Jesus at the Last Supper said: “Take and eat.”
It was a real garden with real people. It was a real table with real people. Then came that garden of Gethsemane experience, the cross at Calvary and that empty tomb!
In Genesis it was temptation for real people unto spiritual death…
At the Last Supper, it became grace unto life for real people. So they could live together in a restored relationship with God, the Father.
What was broken in Eden…
was restored through Christ.
Hallelujah in Jesus -- He's alive!
In a garden with a serpent, beneath the whispering of leaves and the shadow of a lie, a voice once said, “Take and eat.”
It sounded harmless—almost generous. But it was an invitation to an ugly sort of independence away from God, a quiet revolt dressed up as wisdom. And when the two took it, humanity if you will didn’t just bite into fruit—we fell into fracture. Adam was the federal head of the human race, but now we need the second, Adam. That's Jesus.
“When the woman saw that the tree was good for food… she took of its fruit and ate” (Genesis 3:6).
What entered the world in that moment of disobedience was more than wilful disobedience—it was instant distance.
Distance away from God the Father. Distance from real life and meaningful communion. Distance even from a relationship with perfect love.
But Scripture does something breathtaking—it brings us to another table.
On the night before the cross, in the upper room thick with harmonious love and a looming sacrifice of the Lamb of God, another voice speaks those same words to people:
“Take and eat.” (Matthew 26:26)
But this time, everything is different. When God speaks, it's just different.
This was not temptation—it was a warm invitation.
Not rebellion—but redemption unfolding.
Not death—but life being offered.
What was once an act of grasping for self has become an act of receiving.
That's the Great Reversal
In Eden, humanity took what was forbidden → and lost real life.
At the Table, believers received what is given → and gain real life.
“For as in Adam all die, so also in Christ shall all be made alive” (1 Corinthians 15:22).
The first “take and eat” said, “You can be like God.” That's what some cults still falsely say: You can become Divinity.
The second says, “You can be with God.”
The first was rooted in real deception.
The second is anchored in real truth:
“This is My body, which is given for you” (Luke 22:19).
From Ruin to Restoration
What broke in the garden was not merely a vital rule—it was a vital relationship.
And what Christ restores is not merely behavior—but communion. You can repent, believe and be made whole inside. You can experience regeneration in a moment.
The cross is not just where people's sin is forgiven—it’s where fellowship with people is restored, renewed, rebuilt. We've all sinned and falling short of the glory of God, but you can have a second chance at life.
As the old hymn quietly echoes:
“Jesus paid it all, all to Him I owe;
Sin had left a crimson stain, He washed it white as snow.”
“God was in Christ reconciling the world to Himself” (2 Corinthians 5:19).
A Simple, Piercing Truth Huh
We still live between those two voices.
One says: “Take—define life on your own terms.”
The other says: Take—receive life from me.
One leads to striving in the flush for self.
The other to a U-turn and full surrender.
One isolates people.. individuals one by one.
The other restores people.. individuals one by one. Won by One
Why This Matters Right Now
Research from George Barna consistently shows that many people identify as spiritual, yet feel very lonely and disconnected, anxious, and unsure of real purpose in life. The ancient problem hasn’t really changed—we still reach for life apart from God, hoping what we grasp will satisfy.
But the gospel answers with clarity and compassion:
You alone receive the gift from Jesus, but life is not something you seize for self only—it’s Someone you receive inside. Then you want to pass it on. The invitation, the gift that's free from God.
A Story We All Know
It’s like a child who runs from home, convinced freedom lies outside the Father’s care—only to find hunger, loneliness, isolation, brokenness, and regret.
Then one day, he hears the invitation: “Come home.” ..from the Holy Spirit. Get home before dark.
And at the table, He doesn’t earn a seat—he’s given one.
The Gospel in Two Phrases
“Take and eat”—and die apart from God.
“Take and eat”—and live through Christ (God the Son).
That’s the story of The gospel—loss and then redemption, a fall and a rescue, the first Adam and Christ the second Adam.
As Billy Graham once said:
“God proved His love on the cross. When Christ hung, and bled, and died, it was God saying to the world, ‘I love you.’”
The Invitation Still Stands
This is not just theology—it’s personal.
Christ still offers Himself:
Not as a concept, but as life.
“I am the bread of life; whoever comes to Me shall not hunger” (John 6:35).
He likes us totally and righteously satisfied.
So the question is no longer what was lost in Eden—
but whether we will receive The free gift ..what was given at the cross.
Because what was broken…
has truly been restored.
"Never did I meet a Christian who, in his old age, said that he had made a mistake in relying upon Christ as his Savior." ~Charles Spurgeon
Hallelujah in Jesus. The tomb has been empty. There were eyewitnesses. Because he was physically resurrected. We can also experience that.. one day. Sure, in a relationship with Him.