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Description

Guided Question

How does returning to God’s original design for men and women—through submission to Scripture and dependence on the Holy Spirit—challenge the way you currently understand leadership, responsibility, and relationship in your own life?

Summary

In this message, Dr. Robert Lewis continues his Genesis series by examining roles as part of God’s original design for humanity. Building on the prior discussion of equality and difference between men and women, he explores how biblical roles are revealed in Genesis 1–3 and how New Testament writers interpret these passages.

Dr. Lewis argues that while men and women are created equal in value and dignity as image-bearers of God, they are given distinct, complementary roles. He highlights several features from Genesis 2 that suggest male headship: Adam’s creation first, his assignment to cultivate and guard the garden, his receiving God’s command directly, and his role in naming both the animals and the woman. These elements, Lewis explains, are foundational to how the New Testament understands leadership in the home and the church.

The sermon then turns to Genesis 3 and the Fall, showing how sin disrupts God’s intended order. Satan approaches Eve first, roles are reversed, and Adam fails to lead—resulting in devastating consequences. God’s curse affects men and women differently, distorting both leadership and submission into struggle, domination, and resistance. Dr. Lewis explains that this “battle of the sexes” flows directly from the Fall, not from God’s original design.

Finally, the message offers hope through redemption in Christ. While the curse still affects believers, it can be progressively reversed through radical submission to God’s Word and dependence on the Holy Spirit. Drawing from Ephesians 5 and Colossians 3, Dr. Lewis emphasizes that Spirit-filled living restores God’s design—calling husbands to loving, sacrificial leadership and wives to respectful submission—so that God’s original intent for harmony, purpose, and witness can again be displayed to the world.

Outline

  1. Introduction: From Differentness to Roles

    • Review of Genesis 1: equality and distinction

    • Cultural resistance to biblical roles

    • Trusting God’s conclusions rather than human reasoning

  2. Genesis 2: Roles Revealed

    • Adam as primary focus of the chapter

    • God as Father providing occupation and wife

    • Man’s role as leader; woman as helper

    • Symbiotic design for subduing and multiplying

  3. Theological Indicators of Headship

    • Man created first

    • Adam receiving God’s command directly

    • Adam’s responsibility to instruct Eve

    • Naming as an act of authority

  4. New Testament Affirmation

    • Paul’s grounding of church roles in Genesis

    • Key passages: 1 Timothy 2; 1 Corinthians 11 & 14

    • Roles rooted in creation, not culture

  5. Genesis 3: The Fall and Role Reversal

    • Satan’s strategy and temptation

    • Doubting God’s Word and motives

    • Eve leads; Adam follows

    • Adam held responsible for the Fall

  6. The Curse and Distorted Roles

    • Pain in childbirth and toil in work

    • “Desire” and “rule” explained through Genesis 4:7

    • Struggle, domination, and oppression introduced

  7. Roles Restored Through Christ

    • The curse still affects believers

    • Radical commitment required

    • The Word and the Spirit working together

    • Ephesians 5 and Colossians 3 as the pathway forward

  8. Conclusion

    • God’s design as a witness to the world

    • Faithfulness to Scripture despite cultural opposition

Key Takeaways

Scripture References

Recorded on 1.31.82