Centering on the “primeval history” of Genesis 1–11, Pastor David Jang offers a finely tuned interpretation of humanity’s fall, Satan’s schemes, and God’s plan of judgment and salvation. Within this, he explores in depth—through theological insight and spiritual reflection—how believers today can discern sin and temptation and live out a restored identity as God’s children.
Pastor David Jang insists that, as the
gateway to reading the Bible, we must view Genesis chapters 1–11 as one large
narrative unit called “primeval history.” This is because within this
relatively short section the themes of creation and fall, judgment and
salvation, the genealogy of humanity and the direction of history are arranged
in a condensed form. Genesis 1–2 serve as the overture of creation, chapters
3–4 present the fall of humanity and the emergence of sin, chapter 5 shows the
flow of the genealogy, chapters 6–7 describe the judgment of the flood, and the
passages that follow trace the trajectory of a new salvation. Pastor David Jang
interprets this primeval history not as a mere collection of ancient traditions
but as a theological archetype that runs through all of humankind. In light of
Jesus’ declaration, “Just as it was in the days of Noah, so will it be in the
days of the Son of Man” (Luke 17:26), he argues that if we are to understand
the pattern of the final judgment and salvation, we must meditate deeply on the
days of Noah—that is, the structure of this primeval history.
Among these chapters, Genesis 3 stands
as the key text that reveals the nature and process of the human fall. Pastor
David Jang reads the serpent that appears in the Garden of Eden not as a mere
symbolic animal but as a spiritual being that has rebelled against God, a tool
and expression of Satan; at the same time, he stresses that Scripture never
speaks of a dualism in which the two principles of good and evil confront each
other as equals. The phrase, “Now the serpent was more crafty than any other beast
of the field that the LORD God had made,” reminds us that even Satan is placed
in the status of a creature. From the beginning the structure is not one in
which God and Satan, as two equal absolutes, battle each other; it is the story
of a creature who fell through pride within the world created by the sovereign
God.
Pastor David Jang identifies the
deep-rooted cause of Satan’s fall as the “pride of self-exaltation.” He
analyzes the desire to rival God and the inner impulse to covet the same
position as God as the root of all sin. At this point he naturally brings in
Philippians 2. If the fallen spiritual being collapsed through self-display and
self-expansion, the Son of God instead emptied himself and took the form of a
servant. The way of Christ—kenosis, that is, self-emptying and voluntary
self-lowering—is fundamentally the opposite trajectory of Satan’s way.
According to Pastor David Jang’s interpretation, it is precisely through this
path of humility and obedience that Satan has already been judged and the order
in which sin and death ruled has been subverted at its very foundation.
Many people raise questions of
theodicy: “If God is omnipotent, could He not have designed things so that Adam
and Eve would never eat from the tree of the knowledge of good and evil? Why
did He allow a structure in which they could fall?” Pastor David Jang
acknowledges that this question is an age-old problem in theology, yet he
explains that at the heart of the answer lies the theme of “love.” God
commanded human beings to “be fruitful and multiply.” This “bearing fruit” does
not simply mean numerical increase. It refers to the completion of a union of
love, the maturity of a relationship in which we experience that “in that day
you will know that I am in my Father, and you in me, and I in you” (John
14:20). Love cannot be produced by coercion, and genuine love never blooms in a
being who moves as if controlled by a remote. When the omnipotent God created
human beings not as controllable puppets but as personal beings who can choose
love by their free will, this was not a decision in which He merely assumed
risk; rather, it was a declaration that reveals the glory of creation and the
nobility of love.
This logic extends also to the angels.
Jude 1 testifies that certain angels did not stay within their own position of
authority but left their proper dwelling and rebelled against God, and thus He
“has kept [them] in eternal chains under gloomy darkness until the judgment of
the great day.” This means that even invisible spiritual beings, as creatures
endowed with free will, could choose obedience or rebellion and could not
escape responsibility for that choice. At this point Pastor David Jang points
out an important theological balance. The root of the problem does not lie with
God, but with the creature who misused the freedom that had been given as
something good. God is not the designer of evil; He is the One who suffers and
groans because of evil. Therefore, he warns that shifting the blame as though
God created the world wrongly and thus brought about such tragedies is a
serious misunderstanding of the Creator and another form of rebellion.
The serpent’s first words in Genesis 3
are a blatant challenge to the word of God. Although God had clearly warned,
“In the day that you eat of it you shall surely die,” the serpent makes a
declaration that directly contradicts it: “You will not surely die.” Pastor
David Jang sees Satan’s strategy concentrated in this short sentence. First he
arouses suspicion toward God’s word, shaking our trust in the truth; then he
inverts truth into falsehood and falsehood into truth. But mere logical
refutation alone is not enough to fully capture the human heart. So Satan slyly
mixes in sweet temptation and subtle jealousy. The whisper, “For God knows that
when you eat of it your eyes will be opened, and you will be like God, knowing
good and evil,” distorts God from a Creator of love into a being who seeks to
monopolize what is good, and quietly cultivates rebellion and uneasy distrust
within the human soul.
Pastor David Jang diagnoses a key
characteristic of one who has sinned as the “impulse to drag others into the
fall together.” After committing sin, a heart plunged into deep anxiety seeks
to soothe that anxiety not by bearing responsibility alone but by drawing
others in, normalizing and collectivizing the sin. Thus Satan persistently
tempts human beings and expands the fellowship of sin with the mindset of “Let
us collapse together.” When Revelation describes “a third of the stars of
heaven” being swept down, Pastor David Jang reads this as a symbolic expression
of the event in which Satan deceived and brought down other angels as well. He
interprets the phenomena in today’s culture—distorted values and sins becoming
structural and being repeatedly reproduced through various media and public
opinion—as resting on the same spiritual principle.
Another important insight is the fact
that there was a clear commandment even in Eden. People sometimes imagine
heaven as a kind of space of unrestricted freedom, but Scripture does not speak
that way. The prohibition concerning the tree of the knowledge of good and evil
was a clear boundary given to humanity by God the Creator and absolute
Sovereign. Heaven is not a place where one can do anything one wishes; it is a
world of order in which we voluntarily obey God’s will in love. The existence
of commandments is not a sign that love has been damaged; it is a fence that
shows how love is to be concretely expressed and protected.
Yet from the serpent’s perspective this
command appears as a symbol of oppression. Thus Satan injects the whisper, “Why
must God alone be the final standard for defining good and evil? You can take
that seat as well.” For Pastor David Jang this is the very core of pride. Only
God can ultimately judge what is good and evil, what is true and false; the
moment a creature seizes that place and seeks to become the fundamental
standard of good and evil for itself, the door to the fall is opened. The
reason why slogans such as “Each person decides for themselves what is right
and wrong” and “There is no absolute truth” sound so attractive in modern
society lies here as well. When, in the name of freedom, we dismantle the very
standard of good and evil, the entire world eventually becomes submerged in a
flood of relativism and extreme self-centeredness.
Then how, concretely, does the fall
proceed? Pastor David Jang draws attention to the phrase, “So when the woman
saw that the tree was good for food, and that it was a delight to the eyes, and
that the tree was to be desired to make one wise.” Within this brief expression
the classic three steps of temptation are contained. First we see with our eyes
(the lust of the eyes), then we covet in our hearts (the lust of the flesh),
and finally the act of reaching out our hand to take follows (the pride of life).
The structure of worldly desire described in 1 John 2 is thus narratively
reenacted within the Genesis text. Today’s sexual temptations and materialistic
temptations follow the same path. Images and videos capture our gaze, stimulate
imagination and desire, and eventually solidify into actions and habits. For
this reason Pastor David Jang exhorts us above all to be watchful about “what
we look at.” Sin is already crouching at the door, waiting to seize us the
moment we merely peek out (Gen. 4:7).
The process by which Cain, in Genesis
4, becomes jealous of his younger brother Abel and ends up murdering him
follows the same structure. When God regarded only Abel’s offering with favor,
Cain should have been astonished and fearful and should have recognized grace.
The very fact that the offering of a sinner was accepted is already an
excessive favor. However, Cain received God’s grace not as joy and gratitude
but as anger and hurt, and the jealousy and envy that grew within him finally
led to the sin of murder. Pastor David Jang analyzes this as “egocentrism,” the
core of human sinfulness. The attitude that evaluates God and others according
to one’s own standard, and that even in the face of grace asks, “Why am I not
more recognized?”—this, he says, is the abyss of sin.
This does not mean, however, that
humanity is defined entirely by darkness. Pastor David Jang sees a distinctive
dual aspect of human existence revealed in the expression, “Then the eyes of
both were opened, and they knew that they were naked.” The moment human beings
sin, they intuitively recognize that what they have done is wrong. Shame and
fear surge up, and they hastily try to cover themselves with fig leaves.
Animals live by instinct without knowing shame, but human beings were created
so that when they depart from the truth, they experience ontological shame and
existential anxiety. This is a sign that deep within the human soul an
instinctive orientation toward God has been inscribed. Just as a sunflower
turns its head toward the sun, the human soul is originally inclined toward the
Creator. Sin distorts and blurs this orientation, but that inner engraving is
never completely erased.
The garments made of fig leaves can be
read as an image symbolizing human self-righteousness. In order to cover their
sins, people hurriedly weave together leaves of morality, religion, reputation,
and achievement and wrap them around themselves like a skirt, yet before God
they cannot escape the fact that they remain naked. What is astonishing is that
God does not deal with Adam and Eve by immediate annihilation, but instead
makes garments of skin and clothes them. Pastor David Jang interprets this scene
as a “sign of anticipatory grace.” Garments of skin, which can be obtained only
on the premise of someone’s shedding of blood and sacrifice, are a
foreshadowing of the robe of atonement and righteousness that will later be
completed at the cross of Christ. To human beings who have hidden themselves
away in shame and fear because of sin, God comes first, calls out, “Where are
you?” and covers their shame.
Here Pastor David Jang particularly
emphasizes the nuance of God’s voice. The words “Where are you?” are not a
furious scolding but a tender summons of love that goes out in search of a
broken soul. This question is the very starting point of salvation. Toward the
sinner, God does not first interrogate, “Why did you do that?” but asks, “Where
are you now, and why are you hiding from me?” This question remains valid for
believers living today. Even if you have succumbed to the serpent’s temptations
overnight and your heart has collapsed, Pastor David Jang exhorts, the first
step to restoration is to come again before God’s presence in the morning and
answer, “Lord, here I am.”
Yet the most painful scene in the
narrative of the fall is found in Adam’s first answer: “The woman whom you gave
to be with me, she gave me fruit of the tree, and I ate.” Pastor David Jang
sees in this one sentence the stark exposure of another essence of sin: the
shifting of responsibility. Rather than honestly acknowledging his own sin,
Adam blames the woman and, further, through the phrase “the woman whom you gave
to be with me,” subtly shifts responsibility onto God. In contrast, in the New
Testament John the Baptist points to Jesus and proclaims, “Behold, the Lamb of
God, who takes away the sin of the world!” Adam passed his sin on to others;
Christ took others’ sin upon himself. In this sharp contrast, the direction of
salvation history becomes clear.
Pastor David Jang explains that
becoming like Jesus ultimately means this reversal of direction. It is the
transformation of lips that once cried, “It’s your fault,” into lips that
confess, “It is my fault, it is my great fault.” It is the transformation of a
person who shifted burdens onto others into someone who obeys the command,
“Bear one another’s burdens” (Gal. 6:2), and becomes a person who shares in
carrying others’ burdens. This is the mark of a disciple of Christ. The
penitential prayer, “Through my fault, through my most grievous fault,” offered
in old traditional churches, stands upon the same spiritual principle. Just as
Jesus in the Garden of Gethsemane prayed, “Not as I will, but as you will,” and
bore the sin of humanity, so His disciples are also called to break the circuit
of self-centeredness and walk the path of love that assumes responsibility.
Behind all of this narrative flow
unfolds an invisible spiritual war. In the book of Job, Satan is depicted as
coming before God’s throne and accusing Job. His argument, tinged with scorn,
is essentially, “This man fears God only because You have hedged him in with
protection; it is not true reverence.” Pastor David Jang understands this as a
cosmic dispute over “who has the right to rule whom.” In the scene of the fall
in Genesis 3 as well, Satan is in effect saying this to God: “Have You not
seen? These human beings are not qualified to rule over me. On the contrary, I
ought to rule over them.” God answers this challenge by sending the last Adam,
Jesus Christ.
In Matthew 4 Jesus is tempted three
times in the wilderness, yet in each case He responds with the written word and
triumphs. Only after He has overcome the test concerning bread and survival,
the test on the pinnacle of the temple concerning religious display and safety,
and the test concerning absolute allegiance for the sake of glory and authority
does the devil leave Him, and angels come and minister to Him. Pastor David
Jang interprets this as the concrete historical enactment of the created order described
in Hebrews 1: that “all angels are ministering spirits sent out to serve for
the sake of those who are to inherit salvation.” The first Adam collapsed
before the serpent, but Christ, the last Adam, subdued Satan and restored the
lost created order.
Turning our gaze again to Genesis
3:14–15, we find that within this short passage the themes of sin, judgment,
and the promise of salvation are densely compressed. God first declares to the
serpent, “Because you have done this, cursed are you above all livestock and
above all beasts of the field; on your belly you shall go, and dust you shall
eat all the days of your life.” Through this verse, Pastor David Jang reminds
us how severe the judgment is upon those who lead others into sin. Jesus
Himself said that it would be better for the one who causes another to stumble
to have a great millstone fastened around their neck and be thrown into the
sea. A culture that fosters temptation, structures that incite sin, and words
and actions that cause others to fall will all bear heavy responsibility before
God.
Yet even so, God does not leave only
words of judgment. “I will put enmity between you and the woman, and between
your offspring and her offspring; he shall bruise your head, and you shall
bruise his heel.” Following the church’s tradition in calling this verse the
“protoevangelium,” Pastor David Jang reads it as the first promise of the
gospel that appears in all of Scripture. Though humanity as a whole collapsed
in Adam, God prophesies the coming of a new seed, a One who will become the
head of a new humanity. Christ, who will come as the woman’s offspring, will
suffer the wounding of His heel at the cross, yet through His blood-shedding He
will accomplish the decisive victory of crushing Satan’s head. Romans 5 clearly
proclaims this redemptive truth: “For as by the one man’s disobedience the many
were made sinners, so by the one man’s obedience the many will be made
righteous.”
At this point Pastor David Jang shifts
his focus to the theme of restoring the believer’s identity. A believer is no
longer a slave trapped in fear and shame but a child of God who has received
the Spirit of adoption in Jesus Christ. Romans 8 testifies that “you have
received the Spirit of adoption as sons, by whom we cry, ‘Abba! Father!’” John
1 declares that “to all who did receive him, who believed in his name, he gave
the right to become children of God.” Justification is not merely a matter of
emotional comfort; it is an event of legal and positional transfer. The moment
one is moved from the place of a sinner to the place of a son, one’s
existential status is changed, and corresponding authority and responsibility
are granted. A crucial part of that responsibility is to discern Satan’s lies,
no longer be dragged along by those lies, and live a life that reigns in
Christ.
Finally, Pastor David Jang examines how
all of this message can take concrete shape in marriage, family, and the church
community. The story of Adam and Eve is not an anecdote about a married couple
from long ago but a mirror that reflects each of our relationships today. A
home that resembles the order of heaven is not one in which spouses blame each
other and drive one another into sin and hurt, but one in which they share each
other’s burdens and are quick to confess, “It is my fault.” Modern culture tears
down boundaries, packages pleasure and self-realization as the supreme good,
and whispers, “There is no truth; everyone can live however they want.” But
Scripture speaks clearly: truth does exist, good and evil are distinct, and
God’s word is the final standard.
The primeval history of Genesis 1–11
not only explains the distant past of humanity but also serves as a mirror
reflecting our present and a prophetic pattern foreshadowing the future to
come. Just as in the days of Noah, the more an era is absorbed only in everyday
activities—eating and drinking, marrying and being given in marriage—without
sensing the depth of its fall, the more deeply we must cling to God’s word, His
judgment, and His promise of salvation. Through the story of Genesis 3, Pastor
David Jang poses a fundamental question to us: “To whose voice are you
listening, and whose words are you following in your life?” Will you follow the
serpent’s sweet lies and walk the path of “Let us die together,” or will you
respond to the loving voice of God calling, “Where are you?” and return to the
path of life?
In the end, Pastor David Jang’s sermon
converges into a single invitation: to take off the old garments of shame and
fear beneath the cross of Christ, the woman’s offspring, and to put on the new
garments of righteousness and love that God gives. Those who respond to this
call must not forget that they are no longer swept along by the serpent’s
culture but are called, just as the protoevangelium promised, to live a life
that treads on the serpent’s head, a life that participates in Christ’s
victory. And Pastor David Jang soberly declares that such a life must unfold
quietly yet firmly in the very midst of everyday existence—in our homes,
workplaces, and churches.


















