Listen

Description

Genesis 3:14-17
But  ask now the beasts, and they shall teach thee; and the fowls of the  air, and they shall tell thee: or speak to the earth, and it shall teach  thee: and the fishes of the sea shall declare unto thee. Who knoweth  not in all these that the hand of the Lord hath wrought this? Job 12:7-9.
Although  the earth was blighted with the curse, nature was still to be man's  lesson book. It could not now represent goodness only; for evil was  everywhere present, marring earth and sea and air with its defiling  touch.... In  drooping flower and falling leaf Adam and his companion witnessed the  first signs of decay. Vividly was brought to their minds the stern fact  that every living thing must die. Even the air, upon which their life  depended, bore the seeds of death. Continually  they were reminded also of their lost dominion. Among the lower  creatures Adam had stood as king, and so long as he remained loyal to  God, all nature acknowledged his rule; but when he transgressed, this  dominion was forfeited. The spirit of rebellion, to which he himself had  given entrance, extended throughout the animal creation.... But  man was not abandoned to the results of the evil he had chosen. In the  sentence pronounced upon Satan was given an intimation of redemption....  This sentence, spoken in the hearing of our first parents, was to them a  promise. Before they heard of the thorn and the thistle, of the toil  and sorrow that must be their portion, or of the dust to which they must  return, they listened to words that could not fail of giving them hope.  All that had been lost by yielding to Satan could be regained through  Christ.
After  the transgression of Adam, God might have destroyed every opening bud  and blooming flower, or He might have taken away their fragrance, so  grateful to the senses. In the earth seared and marred by the curse, in  the briers, the thistles, the thorns, the tares, we may read the law of  condemnation; but in the delicate color and perfume of the flowers, we  may learn that God still loves us, that His mercy is not wholly  withdrawn from the earth.