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Genesis 3:7

Hebrew Key Terms:

  • עֵינֵי (ʿênê) - eyes (dual construct)
  • פָּקַח (pāqaḥ) - to open (Niphal: "were opened")
  • יָדַע (yāḏaʿ) - to know
  • עֵירֻמִּם (ʿêrummim) - naked (plural)
  • תָּפַר (tāp̄ar) - to sew, stitch together
  • עֲלֵה (ʿălēh) - leaf, leaves
  • תְּאֵנָה (təʾēnâ) - fig tree
  • חֲגֹרָה (ḥăḡōrâ) - belt, girdle, loincloth, apron

Context: Genesis 3:1-6 narrates the temptation and fall. The serpent questioned God's word (3:1), denied God's warning of death (3:4), and promised God-like knowledge (3:5). Eve saw the fruit was good, beautiful, and desirable for wisdom, took and ate, and gave to Adam who ate (3:6). Verse 7 records the immediate aftermath: their eyes were opened, they knew they were naked, and they attempted to cover themselves with fig leaves. This is humanity's first post-fall action—an attempt at self-covering, self-justification, self-righteousness.

Connections:

Connection Method(s): Contrast — The fig leaves represent humanity's inadequate self-covering (works-righteousness) that stands in direct contrast to God's provision of adequate covering through sacrifice (Gen 3:21), establishing the foundational contrast between human self-justification and divine grace that Christ's imputed righteousness definitively resolves.

Christological Connection: Genesis 3:7's fig leaves prefigure humanity's failed attempts at self-righteousness, which Christ's covering replaces:

  1. Fig Leaves = Human Works-Righteousness: Adam and Eve's self-made covering represents all human attempts to justify ourselves before God through moral effort, religious observance, or good works. Paul identifies this pattern in Israel: "Being ignorant of the righteousness of God, and seeking to establish their own, they did not submit to God's righteousness" (Romans 10:3). The Pharisees epitomized this, trusting in their own righteousness (Luke 18:9). All religions apart from the gospel are variations on fig-leaf covering—human attempts to bridge the gap between sinful humanity and holy God.
  1. Inadequacy of Works: The fig leaves' inadequacy prefigures the inadequacy of law-keeping and works. "For by works of the law no human being will be justified in his sight" (Romans 3:20). "We know that a person is not justified by works of the law but through faith in Jesus Christ" (Galatians 2:16). Just as fig leaves could not cover Adam and Eve's shame before God (they still hid in fear, Genesis 3:8, 10), our righteous deeds cannot cover our guilt. Isaiah 64:6 calls our righteousnesses "filthy rags" (בֶּגֶד עִדִּים, beḡeḏ ʿiddîm, literally "menstrual cloths")—as repulsive to God as fig leaves were ineffective for Adam and Eve.
  1. Contrast with God's Provision: Genesis 3:7 (fig leaves) sets up Genesis 3:21 (coats of skins). The contrast teaches a foundational gospel truth: What we cannot provide for ourselves, God provides freely. We attempt self-covering (fig leaves); God provides adequate covering (animal skins requiring death). We attempt self-righteousness (works of law); God provides perfect righteousness (Christ's obedience and death). The pattern is consistent: human effort fails; divine grace succeeds.
  1. Christ Wore Our Fig Leaves: The great exchange is that Christ took our inadequate covering (sin and failed self-righteousness) and gave us His perfect covering (righteousness). 2 Corinthians 5:21 states, "For our sake he made him to be sin who knew no sin, so that in him we might become the righteousness of God." Christ wore our filthy garments (our fig leaves, our sin) so we could wear His robe of righteousness.
  1. From Fig Leaves to Robes of Righteousness: The trajectory shows escalating grace:
    • Genesis 3:7: Fig leaves (human effort) - inadequate
    • Genesis 3:21: Animal skins (God's provision through death) - adequate but temporary
    • Leviticus: Sacrificial blood (repeated atonement) - provisional
    • Isaiah 61:10: Robes of righteousness (prophetic promise) - anticipated
    • 2 Corinthians 5:21: Christ's righteousness (imputed by faith) - perfect and permanent
    • Revelation 7:14: White robes (glorified saints) - eternal

Quote (Luther): "This is the natural religion of man: to sew fig leaves and hide behind trees, to cover sin with works and flee from God. But the gospel does the opposite: it strips away our fig leaves and clothes us with Christ's righteousness."

Quote (Spurgeon): "The first Adam wove fig leaves; the last Adam wove a garment of righteousness. What a contrast! One will wither in an hour; the other will outlast the stars."

Application: Believers must abandon all attempts at self-covering. Every effort to earn God's favor through moral performance, religious observance, or good works is as futile as Adam and Eve's fig leaves. We must stop sewing and start receiving. God's covering in Christ is complete, perfect, and free. Our only contribution is acknowledging our need and receiving by faith what God has provided.

When tempted to trust in our own righteousness, remember the fig leaves—humanity's first and most universal mistake. When you sense shame and guilt, don't reach for fig leaves (excuses, justifications, moral efforts); reach for the gospel—Christ's perfect covering freely given.

The trajectory: Fig leaves (human effort, Genesis 3:7) → Animal skins (God's provision through death, Genesis 3:21) → Sacrificial blood (Leviticus) → Robes of righteousness (Isaiah 61:10) → Christ's righteousness (2 Corinthians 5:21) → White robes washed in the Lamb's blood (Revelation 7:14). Every stage teaches the same truth: we cannot cover ourselves; God must provide the covering through substitutionary death, fulfilled perfectly in Christ.

Trajectory Table: 032 - Coats of Skins (Covering of Shame)