Genesis 3:1 Now the serpent was more subtil than any beast of the field which the LORD God had made. And he said unto the woman, Yea, hath God said, Ye shall not eat of every tree of the garden?
Some believers hold that the serpent in Genesis 3 was not a literal snake. They believe that Satan appeared to Eve in a snake-like form.
Other believers hold that the serpent in Genesis 3 was a literal snake whom Satan somehow directed to deceive Eve.
Do you believe that this serpent was a literal snake?
Was the Serpent in Genesis 3 a Literal Snake?
Discussion in 'Baptist Theology & Bible Study' started by Scripture More Accurately, Sep 25, 2020.
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Yes
9 vote(s)60.0% -
No
4 vote(s)26.7% -
Unsure
2 vote(s)13.3%
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Scripture More Accurately Well-Known Member
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church mouse guy Well-Known MemberSite Supporter
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It was literally a manifestation of Satan. That is the literal message.
But what about Genesis 3:14? The snake or serpent of today does exhibit God's curse, but we do not know if that reflects his characteristics in the Garden. We know he could talk and deceive, which are not characteristics of animals. -
Scripture More Accurately Well-Known Member
The best explanation is that Satan somehow worked through a literal serpent to deceive Eve. -
There are many levels of understanding in this story that we can only guess.
If it was a “ literal serpent” it was unlike anything we know of today or at anytime in the past.
So my answer is, “NO”, it can not be compared to what we know as a serpent.
This serpent could walk, talk, think and reason with a person.
This serpent was going to have offspring that would be at enmity with Eve’s offspring.
And if you want to be “literal”, this serpent would “eat dust” all the rest of it’s life.
The NT book of Revelation borrows heavily from Genesis (and many other OT texts).
There may be an illusion to the story (of Genesis 3) in Rev. 12.17,
So the dragon was enraged with the woman, and went off to make war with the rest of her children, who keep the commandments of God and hold to the testimony of Jesus.
John appears to be allegorizing the story.
Rob -
Scripture More Accurately Well-Known Member
Also, Genesis 3:14 does not say that the serpent would only or exclusively eat dust all the days of its life. -
Perhaps I don’t understand what you mean by it being a “literal” snake.
It was a snake... that’s what the text says...
But the snake in Genesis 3 was certainly much more than just a “literal” snake.
If you only believe that you’re missing much of the story.
My position is that this was not just a simple, “literal” snake but was the embodiment of something so much bigger.
This “physical animal” was the representation of an evil that ultimately could only be defeated by something so much bigger than a simple, ordinary, “literal” man...
...Christ, the God-man.
Rob -
Scripture More Accurately Well-Known Member
Either you believe that this serpent was a distinct being from Satan or you do not. I believe that it was a distinct physical animal that was somehow used by Satan and was not at all just a manifestation or appearance of Satan in a physical form.
Does that help? -
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Scripture More Accurately Well-Known Member
I have never made the claim that the serpent in Genesis 3 was exactly the same as the snakes that we have today. My position is that it was a physical animal that was distinct from Satan and was not merely a manifestation of Satan. -
Scripture More Accurately Well-Known Member
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And when scripture refers to that Serpent of old, Satan and not an animal is in view. -
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Scripture More Accurately Well-Known Member
For me, whether the serpent in Genesis 3 had the ability to talk or not is immaterial for establishing its identity because I have never made the claim that it was exactly the same as our snakes of today.
More importantly, the main point, as I see it, is that the serpent in Genesis 3 was not merely a manifestation or appearance of Satan; it was a distinct, physical serpent. -
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Scripture More Accurately Well-Known Member
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church mouse guy Well-Known MemberSite Supporter
Henry Morris in his study Bible says that snakes seem to have stood upright originally so they some of them would have been as tall as a man. Satan entered the animal and the animal paid a price for this.
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Scripture More Accurately Well-Known Member
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Here is the question that should be asked, why did God curse the snake, when it was Satan who did wrong? I think to create an icon for Satan, so that down through time, people would be reminded of the wickedness of Satan.
Consider, "snake in the grass" or "brood of vipers" or even poison on their lips.
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