The Deep Sleep
"And the LORD God caused a deep sleep to fall upon Adam, and he
slept: and he took one of his ribs, and closed up the flesh instead
thereof." (Genesis 2:21)
This is the first of seven occurrences of the unusual term "deep sleep"
(Hebrew tardema) in the Old Testament. In each case it seems
to refer to a special state induced by the Lord Himself in order to
convey an important revelation to, or through, the person experiencing
it. In Adam's case, God made a bride for him during his
deep sleep from whose seed would be born all the nations of the earth.
"And the rib, which the Lord God had taken from man, made he a woman,
and brought her unto the man" (v. 22). The covenant God made with Adam
and Eve delegated dominion over the earth to their descendants.
The second deep sleep was that which "fell upon Abram" (Genesis 15:12) when
God passed between the sacrificial animals and established His great
covenant with him, promising that from his seed would be born the chosen
nation. "And I will make of thee a great nation" (12:2). The Abrahamic
covenant also delegated the central land of the earth to Isaac's
descendants (15:18-21) and promised that "in thee shall all families of
the earth be blessed" (12:3). But Adam was a type of Christ
and Abraham was a type of Christ, and their deep sleeps pre-figured His
own deep sleep of death on the cross. There He became the last Adam and
the promised seed, dying to give life to His great bride and living
again to establish a holy nation of the redeemed, fulfilling all of
God's ancient covenants, and instituting the eternal New Covenant in His
own blood. When Adam fell into a deep sleep, a bride was
born; when Abraham fell into his deep sleep, a nation was born. But when
Christ slept deeply in death on the cross and in the tomb, death and
hell were judged, and a new world was born.




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