The Image God Refused to Abandon

Why did God allow the Fall? Why didn’t He simply begin again? The opening chapters of Genesis raise profound questions that Scripture does not answer directly. Yet by carefully following the biblical narrative, we can glimpse something of the astonishing wisdom and love of God. These reflections are not presented as doctrine, but as reverent meditation on how Eden, the Cross and God’s purpose for humanity may be connected.

More Than Sacrifice

In Hosea 6, two verses sit side by side and illuminate one another with remarkable clarity. God declares that He desires faithful love rather than sacrifice and the knowledge of God rather than burnt offerings. Then, almost immediately, He says that Israel, like Adam, has violated the covenant. Suddenly the problem is seen in a different light. Israel’s failure was not primarily ceremonial but relational. Like Adam before her, she had not merely broken rules; she had betrayed the God who loved her. Yet Hosea’s message does not end with betrayal. The God who exposes the wound is the God who intends to heal it, and the story ultimately points beyond both Adam and Israel to Jesus Christ, the faithful Man who succeeds where all others have failed.