Gregory C. Higgins

A Revitalization of Images


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temptations so real that he reports that “sometimes I have thought I should see the devil, nay, thought I have I felt him behind me pull my clothes.”63 There are to be sure breaks in the storms of inner turmoil. “Now had I an evidence, as I thought, of my salvation from Heaven, with many golden seals, thereon, all hanging in my sight; now could I remember this manifestation, and the other discovery of grace with comfort; and should often long and desire that the last day were come, that I might for ever be inflamed with the sight, and joy, and communion of him, whose head was crowned with thorns, whose face was spit on, and body broken, and soul made an offering for my sins.”64 However, he also mentions in an offhanded manner his long periods of intense struggle. “So soon as this fresh assault had fastened on my soul, that scripture came into my heart, This is for many days (Dan 10:14), and indeed I found it was so: for I could not be delivered nor brought to peace again until well-nigh two years and an half were completely finished.”65 Certain biblical passages, such as Esau selling his birthright, haunted him. “But chiefly by the aforementioned scripture, concerning Esau’s selling of his birthright; for that scripture would lie all day long, all the week long; yea, all the year long in my mind, and hold me down, so that I could by no means lift up myself; for when I would strive to turn me to this scripture, or that for relief, still that sentence would be sounding in me, For ye know, how that afterward, when he would have inherited the blessing he found no place of repentance, though he sought it carefully with tears.”66 The weight of the passage regarding Esau selling his birthright was counterbalanced by Paul’s assurance of the sufficiency of grace, and the scales in his mind tipped from one side to the other.67

      Phyllis Trible, “Eve and Adam: Genesis 2–3 Reread”

      First, Trible challenges the traditional reading of the second creation story that sees the man being created before the woman. She does so based on the two possible senses of the Hebrew word ‘adham.

      Fourth, Genesis 3 concludes with the fall from paradise into the world that we experience, a world in which all relations are distorted. Serpents strike at the heels of humans and humans try to stomp the lunging creature; women experience pain in childbirth; farmers till the soil under the scorching sun, and all creatures suffer