| 
  Shame 
   Send a link to a friend 
  - Genesis 
	3: 7-11"Then the eyes of both were opened, and they knew that they were naked; and 
	they sewed fig leaves together and made loincloths for themselves. They 
	heard the sound of the Lord God walking in the garden at the time of the 
	evening breeze, and the man and his wife hid themselves from the presence of 
	the Lord God among the trees of the garden. But the Lord God called to the 
	man, and said to him, ‘Where are you?’ He said, ‘I heard the sound of you in 
	the garden, and I was afraid, because I was naked; and I hid myself.’ He 
	said, ‘Who told you that you were naked?"
 | 
			
            | 
				
					
						Most people assume that all the Bible has to say about 
						sex is that it is bad. This is not true. It has lots of 
						good things to say about sex, and we will be getting to 
						those in the coming weeks, but today we do need to start 
						with some sort of Biblical foundation for where sex and 
						sexuality first went off the rails. And it is right here 
						in Genesis. Adam and Eve have been frolicking in the 
						primeval Garden of Eden. And they had been doing it 
						naked. And there was absolutely nothing wrong with this. 
						But then they ate from the Tree. You know the Tree, the 
						one with the apples? Yeah. That one. They ate from the 
						one they weren't supposed to eat from. And what did it 
						do to them? Did it make them yell and fight with each 
						other? Did they try to kill each other? Did they start 
						tearing up the garden and hurting the animals? No. None 
						of these things happened when sin entered the world. 
						Instead what happened is they became embarrassed. 
						Ashamed. And they covered themselves up.
 When God showed up, and they were not only ashamed to be 
						naked in front of one another, but also in front of God, 
						they predictably hid. And God knew what had happened. 
						They had been changed by the knowledge of that which is 
						evil. Now I would wager all of us know the feelings of 
						shame our own bodies can induce within us. We look at 
						ourselves, see the bald head, the round face, the 
						scrawny legs, and we see imperfection, and we are 
						ashamed. We are ashamed because we imagine how we must 
						look, specifically how unappealing we must look, in the 
						eyes of others. And in our highly sexualized culture, 
						where body image counts for so much (better looking 
						people earn more, don't you know), we become 
						particularly ashamed. And that shame we feel at our own 
						bodies, that shame which tells us that we are 
						unattractive, unwanted, unlovable; that our bodies just 
						aren't good enough and need to be covered, shaded, 
						tucked, lifted, surgically enhanced, is sin! It's sin! 
						It is the oldest manifestation of sin. The inability to 
						see ourselves as creatures in the image of God, but 
						instead as an imperfect and flawed body, is a sin. God 
						doesn't see us that way. When we stand before God, 
						awkwardly trying to cover our worst parts and enhance 
						our best, God still says, "who told you that you were 
						naked?" It's still a good question.
 | 
            
			 
             Prayer: Holy God, forgive me for the shame I feel 
			about myself and my body. Help me to remember that I was created in 
			your image, and that you are pleased with me, and have called me 
			good. Help my trust in you to set me free from my shame. I pray in 
			Jesus' name. 
            [Phil Blackburn, First Presbyterian Church] 
            
			 |