Key Scriptures
"Unto Adam he said, Because thou hast hearkened unto the voice of thy wife, and hast eaten of the tree... cursed is the ground for thy sake." (Genesis 3:17 KJV)
"In the sweat of thy face shalt thou eat bread, till thou return unto the ground." (Genesis 3:19 KJV)
"For dust thou art, and unto dust shalt thou return." (Genesis 3:19 KJV)
As we come to Genesis 3:14-19, we arrive at one of the saddest passages in all of Scripture.
In the previous chapter, we saw Adam and Eve believe the serpent's lie.
They chose disobedience over obedience.
They chose self-will over God's will.
They chose the serpent's word over the Word of God.
Immediately after they sinned, shame entered the human heart.
Fear entered the human heart.
Guilt entered the human heart.
The fellowship they once enjoyed with God was broken.
But the consequences did not stop there.
Sin never affects only the sinner.
Its consequences spread outward.
A father sins and a family suffers.
A leader sins and a nation suffers.
Adam sinned, and all creation suffered.
What follows is not God throwing a temper tantrum.
This is not God acting unjustly.
This is the righteous Judge declaring the consequences of rebellion.
The same God who warned Adam of the danger of sin now explains the cost of sin.
And the cost was far greater than Adam could have imagined.
The Curse Upon the Serpent
God begins with the serpent.
"And the LORD God said unto the serpent, Because thou hast done this, thou art cursed above all cattle." (Genesis 3:14 KJV)
The serpent becomes a visible reminder of the Fall.
From that day forward, the creature itself would bear the mark of God's judgment.
Yet God's words reach beyond the animal.
Verse 15 points directly to Satan himself.
"And I will put enmity between thee and the woman, and between thy seed and her seed."
This is often called the first prophecy of redemption.
Theologians sometimes refer to it as the Protoevangelium—the first announcement of the Gospel.
In the very moment judgment is pronounced, God reveals hope.
The serpent would bruise the heel of the coming Redeemer.
But the Redeemer would crush the serpent's head.
Satan may have won a battle in Eden, but God was already announcing his ultimate defeat.
What grace!
Before Adam ever left the garden, God revealed that a Savior was coming.
The Curse Upon the Ground
Then God turns to Adam.
"Cursed is the ground for thy sake."
Notice something important.
God did not curse Adam directly.
He cursed the ground because of Adam's sin.
The earth itself came under judgment.
The world Adam once ruled with ease would now resist him.
The soil that once produced abundance would now produce:
"Thorns also and thistles."
Before the Fall, work was joyful.
After the Fall, work became difficult.
Before the Fall, creation cooperated.
After the Fall, creation resisted.
The farmer understands this truth.
The gardener understands this truth.
Every person who has ever battled weeds understands this truth.
The curse touched creation itself.
Paul later wrote:
"The whole creation groaneth and travaileth in pain together until now." (Romans 8:22 KJV)
Creation is still groaning under the effects of Adam's sin.
Every drought.
Every storm.
Every disease.
Every natural disaster reminds us that something is wrong with the world.
Creation itself is waiting for redemption.
Pain and Suffering Enter the World
To Eve, God said:
"I will greatly multiply thy sorrow and thy conception; in sorrow thou shalt bring forth children." (Genesis 3:16 KJV)
Pain entered human experience.
Before sin, there was no suffering.
No grief.
No heartache.
No tears.
But once sin entered the world, suffering followed.
How many tears have been shed since that day?
How many broken hearts?
How many hospital rooms?
How many funerals?
How many sleepless nights?
Every one of us knows something about suffering.
Some of us know it all too well.
As I write these words, I think about the burdens many of God's people carry.
Aging bodies.
Chronic illness.
Physical pain.
Broken relationships.
Financial struggles.
Loss of loved ones.
All of these things trace their roots back to Genesis 3.
The world we live in today is not the world God created.
We live in a fallen world.
The Sentence of Physical Death
Perhaps the most severe consequence appears in God's words to Adam:
"For dust thou art, and unto dust shalt thou return."
Adam had been formed from the dust of the ground.
Now he would return to it.
Death entered the human race.
Until this moment, death had never touched God's creation.
No cemeteries.
No funeral processions.
No gravestones.
No mourning families.
Adam would now watch his body grow older.
His strength would fade.
His life would eventually come to an end.
The sentence of death was passed upon all humanity.
As Paul later wrote:
"For as in Adam all die." (1 Corinthians 15:22 KJV)
Every cemetery testifies to the truth of Genesis 3.
Every obituary reminds us that God's warning was true.
Sin brings death.
God had said:
"In the day that thou eatest thereof thou shalt surely die."
And exactly as God said, death came.
The Greater Tragedy: Spiritual Death
Yet physical death was not the only death that occurred that day.
There was a deeper death.
A more tragic death.
Spiritual death.
The moment Adam sinned, fellowship with God was broken.
The relationship that had once been intimate became fractured.
The man who once walked with God now hid from God.
The man who once enjoyed God's presence now feared God's presence.
Spiritual death is separation from God.
That separation still affects every person born into this world.
We are not sinners because we commit sins.
We commit sins because we are sinners by nature.
Adam's fallen nature has been passed down to every generation.
That is why every person needs salvation.
Religion cannot cure spiritual death.
Education cannot cure spiritual death.
Government cannot cure spiritual death.
Only Jesus Christ can restore what Adam lost.
A Lesson From the Family Farm
Years ago, I heard about a farmer who ignored a small crack in a dam on his property.
It seemed insignificant.
Just a tiny weakness.
Nothing to worry about.
But over time, the crack widened.
Water began to seep through.
One day, the dam failed.
The flood that followed destroyed fields, fences, equipment, and crops.
What began as a small crack became a disaster.
Sin works much the same way.
Many people think:
"It's only one compromise."
"It's only one act of disobedience."
"It's only one sin."
But sin never remains isolated.
Its consequences spread.
Adam's single act of disobedience affected the entire human race.
The curse that followed touched every generation.
The Hope Within the Curse
Yet even in this dark passage, hope shines through.
God did not destroy Adam and Eve immediately.
God did not abandon them.
God did not leave them without a promise.
The same chapter that contains the curse also contains the promise of a coming Redeemer.
The same God who pronounced judgment also provided hope.
That hope points forward to Jesus Christ.
The Last Adam.
The One who would bear the curse for us.
Paul writes:
"Christ hath redeemed us from the curse of the law, being made a curse for us." (Galatians 3:13 KJV)
Think about that.
The curse entered through the first Adam.
The cure came through the Last Adam.
What sin destroyed, Christ came to restore.
Final Thoughts
Genesis 3 reminds us why the world is the way it is today.
The curse upon the serpent reminds us of Satan's rebellion.
The curse upon the ground reminds us that creation itself has been affected by sin.
Pain and suffering remind us we live in a fallen world.
Physical death reminds us that sin carries consequences.
Spiritual death reminds us of our need for redemption.
Yet the curse is not the end of the story.
God's plan of redemption was already unfolding.
The same God who pronounced judgment also promised deliverance.
And that promise would eventually lead to Bethlehem, Calvary, and an empty tomb.
In our next chapter, we will begin examining the great conflict that follows the Fall—the war between the seed of the serpent and the Seed of the woman that unfolds throughout the rest of Scripture.