The High Cost of Keeping Up

3,108 words, 16 minutes read time.

Caleb shifted the gear into park, but he didn’t turn off the ignition. The heater was blowing a dry, dusty warmth against his face, and the old sedan hummed with a familiar, tired vibration. He sat there for a moment, the grocery bags in the passenger seat settling with a soft plastic crinkle. Through the windshield, the world was tinted in the muted shades of a late November afternoon, and his eyes, almost against his own will, drifted to the house across the street. The Miller place was glowing. It wasn’t just the professional-grade landscaping or the way their windows caught the dying light; it was the sheer, unapologetic Newness of it all. Parked in their driveway was a pristine, midnight-blue truck, the kind with a grill that looked like a wall of chrome and tires that had never seen a speck of real dirt. Caleb looked at his own hands, calloused and stained from a morning spent wrestling with a rusted lawnmower blade, and felt a sudden, sharp pang of something that wasn’t quite anger, but felt just as heavy.

He wasn’t a bitter man. If you asked the guys at the warehouse or the deacons at the church, they’d tell you Caleb was the first one to show up with a toolbox when a neighbor’s basement flooded. He loved his wife, he took pride in his work, and he usually thanked God for the roof over his head before he closed his eyes at night. But lately, the roof felt lower. The walls felt thinner. Every time he saw Miller—a guy who was perfectly nice, who always waved, who once gave Caleb’s son a signed baseball—Caleb felt a strange, hollow ache in his chest. It wasn’t that he wanted Miller to lose what he had; it was just that Miller’s “more” made Caleb’s “enough” feel like “nothing.” It was a slow-acting poison, a quiet thief that slipped into his house every time he scrolled through a filtered feed or looked across the pavement. It made the life he had built with his own sweat look like a consolation prize.

He finally killed the engine, and the sudden silence was louder than the humming had been. He stayed in the seat, staring at the chrome across the street until it blurred. He thought about the ancient words from the stone tablets, the ones about not desiring your neighbor’s house or his ox or his anything else. He used to think that command was for people with black hearts, for people who plotted and schemed. He didn’t realize it was also for the tired men in driveways who just wanted to feel like they weren’t failing a test they never signed up for. The coveting wasn’t a violent act; it was a slow erosion of his own gratitude. It was the way he looked at his wife’s aging kitchen and saw only the chipped Formica instead of the thousand meals she had cooked there with love. It was the way he looked at his son and wondered if the boy noticed the difference between their life and the one across the street.

The front door of his house opened, and a rectangle of warm, yellow light spilled out onto the porch. Sarah stood there, wrapped in an oversized cardigan, looking for him. She didn’t have a designer coat or a life that looked like a magazine spread, but she had a way of looking at him that usually made him feel like a giant. Today, however, he felt small. He felt like a man who was bringing home a bag of generic cereal and a heart full of shadows. He realized then that the “stuff” across the street wasn’t the enemy. The truck wasn’t the problem. The problem was the way he was letting the image of another man’s life become a judge over his own. He was standing in the middle of a beautiful, messy, blessed life, and he was ignoring the fire in his own hearth because he was too busy staring at the sparks from his neighbor’s chimney.

He stepped out of the car, the cold air hitting him like a splash of water. He grabbed the grocery bags, the plastic handles digging into his palms. He took one last look at the blue truck, the chrome glinting in the twilight, and he made a conscious, painful effort to let it go. It didn’t belong to him, and he didn’t belong to it. He turned his back on the Miller house and walked toward the yellow light of his own porch. It was just a house with a squeaky step and a mortgage that wasn’t paid off, but as he reached the door and Sarah smiled at him, he felt the weight in his chest loosen just a fraction. He wasn’t cured, and the itch of comparison would surely come back tomorrow, but for tonight, he chose to walk into the warmth he actually had.

Inside, the smell of roasted chicken and floor wax met him—a scent that usually meant home, but tonight felt like a reminder of the ordinary. He set the groceries on the counter, his movements heavy and deliberate. Sarah was humming a hymn, something about mercies being new every morning, and the sound grated against the static still buzzing in his brain. He wanted to tell her about the truck. He wanted to complain about the unfairness of a world where some men glide while others grind their gears into dust, but the look on her face stopped him. She looked content. It was a terrifying kind of peace, the kind that didn’t require a receipt or a warranty to stay valid.

“Caleb, you okay?” she asked, pausing with a wooden spoon in her hand. “You look like you’ve been chasing the wind.”

“Just tired, Sar,” he said, and it wasn’t a lie, though it wasn’t the whole truth. “The traffic was a bear.” He moved to the sink to wash his hands, staring at the window above the basin. It looked out over the backyard, where the grass was long and the shed door hung on a single, rusted hinge. He saw the work that needed to be done, the endless list of repairs that sucked the marrow out of his weekends. In his mind, the Miller’s backyard was a sanctuary of pavers and fire pits, a place where labor was something you paid for, not something that broke your back. He squeezed the soap too hard, a green streak of liquid trailing down the stainless steel.

He sat down at the table, the old wood groaning under his weight. His son, Leo, came skidding into the room with a drawing in his hand, a chaotic explosion of crayons that was supposed to be a spaceship. The boy held it up with a grin that suggested he had just painted the Sistine Chapel. Caleb looked at the drawing, then at his son’s scuffed knees and the hand-me-down shirt that was a size too large. A voice in the back of his head—a gritty, cynical whisper—reminded him that Miller’s kid probably had the best of everything. New cleats. A private tutor. A future paved with gold leaf.

“That’s great, buddy,” Caleb said, but his voice sounded hollow to his own ears. He felt like a fraud. How could he teach his son about being a man of God when he was currently measuring his own soul against a neighbor’s driveway? He realized that coveting wasn’t just a personal sin; it was a generational shadow. If he didn’t kill the rot now, he’d pass the infection down to the boy, teaching him to look at the world as a series of gaps to be filled rather than a landscape to be explored.

Later that night, after the house had gone quiet and the only sound was the wind rattling the loose pane in the bedroom, Caleb lay awake. The moonlight sliced through the blinds, casting a ladder of shadows across the ceiling. He thought about the rich young ruler in the stories, the man who had everything but couldn’t let go of the one thing that owned him. Caleb didn’t have much, but he realized he was being owned by the things he didn’t have. The lack was becoming his idol. He sat up, the sheets rustling, and put his feet on the cold floor. He didn’t go to the window this time. He knelt.

It wasn’t a pretty prayer. There were no stained-glass words or theological flourishes. It was the prayer of a man in the trenches, a man tired of his own skin. I’m sorry, he whispered into the dark. I’m sorry for making Your grace small. I’m sorry for acting like You’ve held out on me. He stayed there for a long time, the silence of the house pressing in around him. He didn’t feel a sudden surge of magic, but he felt the fever break. The truck across the street was still there, and his siding was still warping, but for the first time in months, the air in his own lungs felt like it was enough to live on. He went back to bed, and as he closed his eyes, he didn’t see the chrome; he saw the yellow light of his own kitchen, and for tonight, it was plenty.

The next morning broke with the same relentless grey, but the air felt thinner, easier to swallow. Caleb stood in the kitchen, the linoleum cold beneath his socks, watching the coffee pot hiss and sputter. He didn’t look out the front window. Instead, he watched Sarah come into the room, her hair sleep-mussed and her eyes soft. He realized then that he had been looking at her for weeks as a co-conspirator in a life of “less than,” rather than the woman who had stood in the rain with him to bury his father and held his hand through every lean December. He walked over and kissed her temple, the scent of her shampoo hitting him like a grounded reality.

“You’re in a better mood,” she noted, leaning into him as she reached for a mug.

“Just realized I’ve been acting like a man with a hole in his pocket,” Caleb said, his voice low and raspy. “Worrying about what’s falling out instead of what’s actually in there.”

He left for work ten minutes early. As he backed the sedan out, the familiar metallic cough of the engine didn’t grate on his nerves the way it had the day before. It was just a machine doing its job, carrying him to a place where he could earn a living for the people he loved. He passed Miller’s house. The blue truck was gone, likely already whisking its owner toward some glass-towered office. For a split second, the old itch flared up—a phantom limb of desire—but Caleb choked it out. He focused on the weight of the steering wheel and the way the heater finally kicked in, warming his hands.

At the warehouse, the day was a grind of inventory and logistics, the kind of repetitive labor that usually gave his mind too much room to wander into dark corners. But today, he stayed in the present. When a coworker complained about the measly Christmas bonus or the boss’s new boat, Caleb just nodded and kept moving. He wasn’t being a martyr; he was being a soldier. He was guarding the perimeter of his own peace, knowing that once you let one “if only” through the gates, the rest of the army would follow. He found a strange, gritty satisfaction in the work itself, the physical reality of crates and clipboards acting as an anchor against the drift of aspiration.

By the time he pulled back into his neighborhood that evening, the sun had already dipped below the horizon, leaving the sky a bruised purple. He saw the Miller house, the lights glowing with that same expensive warmth. But as he turned into his own driveway, he saw something else. Leo was in the front yard, bundled in a coat that was still a little too big, kicking a deflated soccer ball against a tree. The boy saw the car and dropped the ball, his face lighting up as if a king had just arrived in a golden carriage.

Caleb killed the engine and sat for a heartbeat. The siding was still warped. The porch still needed paint. The bank account was still a source of strategic planning rather than comfort. But as he stepped out of the car and his son tackled his knees, Caleb looked up at the grey sky and felt a sudden, sharp clarity. The rot was gone. It hadn’t been replaced by a new truck or a bigger house, but by the quiet, dangerous realization that he already had everything he needed to be the man he was supposed to be. He picked up the boy, felt the cold wind on his face, and walked into his house, leaving the rest of the world to its own shadows.

The following Sunday, Caleb stood in the back of the sanctuary, his hands shoved deep into his pockets. The preacher was speaking on the desert wanderings, on the way a whole generation of people had looked at a land of promise and saw only the giants they didn’t have the strength to fight. Caleb listened, but his mind kept drifting back to the driveway. It was raining again, a cold, needle-like drizzle that blurred the stained glass, and for the first time in a long time, he felt like he was standing on solid ground. He wasn’t there to ask for a promotion or a windfall; he was there to offer up the only thing he had left—his pride.

After the service, he ran into Miller in the foyer. The man was dressed in a suit that cost more than Caleb’s first car, but up close, in the harsh fluorescent light of the fellowship hall, Caleb noticed the deep, dark circles under Miller’s eyes. He noticed the way the man’s hands trembled slightly as he reached for a paper cup of lukewarm coffee.

“Hey, Caleb,” Miller said, his voice sounding thin, like wire stretched too tight. “Good to see you.”

“You too, Jim,” Caleb replied. He looked at the man, really looked at him, and the last of the green rot dissolved. He didn’t see a rival. He didn’t see a titan of industry. He saw a man who looked like he hadn’t slept in a week, a man who was probably white-knuckling his own steering wheel for reasons Caleb would never know. “You doing alright? You look a little worn down.”

Miller paused, a strange, flickering look passing over his face—a momentary crack in the polished veneer. “Just life, you know? It’s a lot to keep moving. Sometimes I think the more you have, the more you’re just a servant to the things you own.” He gave a hollow laugh and shook his head. “Anyway, see you around, neighbor.”

Caleb watched him walk away, moving toward that midnight-blue SUV with the heavy stride of a man carrying a pack full of lead. He realized that the “shining city on a hill” he had been envying was actually a fortress under siege. He felt a sudden, sharp pang of genuine compassion for Miller, a prayer that the man would find a way to set the weight down before it crushed him.

He walked out to his own car, the one with the dent in the rear fender and the upholstery that smelled like damp earth. He turned the key, and when the engine sputtered and finally caught, Caleb didn’t wince. He drove home through the grey afternoon, pulling into his driveway and looking at his house. It was small. It was old. It was imperfect in a thousand visible ways. But as he stepped through the door, he heard the sound of Leo’s laughter and the clatter of plates in the kitchen. He saw the warped siding and the peeling paint, and instead of seeing failure, he saw a shelter that had held firm against every storm. He was a man who owned very little, but as he sat down at his table and took Sarah’s hand, he knew he was the richest man on the block. He had finally learned the grittiest truth of all: that the only thing a man truly possesses is the peace he refuses to trade away.

Author’s Note

Coveting is a quiet rot. It doesn’t start with a heist; it starts in the driveway. It’s the hollow sound of a man measuring his soul against his neighbor’s chrome.

We’ve turned “enough” into a moving target. We look at the man next door and decide our own blessings are insults. We forget that a house is just wood and nails, and a truck is just iron and grease. When you let another man’s life define your value, you aren’t just losing your peace—you’re committing a slow suicide of the spirit.

Scripture isn’t a suggestion. It’s a blueprint for survival.

“For where your treasure is, there your heart will be also.” — Matthew 6:21

If your treasure is the midnight-blue paint on a truck that isn’t yours, your heart is already in the dirt.

This story isn’t about being poor. It’s about being free. It’s about the grit it takes to kill the envy before it kills you. It’s about the man who stops staring at the sparks from his neighbor’s chimney and starts tending to the fire in his own hearth.

The high cost of keeping up is everything you actually own. Your peace. Your gratitude. Your son’s respect.

Stop looking across the street. Look at your hands. Look at your wife. Look at the God who gave you breath. That is the only math that matters.

The rest is just noise. Leave it in the driveway.

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D. Bryan King

Sources

Disclaimer:

The views and opinions expressed in this post are solely those of the author. The information provided is based on personal research, experience, and understanding of the subject matter at the time of writing. Readers should consult relevant experts or authorities for specific guidance related to their unique situations.

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The 1st Adam in the Hebrew Scriptures #5 Temptation, assault and curse

After the choice Adam and Eve made to go against the Will of God, eating of the fruit of the Tree of knowledge of good and evil, God came to deal with three parties in the fall of mankind: Adam, Eve and the serpent. An alleged fourth – the devil – is not mentioned in Genesis narrative. This for the simple reason the symbolic tempter (satan), the serpent, or the evil thoughts in Eve’s mind are the evil itself.

Book of Genesis, Fall of Man. (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

The most common presentation of Adam and Eve does not reflect clearly enough their theological significance, at least as seen in the New Testament. Too many people forget where the trouble started and do not come to see the essence of our suffering today being the cause of man its own choice. Eve decided herself, by her own choice to go against the wishes of God. She herself wanted to be like God. The apostle Paul, being a Jewish scholar knew very well the problem of evil and suffering. For him it was also clear what choice Adam and Eve had made and why.

For Paul the wrath on mankind was caused by the anger of God (Romans 5:9) It does not have to mean we are enemies of God, but Eve her action showed God how man doubted His position. For the opposing attitude of Eve God reckoned against the sinner. In the story of Adam and Eve in the Book of Genesis, we hear God giving a first commandment: not eating of the fruit of the tree of conscience (the Tree of knowledge of good and evil). He is aware that they could see death reigning in the world form Adam’s time to the time of Moses (Knox).

Romans 5: 14 1But death reigned from Adam to Moses, even over 2them also that sinned not after the like 3manner of the transgression of Adam, 4which was the figure of him that was to come.

In his letter to the Romans we get to hear that Adam foreshadows another person who had to come. The first Adam or the first man, corresponds in some degree to the man who was to come, and whose birth 2020 years ago we remember this year. That man being born was a gift to mankind, from God, which more powerfully affected mankind.

Romans 5: 15 1But yet the gift is not so as is the offense: for if through the offense of 2that one, many be dead, much more the grace of God, and the gift by grace, which is by one man Jesus Christ, hath abounded unto many.

Adam and Eve committed an offence on which God had to react. He could directly destroy them and start all over  again by creating some new living beings in his likeness which would keep to His commandment. Moreover, the boon of God exceeds the fruit of Adam and Eve’s sin. On that contrast between the gift and the results of that one sin, we shall come back in later chapters.

By their act, going against God’s Will, and by wanting to be like God, their Maker gave them the opportunity to show how much they themselves could make of it all. God’s right to govern was doubted, so know they could come to govern themselves and could come to make something of the world. Because all the children of Adam and Eve came after their choice of adversary they all fell under the spell or curse God came to bring over them. Adam and Eve after eating of the Tree of knowledge came to know the difference between good and evil and became weaker than before, because they now had knowledge. We can not escape the relationship from the first human beings. For just because of their relation to Adam and Eve all men fall under the spell of God and have to bear the consequences of that rebellion of the first carnal man. Being the descendants of Adam and Eve we all became members of a sinful race and we all shall have to face death.

1 Corinthians 15: 21 1For since by man came death, by man came also the resurrection of the dead.
22 For as in Adam all die, even so in Christ shall all be 1made alive.

In the letter to the Corinthians we are also told there is a solution. In those Greek Writings we find another confirmation of the same consequent: for Christ is to be considered as opposite to Adam, that as from one man Adam, sin came over all, so from one man Christ, life comes unto all: that is to say, that all the faithful, as they die, because by nature they were born of Adam, so because in Christ they are made the children of God by grace, they are quickened and restored to life by him. {annotation of the 1599 Geneva Patriot’s Edition}

The way the apostle Paul looks at the and the 2° Adam places the Adam-story within a royal context, because the essence of the matter were Adam and Eve impeaching the Divine Creator. Them to query God His Most High position, is the biggest issue. This way a battle over kingship and its relation to the universe was initiated. The position of the one sent from God as a solution is too often missed by the majority of people, even by those who call themselves Christian.

In the Garden of Eden sin entered in the world of man. In a royal garden or orchard Jeshua (Jesus Christ) accepted the fact he must follow not his will but the Will of the Most High God, and should go to the stake. (Matthew 26:36-46)

In the Holy Scriptures a garden is used to express joy, peace and satisfaction.

Jeremiah 31: 12 Therefore they shall come, and rejoice in the height of Zion, and shall run to the bountifulness
of the Lord, even for the 1wheat and for the wine, and for the oil, and for the increase of sheep and bullocks: and their soul shall be as a watered garden, and they shall have no more sorrow.

Adam and Eve by Peter Paul Rubens (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

Adam and Eve had no sorrow in the Garden of Eden. They had everything they needed. But God did wanted to teach them a lesson and did not want them in His Garden any more. Since Adam listened to his wife and ate from the tree whose fruit Jehovah God commanded him not to eat, the ground is cursed because of him.  So his deed became the cause of the earth coming in problems by man. It is often by the wrong actions of men that something bad happens in the world, for example mudslides because men took away all the trees.
All our life now we will have to struggle to scratch a living from it. God told man that it will grow thorns and thistles for us, though man will eat of its grains. This time not for nothing any more, like it was in the Royal Garden. From then onwards man had to make his own garden and work with his own hands for it. By the sweat of our brow, will we have food to eat until we die, i.e. return to the ground from which man were made. Because we shall have to be reminded that we were made from dust, and to dust we will return.
But woman certainly could not escape. For him and her there was first no pain, but knowing now good and bad they also came to know pain and sorrow. The pain of woman’s pregnancy was going to be sharpened, and in pain she will give birth. She still was going to be able to give children, but concerning having control over things it would be more difficult. God warned her that though she still will desire to control her husband, it will be him who is going to rule over her.

Genesis 3: 16  Unto the woman he said, I will greatly increase thy 1sorrows, and thy conceptions. In sorrow shalt thou bring forth children, and thy desire shall be subject to thine husband, and he shall rule over thee.
17  Also to Adam he said, Because thou hast obeyed the voice of thy wife, and hast eaten of the tree, (whereof I commanded thee, saying, Thou shalt not eat of it) cursed is the earth for thy sake: in sorrow shalt thou eat of it all the days of thy life.
18 Thorns also and thistles shall it bring forth to thee, and thou shalt eat the herb of the field.
19 In the sweat of thy face shalt thou eat bread till thou return to the earth: for out of it wast thou taken, because thou art dust, and to dust shalt thou return.
20 (And the man called his wife’s name Eve, because she was the mother of all living)
21 Unto Adam also and to his wife did the Lord God 1make coats of skins, and clothed them.
22  And the Lord God said, 1Behold, the man is become as one of us, to know good and evil. And now lest he put forth his hand, and 2take also of the tree of life, and eat, and live forever,

23 Therefore the Lord God sent him forth from the garden of Eden, to till the earth, whence he was taken.
24 Thus he cast out the man, and at the East side of the garden of Eden he set the Cherubims, and the blade of a sword shaken, to keep the way of the tree of life.

Adam, Eve, but also we should see that the transgression of God’s commandment was the cause that both mankind and all other creatures were subject to the curse God spoke in that Kingdom of God, the Garden of Eden. Adam and Eve, fell from the estate of integrity in which God had created them and now had to build their own kingdom (a kingdom of man) in their own world.

Temptation was the occasion; it was not the cause. To be subjected to temptation is not sinful for the tempted. Embrace and acquiescence constitute sin, i.e. going in against the Will of God.
Eve succumbed to the ideas in her head. Her heart wanted to have so much as God. She herself made the choice to take the fruit and to eat it. She came to the point of overt disobedience to the divine prohibition. Adam trusted his partner and with her in the adventure, hoping also to get the knowledge of good and evil and wanting to become wise (Genesis 3:6 ASV)

The tempter had gained the trust of the first human beings. Eve had accepted as true what was a blasphemous assault upon the veracity of Good and came to regard the tree as desirable in the direction that contravened the divine prohibition. Eve served herself as carnal creature  rather than the Divine Creator.

The mannin her failure to recoil with revulsion from the temptation and the idea that she would not die (Genesis 3:4) is evidence that defection had already taken place and that she exemplified the invariable psychology of sin that overt action proceeds from the inward disposition of heart.

Proverbs 23: 7 For as though he thought it in his heart: so will he say unto thee, Eat and drink: but his heart is not
with thee.

Man loves to give the fault of their wrong doing to others or say it is not from them. But In the Messianic Scriptures the sent one from God clearly warns man that there is nothing outside man. Summoning the multitude rabbi Jeshua (Jesus Christ) addressed the crowd close to him and told them that we should worry about what comes out of man. It is that what is inside and comes outside that pollutes or defiles man. It is from inside, out of man’s heart that come evil thoughts and actions, like self-seeking, pride, jealousy or envying, slander, malice, double-dealing, lying, deceiving, misleading, betraying, sexual vice, adultery, fornication, theft or stealing, wickedness, murder, all things that make a person unclean.

Mark 7: 21 For from within, even out of the heart of men, proceed evil thoughts, adulteries, fornications, murders,
22 Thefts, covetousness, wickedness, deceit, uncleanness, a wicked eye, backbiting, pride, foolishness.
23 All these evil things come from within, and defile a man.

We may not be mistaken, it is all from within ourselves.  The satan or adversary comes from our inner thoughts which we allow to go wrong and where we give in. We can choose not to follow certain ideas, but when we chose to follow the wrong path then we sin. There may be manyfold temptation but it is how we react on them.Whenever you find yourself surrounded by various temptations do know that it all depends on your choice and on your faith which shall demand action (works of faith), leading to steadfastness, developing endurance. But to withstand such temptation man shall need now the courage to choose the right path and let patience finish its work that you may become fully developed and perfectly equipped, lacking in nothing or in no respect deficient. So when you are drawn away, enticed and baited by your own evil desire, like Eve was, let yourself not be beguiled and allured by your own evil desire and enticed by a bait. Remember that when passion or desire conceives and gives birth to sin, than when the bad act or sin runs its course and get fully matured it shall give birth to death. We may not be mislead and make no mistake about this.

James 1: 14 But every man is tempted, when he is drawn away by his own concupiscence, and is enticed.
15 Then when lust hath conceived, it bringeth forth 1sin, and sin when it is finished, bringeth forth death.
16 1Err not my dear brethren.

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* Bible quotes from 1599 Geneva Patriot’s Edition

Preceding articles

The 1st Adam in the Hebrew Scriptures #1 Beginning of everything

The 1st Adam in the Hebrew Scriptures #2 Beginning of mankind

The 1st Adam in the Hebrew Scriptures #3 With his partner

The 1st Adam in the Hebrew Scriptures #4 The Fall

The Seed Of The Woman Bruised

Jesus begotten Son of God #10 Coming down spirit or flesh seed of Eve

Sayings of Jesus, what to believe and being or not of the devil

Not about personal salvation but about a bigger Plan

A book of life and a man born more than two thousand years ago

When having found faith through the study of the Bible we do need to do works of faith

Next: The 1st Adam in the Hebrew Scriptures #6 Curse and solution

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Additional reading

  • Looking for a primary cause and a goal that can not offer philosophers existing beliefs
  • A multifold of elements in creation and a bad choice made
  • First mention of a solution against death 1 To divine, serpent, opposition, satan and adversary
  • First mention of a solution against death 2 Harm or no harm and naked truth
  • First mention of a solution against death 3 Tempter Satan and man’s problems
  • First mention of a solution against death 4 A seed for mankind
  • First mention of a solution against death 5 Evil its law of death
  • Necessity of a revelation of creation 1 Works of God and works of man
  • A promise given in the Garden of Eden
  • Set free from any form of mental torment or self-condemnation
  • No curtain placed over tomorrow
  • Around pre-existence of Christ
  • Satan the evil within
  • Additional comments to the 3rd Letter to the Romans
  • Luther’s misunderstanding
  • Solution for Willing hearts filled with gifts
  • Redemption #2 Biblical solution
  • When having found faith through the study of the Bible we do need to do works of faith
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    Further reading of interest

  • Images of God 1: Big and Close
  • Genesis 3
  • Day 7: Adam and Eve’s Relationship
  • Creation and The Fall – A Dramatic Reading
  • Did He Really Say That?
  • What Happened in the Garden… Doesn’t Stay in the Garden
  • There’s a Serpent in Your Bible.
  • When Everything Went to Smash
  • What Satan Offered Adam And Eve…
  • Me-Centered More
  • Adam and Eve and Us: Part Two
  • Eve as a symbol for the Church
  • Where is your Garden of Eden?
  • Puzzling over Genesis and the Fall
  • Wednesday-(Created & Fallen) Devotion
  • The Existence Of The Snake
  • Friday-(Created & Fallen) Devotion
  • Recap: What Every Christian Should Know About Genesis 1-4
  • Gospel Theology (Pt. 3) – Original Sin
  • Adversary. Accuser. (Zechariah 3:1)
  • Occasions of sin
  • Watching Ourselves
  • The Life of a 21st Century Prophet: Introspection 
  • Scripture for Thursday, October 13 (10/13)
  • Temptation, Treadmills & Grace
  • Temptations
  • I Have a Confession To Make…
  • Hell
  • Believing Is Not Seeing
  • 1 Corinthians 9-16: I Struggle With These Chapters
  • Why Did God Flood The Earth If He Later Allowed The Same Thing To Happen Again?
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    Adam and Eve – Stepping Toes

    Posts about Adam and Eve written by Guestspeaker, Belgian Biblestudents - Belgische Bijbelstudenten, taanathshiloh, and Christadelphians

    Stepping Toes