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The Trees of the Garden
By Janet Lisonbee
In the parables of Jesus Christ,
the processes of sowing seeds and growing plants, trees, and
fruit have been used as metaphors for different aspects of the
reception and utilization of the Gospel in our lives. It was
a fruit tree that plunged mankind into mortality, and it is
a fruit tree that secures us eternal life. Parables of trees
that were planted, grafted, pruned, uprooted, hewn down and
whose branches were burned are used frequently in the scriptures.
Vines and wheat are also metaphors in the scriptures.
Why does the Lord use trees and
plants as teaching tools? Certainly, because the cultivation
of trees and plants is familiar to most of us; but, I believe,
it is because trees, vines and wheat bear fruit, and
it is the fruit with which the Lord is most concerned.
As we consider these different trees and plants, we should bear
in mind that it is the fruit the Lord is after, and which is
“most precious” unto Him (Jacob 5:61). He is the Lord of the
vineyard and it takes much work and labor to produce good fruit.
The story of life begins with two
famous trees — the Tree of the Knowledge of Good and Evil and
the Tree of Life, which were planted by the hand of the Lord
in the Garden of Eden. Understanding what these trees and their
fruit represent is essential to our understanding the Plan of
the Lord, because it is these two trees which represent the
beginning and the desired end of our probation.
The Tree of Knowledge of Good
and Evil
“And the Lord
God commanded the man, saying, Of every tree of the garden thou
mayest freely eat: But of the tree of the knowledge of good
and evil, thou shalt not eat of it: for in the day that thou
eatest thereof thou shalt surely die” (Gen. 2:17).
This scripture implies that God
was giving a warning to Adam and Eve, to let them know that
— unlike the other fruit in the Garden — the fruit of this tree
had severe consequences to the person who ate it, including
death. Remember, the fruit itself was not good and evil. The
fruit was the knowledge of good and evil. That knowledge
was essential in order to know how to choose the good from the
evil!
Man’s knowledge of good versus
evil and his decision to choose the good is the process by which
mankind becomes like our Father in Heaven. Adam and Eve’s fall
resulted from their yielding to the temptation of Satan and
disobeying the Father.
Certainly, the fruit of the tree
can represent mortality. It is through the experiences of this
earth life that we learn the difference between, and the effects
of, good and evil. Eve said, “Were it not for our transgression
we…never should have known good and evil, and the joy of our
redemption…” (Moses 5:11). In choosing mortality, we all became
subject unto death; and not only that, but suffering, pain,
disappointment, sickness and all sorts of misery, as well.
No wonder there was a strict warning!
Yet, as the Lord told Joseph Smith
in Liberty Jail, “…know thou, my son, that all these things
shall give thee experience, and shall be for thy good” (Doctrine
& Covenants 122:7).
Here, in mortality, we are veiled
from the presence of God. Similarly, Adam and Eve — after being
cast out of the Garden — were veiled from the presence of the
Lord. This earth life is a time of testing. God said, “And
we will prove them herewith, to see if they will do all things
whatsoever the Lord their God shall command them” (Abr. 3:25).
Satan is allowed, as he was in the Garden, to tempt and to try
us.
This tree also had the power to
open one’s eyes. The serpent tempted Eve with the statement,
“Ye shall not surely die; For God doth know that in the day
ye eat thereof, then your eyes shall be opened, and ye shall
be as gods, knowing good and evil” (Moses 4:10-11). Adam said,
“…because of my transgression my eyes are opened…” (Moses 5:10).
What was the first effect of having
their eyes opened? “And the eyes of them both were opened,
and they knew that they had been naked” (Moses 4:13). Adam
and Eve had to have their eyes “opened” in order to see their
nakedness. Nakedness in the scriptures often refers to sin.
Similarly, we need to have our
eyes opened to see our “nakedness” or our sins. Many people
are blinded to their own sins. It wasn’t until the shock of
an angel telling him that what he was doing was wrong that Alma
the younger saw “that he had rebelled against God (Alma
36:14). It was not until King Benjamin’s people viewed their
own carnal state that they had the mighty change of heart (Mosiah
4:2).
C. S. Lewis wrote, “When a man
is getting better, he understands more and more clearly the
evil that is still left in him. When a man is getting worse,
he understands his own badness less and less. A moderately
bad man knows he is not very good — a thoroughly bad man thinks
he is all right” (Mere Christianity, p. 87). Unless
we have these eye-opening experiences that motivate us to repent
in this life, we must stand before God at Judgment Day and “shall
have a perfect knowledge of all our guilt, and our uncleanness,
and our nakedness…” (2 Nephi 9:14).
The process of discerning good
from evil or truth from error is not always easy for mortals
in this fallen world. Often there seem to be “gray” areas.
It is a fact of science, that when there are low levels of light,
colored objects appear to be various shades of gray. It takes
light in order for man to “see things as they really
are” (Jacob 4:13). Truth is equated with light, and it is the
light of truth that enlightens our eyes (or in other
words, opens them to understanding).
When we are born into this world,
we are all given a conscience (the light of truth) which gives
us knowledge of good and evil. Jesus said, “I am the true light
that lighteth every man that cometh into the world” (Doctrine
and Covenants 93:2). Thus, the Tree of Knowledge of Good and
Evil is also representative of Jesus Christ. We must grow in
light and truth, because “Light and truth forsake that evil
one” (Doctrine and Covenants 93:37). Yielding to the temptations
of Satan “taketh away light and truth through disobedience”
(Doctrine and Covenants 93:39).
In this sense, we need to partake
continually of the fruit (which is truth) of the Tree of Knowledge
of Good and Evil (Christ) so that we may grow in the knowledge
of the Lord and be filled with light until there “shall be no
darkness in you; and that body which is filled with light comprehendeth
all things” (Doctrine and Covenants 88:67).
Satan told Eve that by partaking
of this fruit, she would be as God. Eve saw that this tree
was, “good for food…and a tree to be desired to make her wise”
(Moses 4:12). Some Christian writers condemn Eve for partaking
of the fruit, implying that she was “grasping” for Godhood.
However, Godhood is not something that can be simply grasped
and internalized.
Spiritually, we are little children
and cannot understand Godhood by simply “partaking.” That
would be like expecting a five-year-old child to understand
the concepts of calculus before he learns the basics of arithmetic
or algebra. The Lord does expect us to grow up into His likeness,
however, and the knowledge of good and evil is essential to
that process.
The fruit tasted sweet to Adam
and Eve while in the Garden. Ahead lay the trying years of
mortality. They, as is the case with the rest of us, would
find the fruit can also be bitter at times. In speaking about
the two trees in the Garden, Lehi stated, “it must needs be
that there was an opposition; even the forbidden fruit in opposition
to the tree of life; the one being sweet and the other bitter”
(2 Nephi 2:15).
We know that the fruit of the tree
of life is “sweet above all that is sweet” (Alma 32:42), and
so Lehi must have meant that the fruit of the Tree of the Knowledge
of Good and Evil was bitter. Life is hard for many people and
sin is the cause of much unhappiness. Even having our eyes
opened can be bitter as we see ourselves “as we really are”
with all our weakness, sins and faults. But true repentance
turns the bitter into sweet.
Many have wondered what kind of
fruit the tree of Knowledge of Good and Evil could have been.
Apocryphal writings suggest that it could have been the fig
tree [i] , the
grape [ii] , or the olive tree [iii] . It is interesting
to note that all three of these kinds of fruit are used in the
same type of parables in the scriptures.
In Isaiah 5:1-7, we read about
the Lord’s vineyard that produced wild grapes and the Lord asked,
“What could have been done more for my vineyard, that I have
not done in it?” Jesus gave a parable of a barren fig tree
that dresser wanted to cut down. The Lord of the vineyard replied,
“Let it alone this year also, till I shall dig about it, and
dung it; and if it bear fruit, well: and if not, then after
that thou shalt cut it down” (Luke 13:6-9). These parables
correspond very well with Zenos’ allegory of the olive tree
in Jacob 5, with the trees representing the house of Israel.
Hosea wrote: “I found Israel like grapes in the wilderness,
I saw your fathers as the first ripe in the fig tree in her
first time" (Hosea 9:10).
After having their eyes opened,
Adam and Eve saw that they were naked, and made themselves aprons
of fig leaves to hide their nakedness. One of my childhood
memories is a huge umbrella-shaped fig tree in our yard, whose
leaves almost touched the ground. I loved to climb that tree,
but was careful not to brush against the leaves, because they
itched and irritated my skin. I found it amusing that Adam
and Eve made aprons out of fig leaves and I realized that this
is what Satan tries to get each of us to do — cover up our sins.
Like fig leaves, our consciousness
of sin will “irritate” our souls until we stop trying to hide
our sin and repent. Fig leaves are not the answer to our nakedness.
We must be clothed with the robe of righteousness — and it is
Jesus Christ who clothes us, just as He clothed Adam and Eve
in coats or robes of skins to cover their nakedness. This covering
is symbolic of the atonement, which covers our sins. “Blessed
are they whose iniquities are forgiven, and whose sins are covered”
(Romans 4:7).
In summary, the Tree of Knowledge
of Good and Evil can represent mortality, where we learn through
our experience to distinguish the good from the evil. It can
also represent the “eye-opening” light of Jesus Christ, with
its fruit being truth The fruit of the tree can also represent
the spiritual condition of the posterity of Adam and Eve as
illustrated in Zeno’s allegory, through the choices they made
in mortality, some being bitter and others sweet.
The Tree of Life
After Adam and Eve partook of the
Tree of Knowledge of Good and Evil, the Lord clothed them with
coats of skins:
And the Lord God
said, Behold, the man is become as one of us, to know good and
evil: and now, lest he put forth his hand, and take also of
the tree of life, and eat, and live for ever: Therefore the
Lord God sent him forth from the garden of Eden, to till the
ground from whence he was taken. So he drove out the man; and
he placed at the east of the garden of Eden Cherubim, and a
flaming sword which turned every way, to keep the way of the
tree of life (Genesis 3:22-24).
We learn from this scripture that
the Tree of Life causes one to live forever and that it is guarded
by cherubim. Cherubim also guard the Ark of the Covenant, where
the Lord dwells. Isaiah exclaimed, “O Lord of hosts, God of
Israel, that dwellest between the cherubim…” (Isaiah 37:16)
Cherubim also guard the temple (Ezekiel 10:3-5).
In the temple, Ezekiel saw four
cherubim having four different kinds of faces full of eyes.
John the Revelator also saw four cherubim with six wings, and
with faces of a lion, ox, man, and eagle, near the throne of
God. Isaiah saw a figure with six wings in the temple (Isaiah
6). Figures of cherubim were profusely displayed in the courtyard,
forecourt, the Holy Place, on the veil, and in the Holy of Holies
in King Solomon’s temple.
Why must there be guards? Joseph
Smith explained, “the conditions of God’s kingdom are such,
that all who are made partakers of that glory, are under the
necessity of learning something respecting it previous to their
entering into it… he must have been instructed in the government
and laws of that kingdom by proper degrees, until his mind is
capable in some measure of comprehending the propriety, justice,
equality, and consistency of the same” (TPJS, p. 51). There
must be someone to make certain they are prepared before allowed
to enter.
We are taught, as Latter-Day Saints,
that angels stand as sentinels or guards to determine our worthiness
to enter into the Celestial Kingdom. Brigham Young stated,
“Your endowment is to receive all those ordinances in the House
of the Lord, which are necessary for you… to enable you to walk
back to the presence of the Father, passing the angels who stand
as sentinels, being able to give them the key words, the signs
and tokens, pertaining to the Holy Priesthood, and gain your
eternal exaltation…” (Discourses of Brigham Young, comp.
by John A. Widtsoe, p. 637).
There was also a flaming sword
guarding the Tree of Life. Paul's letter to the Ephesians speaks
of putting on the whole armor of God. One piece of that
spiritual armor is the sword of the Spirit, which is the Word
of God (Ephesians 6:17). Doctrine and Covenants 27:18
states that the sword is the Spirit of God. From this insight,
we can understand that the flaming sword that God placed in
the hands of the cherubim is the sword of the Spirit or the
Word of God.
Paul writes, “For the word of God
is quick and powerful, and sharper than any two-edged sword,
piercing even to the dividing asunder of body and spirit, and
of the joints and marrow, and is a discerner of the thoughts
and intents of the heart” (Hebrews 4:12). What an awesome weapon
in the hands of the cherubim!
The two edges represent what the
sword can do: “either to the convincing of them unto peace and
life eternal, or unto the deliverance of them to the hardness
of their hearts and the blindness of their minds unto their
being brought down into captivity, and also into destruction”
(1 Nephi 14:7). The cherubim are endowed with the Holy Spirit
and wield that sword to guard the Tree of Life. Since their
sword is a discerner of the heart and mind, there is no way
that a person can deceive them. The Tree of Life is protected
from the unworthy.
There are several ancient accounts
of the Tree of Life symbolism. Among the closest parallel with
Lehi’s dream are scenes that appear on a number of small gold
plates dating from the fifth century B.C. to the third century A.D.,
engraved in Greek and found in Italy, Sicily, Crete, and Macedonia.
These plates depict the dead, wandering in the world of the
shades, and warn them to avoid a destructive spring on their
left. They enjoin the souls to keep to the right, where they
will encounter another spring beside a white cypress tree.
After pausing for refreshment and
nourishment from the spring and the tree, the wanderers continue
to the lake of memory, where, after responding appropriately
to questions posed by the lake guardians, the travelers
receive eternal memories and enter into the gods’ presence.
The texts on many of the plates state that those who successfully
complete the journey become gods themselves (C, Wilford Griggs,
“The Tree of Life in Ancient Cultures”, Ensign, June
1988, 27, (emphasis added)).
In the different cultures, the
Tree of Life has been depicted variously as an olive tree, a
palm tree, a cypress tree, a lotus plant, a persea tree and
others. Joseph Smith’s father had a dream very similar to Lehi’s.
In his dream, the Tree of Life was like unto a chestnut tree.
He related:
…beyond me, was
a low, but very pleasant valley, in which stood a tree, such
as I had never seen before. It was exceeding handsome, insomuch
that I looked upon it with wonder and admiration. Its beautiful
branches spread themselves somewhat like an umbrella and it
bore a kind of fruit, in shape much like a chestnut bur, and
white as snow, or, if possible, whiter. I gazed upon the same
with considerable interest, and as I was doing so, the burs
or shells commenced opening and shedding their particles, or
the fruit which they contained, which was of dazzling whiteness.
I drew near, and began to eat of it, and I found it delicious
beyond description. (He then invited his family to join him
even though people in a large and spacious building were mocking
them) …we all rejoiced together. The more we ate, the more
we seemed to desire, until we even got down upon our knees,
and scooped it up, eating it by double handfuls” (Lucy Mack
Smith, The History of Joseph Smith by His Mother,
p. 57-58).
Neither Lehi’s dream nor Nephi’s
vision mentions the cherubim or the guardians of the Tree of
Life; but in both accounts there were four main groups depicted.
These groups correspond very well with the four groups of seeds
in the parable of the sower in the Gospels and are instructive
on what and what not to do to reach the tree.
Two groups reach the tree, but only one stays. There
are hints to why they didn’t stay. The one group did “press
forward through the mist of darkness, clinging to the
rod of iron” (1 Nephi 8:24), while the other group did “press
their way forward, continually holding fast to the rod
of iron …and fell down and partook of the fruit” (vs. 30).
When one clings to something, it
is because there is a force pulling him in the opposite direction.
In this case, it was the desires of the world. The other group
didn’t have any problem holding fast to the rod because they
had lost the desires for the things of the world. But, once
having arrived at the tree, the “clingers” were soon ashamed
by the scoffings of the world. It is also noteworthy that this
group did not fall down at the tree. Those who truly partake
of the atonement of Christ, instinctively fall down in the most
sublime reverence and gratitude. Christ is also representative
of the Tree of Life.
The tree is symbolic of Jesus (1
Nephi 11:21) and the love He has for us. The fruit is the evidence
of His love, the atonement. Eve said that she was glad that
she ate of the Tree of Knowledge of Good and Evil because of
the knowledge she had gained, but was also very joyful in her
redemption from sin through Jesus Christ (Moses 4:11).
Alma (chapter 32) tells us that
in order to grow a Tree of Life within ourselves, we must plant
the seed (which is the Word, which is Christ) and nurture it
with great diligence, until it bears fruit, that we will partake
of, that is white and sweet beyond comparison. Alma is telling
us that we must first believe in Jesus Christ, and then continue
to learn of Him and emulate Him, until we reach a point where
(like the brother of Jared) we are redeemed from the Fall and
allowed back into His presence (Ether 3:13).
We must also be diligent like unto
Nephi, who received this commendation from the Lord, “And thou
hast not sought thine own life, but hast sought my will, and
to keep my commandments. And now, because thou hast done this
with such unwearyingness, behold, I will bless thee forever”
(Helaman 10:4-5).
In the book of John (17:3) we read,
“And this is life eternal, that they might know thee the only
true God, and Jesus Christ, whom thou hast sent.” Jesus also
said, “I am the way, the truth, and the life: no man cometh
unto the Father, but by me. If ye had known me, ye should have
known my Father also” (John 14:6-7). There is no other way
to return to dwell with Christ and our Heavenly Father.
Summary
In final analysis, both trees of
the Garden represent Jesus Christ. As Jesus said, “I am the
light and the life of the world. I am Alpha and Omega, the
beginning and the end” (3 Nephi 9:18). Paul stated that Jesus
Christ is “the author and finisher of our faith” (Hebrews 12:2).
As we journey from Tree to Tree,
we need to grow in the knowledge of good and evil, continually
choosing the good, enter into sacred covenants so that we are
able to give the angelic sentinels the evidence or signs of
our knowledge and good works and partake of the Tree of Life.
In doing so, we become the firstfruits of the Tree of Life and
may it be said of us, “These were redeemed from among men, being
the firstfruits unto God and to the Lamb” (Rev. 14:4) and “Israel
was holiness unto the Lord, and the firstfruits of His increase”
(Jeremiah 2:3).
[i]
Jewish tradition identifies the Tree as a
fig tree. Rabbi Nehemiah said, “The
tree of which the first man ate was the fig, the thing wherewith
they were spoilt, yet were they redressed by it. As it is said:
And they stitched a fig-leaf” Berahot 40a].
In
the non-canonical Book of Adam and Eve, we find further confirmation
of this viewpoint: “I sought a leaf to cover up my nakedness
and found none, for, when I ate, the leaves withered off every
tree in my plot except for the fig, and from it I took leaves
and it made me a girdle, even from the tree of which I ate”
[20:5].
According
to Apocalypse of Moses 20, Eve ate the fruit of the fig
tree. There is an interesting vision in Jeremiah (24th Chapter).
The Lord showed Jeremiah a vision of two baskets of figs — “One
basket had very good figs… and the other basket had very naughty
figs, which could not be eaten, they were so bad. Then said
the Lord unto me, What seest thou, Jeremiah? And I said, Figs;
the good figs, very good; and the evil, very evil, that cannot
be eaten, they are so evil” (24:2-3).
[ii] Charlesworth,
Old Testament Pseudepigrapha, 1:667, n. 4q, notes that
the tree is identified as the vine by the second-century sages:
R Meir [TB Sanhedrin 70a] and R. Judah b. Llai [Genesis Rabbah
15:7] and that it is mentioned in Apocalypse of Abraham 23:1-10,
the fruit of the tree with which Eve was tempted is described
as “like the appearance of a bunch of grapes of the vine.
In the Apocrypha,
Baruch states that an angel explained to him that the grape
is the forbidden fruit, and notes how much sorrow has come from
drinking wine. He then points out that the sacrament uses wine
because of the symbolism that even as the Fall of man came from
the grape, so also does salvation (from footnote in John Pratt
“Decision Days Ahead”, Meridian Magazine, III Baruch
4:8,16-17. See Charles, R.H., The Apocrypha and Pseudepigrapha
of the Old Testament London: Clarendon Press, 1913, vol
II, p. 536).
[iii] Even
though, according to the Apocalypse of Moses, the Olive
tree was considered the Tree of Life, there are problems. The
olive tree best fits the description of the Tree of the Knowledge
of Good and Evil whose fruit is bitter, yet is good for food
and is also good for light. In Zenos’ allegory, the olive trees
are capable of producing good and evil fruit, valuable roots
and worthless roots, branches that are wild and tame.
In John Pratt’s
Article, “Decision Days Ahead,” Meridian Magazine, he
draws a comparison with the olive branch carried by the dove
to Noah as representing the fruit given to Adam and Eve. “What
if the day on which the dove brought Noah an olive leaf represented
the day on which Eve brought some of the fruit to Adam?”
© 2005 Meridian
Magazine. All Rights Reserved
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| About
the Author: |

Janet
Lisonbee, a native Arizonan, has spent most of her life in Virginia
and in Kirtland, Ohio. She is married to Dan Lisonbee and together
they are the parents of ten wonderful children. Janet has served
as early morning seminary teacher for many years and is also a
church history researcher. She is the author of Obituaries
and Life Sketches of the Early Saints Who Died in the Kirtland,
Ohio Area, and developed and presented Kirtland Temple Cemetery
tours when she and her family lived in Kirtland. She also developed
graveyard tours and Christmas tours for the Lake County Historical
Society. She and her family currently reside in Traverse City,
Michigan.
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