
												innocence, yet they were not 
												abandoned to despair; God’s 
												thoughts of love designed them 
												for a second state of probation 
												upon new terms. And he placed at 
												the east of the garden of Eden, 
												a detachment of cherubim, armed 
												with a dreadful and irresistible 
												power, represented by flaming 
												swords which turned every way — 
												On that side the garden which 
												lay next to the place whither 
												Adam was sent, to keep the way 
												that led to the tree of life.
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