Tree of Life: In Genesis 2-3, it was in the Garden of Eden, offering eternal life. Humanity was cut off after the fall (Genesis 3:22-24).
The Cross: In the New Testament, the Cross is Christ's instrument of sacrifice, granting salvation and eternal life (John 3:16; Romans 6:23).
Adam was placed in the garden as a gardener (Genesis 2:15), responsible for tending the Tree of Life and the rest of creation. Through Adam's disobedience, death entered the world (Romans 5:12), cutting humanity off from eternal life.
Aspect | Tree of Life | Cross |
---|---|---|
Source of life | Eating from it sustains eternal life | Christ's sacrifice gives eternal life |
Access blocked | Cut off after the fall | Opened to humanity through Christ |
Healing | Leaves for healing (Rev 22:2) | Christ's wounds bring spiritual healing (1 Pet 2:24) |
Placement | Garden of Eden, paradise | Golgotha, new Eden imagery (Luke 23:43; Rev 22:1-2) |
Jesus is the fruit of the womb and the seed who fulfills God's promise:
Just as a tree produces new leaves after being wounded (1 Peter 2:24), the wounds of Christ on the Cross bring spiritual life and healing. Revelation 22:2 mentions leaves for the healing of the nations—symbolically, Christ's suffering produces growth, restoration, and fruitfulness in believers.
This shows that the Cross is not only an instrument of death but a wounded tree that produces new life, connecting directly to the Tree of Life imagery.
Many theologians see the Cross as the new Tree of Life. It restores what was lost in Eden: eternal life, healing, and spiritual fruitfulness. Jesus, as the seed and fruit, completes this divine plan.
The Cross is not literally a tree of fruit, but symbolically it fulfills the role of the Tree of Life. Jesus, the true gardener, seed, and fruit, defeats death, and His wounds produce new life and healing for all believers.