Genesis 2:15-17 Then the LORD God took the man and put him into the Garden of Eden to cultivate it and keep it. And the LORD God commanded the man, saying, “From any tree of the garden you may eat freely; but from the tree of the knowledge of good and evil you shall not eat, for in the day that you eat from it you shall surely die.”
Many things reveal our sinful nature, but we need to remember our sinful nature was founded in the Garden of Eden and it was the choice, eating what God had told them not to eat, that caused the fall of mankind and brought on our sin nature resulting in our falling short of the glory of God.
God made Adam and Eve with bodies. Our bodies are created with a central nervous system that signals us when our bodies are in need of food. The longer we go without food, the stronger the signal. When we are getting hungry, the craving increases and can become overpowering. We must eat. When we don’t eat, the hunger pains become unbearable. God made us as beings that have to eat to live. It is an absolute necessity. No eating, we die.
Along with the physiological craving for food, God gave us a delight in eating and provided us eyes, nasal passages, and taste buds to evaluate food. Then, God gave us a choice of all the items to eat, items that He had already declared as being good.
The stage was set. A physiological need for food was embodied in humans. The need was accompanied by an innate craving designed to ensure the need is met. The humans were placed by the same Creator that gave them the need for food in a garden filled with a plethora of food. The command of what to eat and not eat was issued.
How interesting that it would be a simple necessary daily act like eating that would begin centuries of sinful behavior. God chose a very basic, necessary elementary task, a task that related to a physical need, a task that fulfills the innate craving called hunger.
God, in His infinite wisdom could have just as easily said, “don’t pick that flower,” “don’t look inside that cave,” “don’t swim in that river,” or something else. Perhaps God didn’t say, “don’t go in that cave” because we can go our entire lives without going in caves. We don’t need to go in caves to live. Going in a cave is not a necessity. In contrast, Adam and Eve have to eat. It is a necessity to live. But, with their eating, they had a choice. Adam and Eve could eat anything else in the garden, freely, except from one tree. It was a necessity that Adam and Eve eat, but not a necessity to eat from the tree of the knowledge of good and evil.
What does all this have to do with us today? Eve saw that the tree of the knowledge of good and evil was good for food, and that it was a delight to the eyes. The fruit was enticing and appealed to the senses that God had given her and Adam to enjoy the goodness of what He had made. God meant the senses for good, but we often use them for evil. Every sin has its root in enjoyment. In fact, the Bible recognizes and tells us that sin is pleasurable, but fleeting in duration (Hebrews 11:25). Just as Adam and Eve were tempted to enjoy what looks good and pleasurable, we are tempted to enjoy what appears to be good and pleasurable. God, our Creator that loves us and wants the very best for us, tells us to obey Him and to avoid the enticements of the world that lead us away from Him. He says that we need to trust and obey. He says that He knows best and in the end, at His right hand are pleasures forevermore for those that are willing to obey Him. The question is, do we believe God? Adam and Eve did not believe God. They did not believe that He had their best interest in mind. Instead, they were thinking that God had His own interest in mind and that God was selfishly withholding good from them.
So, ask yourself this question, “Is God telling me what to do because He is thinking of Himself and His interests and because He wants to get His own way?” Or, “Is God telling me what to do because He loves me and has only good for me?”
For our fleeting pleasures of sin, Jesus Christ was willing to be treated as a criminal, flogged, crucified, and endure the wrath of His loving Father. Is sin that pleasurable? Really?
1 John 2:16-17 says, “For all that is in the world, the lust of the flesh and the lust of the eyes and the boastful pride of life, is not from the Father, but is from the world. And the world is passing away, and also its lusts; but the one who does the will of God abides forever.”
Exodus 12:14 ‘Now this day will be a memorial to you, and you shall celebrate it as a feast to the LORD; throughout your generations you are to celebrate it as a permanent ordinance.
Luke 22:19And when He had taken some bread and given thanks, He broke it, and gave it to them, saying, “This is My body which is
given for you; do this in remembrance of Me.”
For thousands of years, food has been a focus of our times of celebration and remembrances. Kings display their wealth by declaring great feasts. I love how the beginning of Esther describes the great banquet of King Ahasuerus’s which lasted 180 days. What wealth! Things haven’t changed much since King Ahasuerus day, except maybe the length of the feast is not quite as long. When countries host ambassadors, they have elaborate State dinners with lavish servings of all kinds of good food. In our home, we have a tradition of letting the person celebrating their birthday pick the food for the meal we eat as a family. Everybody I know enjoys Thanksgiving, Christmas, and Easter meals as well as a good ole 4th of July barbecue. Basically, when people gather, food is present.
The Israelite people have many feasts; Passover, Pentecost (also called the feast of weeks), the Day of Atonement, Feast of Tabernacles (Booths), Rosh Hashanah, Purim, and more. What is interesting is that God commanded His people to celebrate with food. Specifically, God instituted the Jewish Passover feast to remember and celebrate their deliverance from bondage. The feasts were very much a part of the Old Covenant.
It is by the grand design of God that in the same way, as part of the New Covenant, we participate in the ordinance of communion to remember our deliverance from the bondage of sin. The Apostle Paul tells us that whenever we participate in the Lord’s Supper, we proclaim the Lord’s death until He comes back. Eating bread and drinking the wine of communion are ways to remember and celebrate our salvation. In the scheme of life, is there anything that should have more cause to remember than what Christ has done for us?
How interesting that God has chosen eating food as a way to celebrate the Lord’s death.
Jesus said (Luke 14:15), “Blessed is everyone who shall eat bread in the kingdom of God!” The Angel told John, (Revelation 19:9), “Blessed are those who are invited to the marriage supper of the Lamb.”
Indeed!

Genesis 2:9 And out of the ground the LORD God caused to grow every tree that is pleasing to the sight and good for food …
Thank you, God, that food tastes good. Food is delicious, scrumptious, tasty, yummy, and mouthwatering. Everything God made is good. Food is very good. I have yet to meet a person that doesn’t enjoy a good meal. All of us have seen the look of bliss in someone’s face when they bite into something they love; sheer joy! We are born with an appetite and a hankering for good-tasting, lip-smacking food. Around 99% of the time, I look forward to eating, and 100% of the time I look forward to eating when I know it is one of my favorite foods. We eagerly share our eating experiences with others.
God’s goodness gives us the ability to experience favorable things. Food teaches us that God cares about appealing to our senses. Things in the world are “sensational.” God wants us to observe and find that what He has made is good. He has given us tools and abilities to make observations and to evaluate the world around us and how He made it to be good. Food is one of those good things God made, and taste buds are what He gave us to realize that food is good. God made food good to eat. Imagine if food had no taste, and it all looked the same. Taste is known to have the ability to become an obsession. Ever have a craving for chocolate? Some of you reading this just did. People often overeat just for the taste. Even the mention of a food may cause the mouth to begin to salivate. People with the loss of taste have to force themselves to eat as the sense of taste is related to our appetite. People spend extra money on items that taste good. A real-estate investor from Hong Kong reportedly paid over $160,000 for a gigantic Italian White Alba truffle. Oh my!
God’s goodness has endless variety and imagination. When God made food, He made more variety than we could imagine. There is the rich delicacy of sevruga caviar and the New England favorite of baked beans and franks. I recall that my grandfather enjoyed eating pickled pig’s feet. God made such a variety of foods that it is impossible to taste all the different types of food that the world has to offer in our lifetime. There is variety in taste, color, shape, and size. In one meal you can have blueberries and an orange accompanied by black-eyed peas and yellow squash with green beans. We can eat tiny grains of wild rice or a large watermelon. Food can be a highly fattening donut or be tasteless and without calories. We can have an oblong eggplant, a flat tortilla, or a wedge of cheese. It is amazing to think of all the different types of food and recipes available to us.
It happened that my recent devotional reading took me through the book of Nehemiah. Toward the end of the book, the people were repentant for their sins which were drastically contrasted and highlighted by the backdrop of the goodness of God and His helping them rebuild Jerusalem, their great city. In their repentance, the Levites testified and praised God before the Israelite people. In their proclamation of praise, they told of how God had been with them throughout their history. When they recall the time period when the people of Israel entered and dwelt in the promised land and basked in the bountiful produce, they said this, “So they ate, were filled, and grew fat, and reveled in Thy great goodness (Nehemiah 9:25).“ In this sentence, I was struck by just exactly how the goodness of God was measured; by the abundance of good food.
God is good. His goodness is to be praised for its variety, plenty, beauty, and enjoyment. Taste and see that the Lord is good!
-Allen