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God's Word Faithfully Preached from the Pulpit

The Christmas Tree (Genesis 2:8-9, 15-17; 3:22-24)

SERMON MANUSCRIPT

Sermon Reading by Elder Ronald Fernando, Prepared By Rev. Nollie Malabuyo

Every Christmas season, we never stop hearing naysayers that Christmas is a pagan holiday, or at least originated as a pagan festival. They argue that December 25 as the birthdate of Jesus was an adaptation of the pagan celebration of the winter solstice called Saturnalia or the Sol Invictus festival to encourage pagans to convert to Christianity. But is this historically true?

We begin our Advent season in 2012 with the story of the Christmas tree and the “real” Christmas tree. Many scholars have debunked this so-called pagan origin of Christmas as a myth. It is well-documented that Jesus’ birth was celebrated by the church as early as 150 A.D. Even the December 25 date was celebrated as early as 200 A.D.

So the Christmas-pagan connection popular these days is itself a big myth. What about the Christmas tree-pagan connection? Is our Christmas tree also to be junked as pagan? On dark winter nights, ancient Romans and other pagans decked their homes with trees to symbolize life in the midst of darkness and death. So, some connect the Christmas tree to the living trees which ancient pagan Germans brought into their homes during the dark midwinter days of the Yule season.

But the conclusion from history is that there is no connection between these pagan practices and the Christmas tree. We will continue with the rest of the Christmas tree story later. Is there a Biblical connection between the “Christmas tree” and the history of salvation in Christ?

This morning, we will study this theme, The Christmas Tree, under three headings: first, A Gift in Eden; second, A Curse at Calvary; and third, A Blessing in the Paradise of God.

A Gift in Eden

For Adam and Eve’s earthly pleasure, God planted a beautiful, luscious garden in Eden. In the middle of the garden, God planted two trees: the tree of the knowledge of good and evil and the tree of life. And he was pleased to give them all of this garden to enjoy with their sight and taste, except for one: the tree of the knowledge of good and evil. God warned them about disobeying this command, “in the day you eat of it, you shall surely die” (Gen 2:15-17).

Were they also prohibited from eating of the tree of life? The Bible seem to imply that there was no prohibition. This means that together with all the other trees, Adam and Eve were also given the fruit of the tree of life to enjoy. After our first parents fell into sin, God pronounced his judgment on them and on creation. Sin and death, hard toil, and sufferings will mar their earthly life. They also lost their true knowledge of and communion with their Creator. And God drove them out of the garden for their own protection. What was it that God was protecting them from?

The prohibition from eating of the tree of the knowledge of good and evil was God’s first covenant with man, a covenant of works: disobey and you will die. The reverse is implied: obey and you will live. Every covenant has a sign and seal of its confirmation, such as circumcision was the sign of membership in God’s covenant with Abraham. In the garden of Eden, there were two ratifying signs: the two trees in the middle of the garden. Eating of the tree of the knowledge of good and evil will confirm the curse of death for disobedience, while eating of the tree of life will ratify the gift of eternal life for obedience.

If Adam successfully passed his probation in the garden, he would have been confirmed in the state of perfect holiness, righteousness, and life with God in both body and soul for eternity. There would be no more threat of the curse of sin and death because of disobedience. In fact, there is no possibility of disobedience because Adam would be perfectly holy and righteous. And since he is the covenant head, he would have passed this perfection onto all his descendants. God’s command to fill the earth and multiply (Gen 1:28) would have been completely fulfilled, because Adam’s perfect descendants would overflow out of the garden of Eden into all the world. The whole earth would then be filled with his glory, because it will be filled with his glorious people.

Not only will the whole earth be full of God’s glory; the whole earth, not only Eden, will be God’s garden-temple. The garden of Eden was the original temple of God on earth. God commanded Adam to “work” and “keep” Eden, two words that are used for the responsibilities of Levitical priests in the tabernacle (“serve” Num 4:23; “keep” Num 18:7). The garden of Eden is also called “the garden of God” (Ezk 28:13). It is in Eden where God and Adam would fellowship together: where God would teach Adam his ways; where Adam would worship God.

The tree of life symbolized God’s gift of eternal life to Adam and all his children if he was able to pass the test of obedience.

A Curse at Calvary

But as the Bible tells us, Adam did not pass God’s probation. Not only did he not guard God’s garden-temple from the serpent’s intrusion; he even let himself be deceived by the devil’s lying words. Because of their sin, Adam and Eve were driven by God out of the garden for their own sake. Why was getting driven out of the garden a merciful act of God towards them who violated his covenant law?

We read in Genesis 3:22-23, “Then the Lord God said … Now, lest he reach out his hand and take also of the tree of life and eat, and live forever—’ therefore the Lord God sent him out from the garden of Eden …” After he fell into sin, the perfect image of God in Adam was corrupted, and the only way for him to be saved from his condition is through the first gospel-promise in Genesis 3:15, through the Seed of the Woman who would destroy the serpent.

If Adam had eaten of the tree of life, he would have “lived forever.” This means he would have had eternal life, and what could be wrong about eternal life? Is not “eternal life” what all humankind long for? But the problem with sinful Adam living forever is that he will have lived forever as a sinful human being. What could be a more dreadful and miserable existence than living forever without any hope of being delivered from sin and suffering? This existence would be the same as suffering eternal torment in hell.

And so, the tree of life, the sign of blessings that God would give him for obedience, became the tree of cursing for his disobedience. From that day forward, Adam and all his descendants were barred from entering the garden. To prevent anyone from entering, cherubim with a flaming sword were assigned by God to dwell at the gate of Eden in the east (Gen 3:24), just as cherubim were embroidered on the curtain at the entrance to the Holy of Holies in the wilderness tabernacle (Exod 26:31; 39:34; 40:21). As if to show Adam how he failed as the garden-temple’s gatekeeper, God now placed his own cherubim to guard his garden-temple’s entrance from unauthorized intruders. Even the mercy seat which covered the ark of the covenant, representing God’s presence in the tabernacle, was guarded by two golden cherubim (Exo 25:18; Heb 9:5).

Both Old and New Testaments refer to a tree as a symbol of cursing. Although the Old Testament never uses the word for “cross,” there are many texts that imply the death penalty by hanging or impaling on a tree. Pharaoh hanged his chief baker on a tree, just as Joseph had prophesied (Gen 40:18-22). In the covenant renewal before Israel entered the Promised Land, the death penalty is executed by hanging on a tree, because “a hanged man is cursed by God” (Deu 21:22- 23). And during the conquest of Canaan, Joshua hanged five kings of conquered nations on trees (Josh 8:29; 10:26). During the time of Queen Esther, Haman the enemy of Jews, was hanged on a tree by the king for his murderous plot (Est 7:10; 9:13).

Although New Testament writers say that Jesus died on a “cross,” Peter and Paul used the word “tree” five times instead of “cross.” In Peter’s two sermons, he accused the Jews of killing Jesus by “hanging him on a tree” (Acts 5:30; 10:39). Again, in his first epistle, Peter says that Jesus “bore our sins in his body on the tree, that we might die to sin and live to righteousness” (1 Pet 2:24). In one of his sermons, Paul also mentioned that after Jesus died, “they took him down from the tree and laid him in a tomb” (Acts 13:29).

But the most obvious connection between cursing and hanging on a tree was made by Paul in Galatians 3:13, as he quotes Deuteronomy 21:23, “Christ redeemed us from the curse of the law by becoming a curse for us—for it is written, ‘Cursed is everyone who is hanged on a tree’.” It is Christ himself hanging on a tree that bore the curse of sin and death on Adam and all his descendants. Without his vicarious atonement on our behalf, God would have instead figuratively “hung us on a tree,” which is in reality, driving us to eternal hell because all mankind bear the curse and judgment of sin and death.

So for the New Testament writers, the tree of life in Eden became the tree of cursing, the cross on which Jesus was hung for our salvation. It is not merely a coincidence that sin first came at the foot of a tree, and sin was conquered later at the foot of another tree, the cross of Calvary.

Like Adam and Eve, Christ our Tree of Life was also driven out from God’s garden-temple. He came down from heaven on a commission from his Father to save his people from sin. He who had the glory of God in heaven was born of a woman as a lowly human being, under the law. He wandered in deserts, mountains, little villages and big cities, preaching the gospel of salvation from the curse of sin and death brought in by our first parents’ sin in the garden of Eden. But unlike our first parents who were barred from returning to the blessed garden by the cherubim with fiery swords, Christ passed through the fiery judgment of “hell” on the tree to return once again to his own garden-temple, heaven itself.

A Blessing in the Paradise of God

After being absent since the day that Christ was hanged on a tree, the Tree of Life at last reappears in the new heaven and new earth.

The Tree of Life is once again seen in “the paradise of God” (Rev. 2:7). Christ is pictured as the conqueror, the Lion of Judah who conquered as a slain Lamb (Rev 5:5). Believers who persevere through persecution are also pictured as conquerors. Christ promises “to those who overcome” and are truly victorious by faith in Christ, the right “to eat from the tree of life.” Now, those who are faithful to Christ till the end will partake of the tree which was forbidden of Adam and Eve in the garden

In the holy city, it is seen not as a stark cross of death and condemnation, but as a luscious tree “on either side of the river … with its twelve kinds of fruit, yielding its fruit each month. The leaves of the tree were for the healing of the nations” (Rev 22:2). The Tree of Life, amazingly bearing fruit all throughout the year, will satisfy the city’s residents continuously, signifying eternal life. All the nations will be healed by its leaves, not only physically, but also from sin and death (Rev 20:14; see also Ezek. 47:12).

Those who are blessed because they have “washed their robes” with the blood of the Lamb shed on the cross (Rev 7:14) will have “the right to the tree of life” (Rev 22:14). Because they are now cleansed of sin and forgiven by God, they also “enter the city by the gates.” The angels guarding the twelve gates of the city (Rev 21:12) will actually usher them into the blessed heavenly city. Outside the gates are those who have not washed their robes because they have rejected the One who was hanged on the tree of cursing.

Those who believe the Word of God and Christ have “a share in the tree of life and in the holy city” (Rev. 22:19). They will never lose their share, because they have eaten of the Tree of Life that gives them godly wisdom from the Word for eternity.

So the medieval church understood this connection between the Christmas Tree and the Tree of Life in paradise. Beginning in the eleventh century, the church presented plays that featured a Paradise Tree and the light of Christmas. Germans then started decking their homes with their own Paradise Tree on December 24, the feast day of Adam and Eve. The Paradise Tree became a symbol for the Tree of Life and the cross, which they decorated with apples at first (recalling the forbidden fruit), then later with wafers, candies and sweets. Candles were lit inside pyramids were then added to symbolize Jesus as the light of the world. More and more decorations would be added through the centuries, to the frivolous extent that we see today.

Thus, it is convincing that the first Christmas trees that adorned homes in Germany in the early sixteenth century originated from the medieval plays that featured the Paradise Tree decorated with lighted pyramids.

Remember the three most important trees in the Biblical history of salvation: the garden of Eden’s Tree of Life, the Tree on which Jesus was crucified, and the Tree of Life in the Paradise of God in the new heaven and earth. Let this Christmas be your opportunity to teach your children, as your whole family decorate your Christmas tree and place your presents under it: first, that these three trees symbolize the tree great milestones in God’s great plan of redemption; second, when Jesus was hanged on a tree, the great curtain embroidered with the cherubim guarding the Holy of Holies was torn apart in two (Matt 27:51); and third, that just as God gave Adam and Eve access to paradise in Eden, God opened the Most Holy Place to all believers through Jesus’ birth, death and resurrection. This is a picture of heaven itself being opened for God’s people to enter in. No flaming sword will bar you anymore from entering our heavenly rest (Heb 4:1). Instead of preventing you from entering the new heaven and new earth with its great, high walls, the angels posted at each of the twelve entry gates will welcome and usher you into your heavenly eternal rest. Our Christmas tree is a picture of the Tree of Life by which we remember Jesus who was born to save us from sin and death. And when he restores the old creation into a new heaven and new earth, the Tree of Life in the garden of Eden will have come full circle, because he will restore his people back to the Paradise of God to finally partake of the Tree of Life there. R

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