Page 31 Adam gets alone and lifts his eyes to the heavens and says, ,Lord, the wife that you gave me says that she doesn’t know which fruit to use to prepare a meal for us. Heaven is silent. Adam repeats the question. But still, there is only silence. After waiting fifteen minutes, Adam returns to Eve saying, ,The Lord didn’t respond to me, Honey-Buns. I went back over the commandment He gave me, and I guess you can pick whatever fruits you like so long as they didn’t come from the forbidden tree. Eve shrugs her shoulders and decides to use the peaches. Ten minutes pass and she calls for Adam again, ,Sweety-weety, I’ve got another question. How am I to prepare these peaches? I mean, should I peel them or leave them the way they are? Should I slice them, dice them, quarter them, bake them, make a pie out of them, make peach cobbler, mashed peaches, peach-bread, or a peach smoothie? Can you please ask God how I’m suppose to do this? Adam retorts, ,All right, fine. But I doubt He’ll answer me. Adam retreats to a place alone and beckons the Lord to answer his wife’s question. For the second time, Adam meets the silence of God. Suddenly, a thought arises in Adam’s unfallen mind. He thinks to himself, God is not answering me because I already know the answer! Let that statement marinate for a moment. Adam returns to Eve and says, ,Listen, Pumpkin. God isn’t
Worship without wonder is lifeless and boring. Many have lost their sense of awe and amazement when it comes to God. Having begun with the arrogant presumption of knowing about God all that one can, they reduce Him to manageable terms and confine Him to a tidy theological box, the dimensions of which conform to their predilections of what a god ought to be and do.
Sam Storms