When God created the Garden of Eden, He placed within it everything necessary for human livelihood and joy. Yet at the center of that abundance stood a single tree whose fruit carried a deadly consequence. Woven into the beauty of the garden was the real possibility of rebellion and loss. God did not hide that reality. He spoke clearly, warned lovingly, and made sure the choice was understood. One can almost picture Him pointing to the tree and explaining that the decision to eat from it would open a door to consequences far beyond imagination. This was not cruelty but care. He loved them enough to speak plainly and then trusted them enough to step back. Even in Eden, God showed that He had humanity’s good firmly in view, not by coercion, but by honest love that respected freedom.
That same pattern plays out in everyday life. Real love always involves trust, and trust always carries risk. We know the difference between love and the urge to possess, yet we confuse them often enough to prove the point. God’s love does not grasp or manipulate. He gives room to choose, even when those choices lead to pain. He did not create people as machines but as reflections of Himself, capable of trusting or refusing to trust. Jeremiah 31:3 reminds us that God’s love is an “everlasting love,” steady and unchanged. That constancy does not remove consequences; it walks with us through them. Like the father in Jesus’ parable, God allows a wandering child to leave, knowing that freedom is hollow without wisdom. True love, as uncomfortable as it may feel, refuses to chain another to safety.
Jeremiah later made clear that Israel’s suffering did not arrive unannounced. In Jeremiah 2:19, the prophet explained that their troubles were the result of their own choices, choices God had carefully outlined long before. He went on to describe their unfaithfulness in language sharp enough to sting, portraying them as lovers who sold themselves for lesser gains. Scripture does not soften that image, and neither should we. When the Bible says that all have sinned, it means none of us are innocent bystanders. Yet the New Testament opens a surprising door. Jesus said, “The tax collectors and the prostitutes are entering the kingdom of God ahead of you” (Matthew 21:31). Paul echoes the hope when he writes, “The wages of sin is death, but the free gift of God is eternal life in Christ Jesus our Lord” (Romans 6:23). The same freedom that made rebellion possible also made redemption necessary, and in Jesus, God chose to bear the cost Himself.
