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THE BEGINNING OF SIN, PART 2 (11 OF 64)

by Brad Whitt

Scripture: Genesis 3
This content is part of a series.


The Beginning of Sin, Part 2 (11 of 64)
Series: The Book of Beginnings Series
Brad Whitt
Genesis 3


Tonight, if you have your Bibles with you now this evening, if you will be finding your place once again at the book of Genesis, the very beginning book in your Bible. Right there after where you signed your name. There in the very front of your Bible, Genesis chapter three tonight. And we're picking up in a study we began last Sunday night entitled The Beginning of Sin. When you come to Genesis chapter three, there are lots of questions that are answered that perhaps you've been asking yourself over these many years. Number one, when did sin begin? And Genesis tells us, right there in the beginning.

Another question is, well where did sin begin? And the Bible tells us again, it began in the Garden of Eden. Who began sin? Well, Adam and Eve. How did sin begin? Well, sin began when Adam and Eve ate of the forbidden fruit that God had told them not to eat from, that tree. It began when they disobeyed God. What happened as a result of sin? Well they were kicked out of the garden, you remember? And death and pain and sorrow and suffering and all those sorts of things entered into this world. And so these are a lot of the questions that we ask that when we come here to the very first book in your Bible that are answered for us, when you come into Genesis chapter three. But again, one of the primary questions that we alluded to last week and began to deal with, we ask today, but in a little bit different manner; when did sin begin?

Or to put it another way, why did God allow Adam and Eve to sin? And I told you last week that maybe there are some other answers, but I believe that perhaps the best answer for that is because coerced love is not love at all. God had to give them the opportunity to disobey. God had to give them the opportunity to mess up because if not, they would become nothing more than automatons and robots and those sorts of things. And again, ...

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