This powerful exploration of Genesis 2 and 3 takes us on a journey through the most pivotal moment in human history—the before and after of the fall. We discover that God as Creator establishes Himself as the ultimate authority, providing everything humanity needs with unrivaled security and unimaginable generosity. The garden wasn't just a place to live; it was a temple where we, as image bearers, were given priestly duties to work and watch over God's creation. The message challenges us to recognize that work itself is not a curse but part of God's good design, and that God's provision always precedes our performance. We see how Satan operates as the deceiver, not by creating truth but by distorting it, always putting question marks where God has placed periods. His tactics remain unchanged: he tempts us to question God's Word, His ways, His wisdom, and His consequences. The fall reveals mankind as rejecter—rejecting reality, roles, and repentance, trying to cover our nakedness with fig leaves of religion rather than embracing God's provision. Yet the greatest surprise isn't judgment but mercy. In Genesis 3:15, we encounter the proto-evangelium, the first gospel promise that through the seed of the woman, the serpent's head would be crushed. This foreshadows Calvary, where Jesus went under the sword of death so we could access the tree of life. Where the first Adam failed in a garden, the second Adam conquered in a garden, transforming the grave into glorious victory and offering us not self-made coverings but the robe of righteousness through His shed blood.