Tracing the family tree back to its, roots is an ancient activity which absorbs many today.
Societies are being formed and members are finding the study of their pedigrees fascinating, if not altogether flattering. .
For example, a member of a genealogical society in Ontario claims to trace his family tree back to 495 A.D. and he includes Alfred the Great among his ancestors.
Another traces his bloodlines over centuries to the Doomsday Book, a record of English lands compiled for William the Conqueror about 1086.
Another was elated by his recent discovery that one of his relatives was a soldier in the war of 1812 and took part in the sacking of Oswego.
For various reasons not everyone cares to identify his family tree. The history of the black sheep, or the skeleton in the closet is admittedly often better left untold.
The long, inglorious history of the whole human family leaves no room for boasting. It is the shameful truth that our first parents were guilty, fallen creatures cast out of the Garden of Eden, and that their first offspring, Cain, murdered his brother Abel.
What has been the continuing result for every member of Adam's race to this present day? Let the Word of God answer: "Wherefore, as by one man sin entered into the world, and death by sin; and so death passed upon all men, for that all have sinned." Rom. 5:12.
The universality of death only proves the universality of sin. As another has said: "Man has fallen! Not this man or that man, but the whole race. In Adam all have sinned; in Adam all have died. It is not that a few leaves have faded or been shaken down, but the tree has become corrupt, root and branch."
"Climb your family tree!" urges the modern genealogist.
"Look... to the pit whence ye are digged," says the Word of God. Isa. 51:1.
Unless we are prepared to go to the very bottom, the study of our pedigrees is a profitless exercise, but once we see our lost estate, how brightly the gospel shines before our dark and sinful background.
Jesus the One who left the throne
To save a ruined race.
From heaven He came into the world "to seek and to save that which was lost." Luke 19:10.
The Savior that God promised on the very day that Adam and Eve fell, is Jesus. He is the Second Adam, the head of a new race. At this moment you are either in Adam or in Christ—saved or lost. If lost, why not come to Him now, confessing your need and claim Him by faith as your own. He waits to receive you just as you are.
"Therefore if any man be in Christ, he is a new creature." 2 Cor. 5:17.