Hey friends,

Welcome to Issue 5 of our Christian AI art + devotional series with Grok Imagine.

Last time we celebrated God’s perfect six-day creation — everything mature, complete, and declared “very good.”

Check it out here: https://graceintheglitch.beehiiv.com/p/turn-grok-imagine-ai-into-worship-4

This week, we move into Genesis 3 and witness how quickly doubt and pride shattered that goodness.

We see the lead-up to the original sin at the Tree of the Knowledge of Good and Evil, followed by the serious consequences of disobedience — and yet, even in judgment, we glimpse God’s compassion and the first promise of redemption.

These prompts and devotionals are honest about the weight of sin while pointing us to hope in Christ.

Copy-paste the prompts into Grok Imagine, choose your aspect ratio (16:9 for grand cosmic scenes, 3:2 for balanced compositions), and let the images draw you into awe and worship.

Adapt as desired

The Temptation at the Tree (Inspired by Genesis 3:1-6)

AI Prompt 1 for Grok Imagine: dramatic colored etching of the Garden of Eden scene at the Tree of the Knowledge of Good and Evil, Eve standing near the tree with Adam beside her listening silently, a cunning serpent coiled in the branches speaking to Eve, subtle doubt in the air as the serpent questions God’s word, fruit looking desirable, Eve reaching toward the fruit while adding to God’s command, photorealistic biblical realism, soft garden lighting with gentle shadows, atmosphere of temptation and fateful decision, ultra-detailed, reverent yet solemn mood, teal highlights, (adam and eve are Israeali origin and coloring)

Why it glorifies God: This honestly shows how the enemy twists truth and how prideful desire to “be like God” leads to disobedience.

The Temptation at the Tree (Inspired by Genesis 3:1-6
Verse: "Now the serpent was more crafty than any of the wild animals the Lord God had made." (Genesis 3:1)

Devotional: The serpent sowed doubt in God’s goodness and word.

Eve added to what God had said (“neither shall you touch it”), and Adam — who was with her — remained silent instead of leading and protecting.

Together, they chose pride over obedience, wanting to be like God on their own terms.

What started as “very good” was marred in a single moment of unbelief.

Prayer: Lord, guard my heart from doubting Your Word and adding to it. Help me trust and obey You fully, especially when temptation comes. Amen.

The Fall and Its Consequences (Inspired by Genesis 3:7-24)

AI Prompt 2 with Grok Imagine: Heart-wrenching scene after the Fall in the Garden of Eden, Adam and Eve realizing their nakedness and covering themselves with fig leaves in shame, God as a glowing light confronting them with sorrowful authority, distant curses visible — serpent with no lege, slithering ashamed, ground beginning to show thorns, sorrow on their faces, yet a faint ray of divine light hinting at future redemption, photorealistic biblical scene, somber yet compassionate atmosphere, soft fading garden light, ultra-detailed emotional depth

Why it glorifies God: Even while pronouncing consequences for sin — spiritual death, separation from Him, shame, and a cursed creation — God shows mercy by providing covering and promising ultimate victory through the Seed who would crush the serpent’s head (Genesis 3:15).

The Fall and Its Consequences (Inspired by Genesis 3:7-24)
Verse: "Therefore, just as sin entered the world through one man, and death through sin, and in this way death came to all people…” (Romans 5:12)

Devotional: Because Adam was with Eve and chose to eat anyway, sin and spiritual death entered the human race.

They experienced immediate shame and separation from God.

Yet in His judgment, God showed compassion — expelling them from the garden so they would not eat from the Tree of Life and live forever in a fallen state.

Even here, He gave the first gospel promise: the Seed of the woman would one day defeat the serpent.

Prayer: Heavenly Father, thank You for taking sin seriously while showing mercy. Help me never take Your grace for granted and trust in the Redeemer promised from the very beginning. Amen.

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Quick Tips for Godly Results with Grok Imagine

  • For the temptation scene, use words like “cunning serpent,” “desirable fruit,” and “solemn mood” to capture the weight of the moment.

  • For the consequences scene, include “shame,” “compassionate atmosphere,” and “faint ray of hope” to balance judgment with mercy.

  • Always caption your shares with Scripture: “Visualizing His truth (Genesis 3)” to keep the focus on God’s Word.

  • Refine easily: Reply with “add more shame in their expressions” or “soften the light to show compassion.”

Which scene impacted you more — the moment of temptation or the weight of the consequences mixed with hope?

Reply with your Grok Imagine creations and thoughts.

We’ll continue chronologically through Genesis next time.

Forward this to someone who needs to understand both the seriousness of sin and the greatness of God’s mercy.

Blessings & creative light,
Jennifer Leigh Nelson
Grace in the Glitch Hub on X
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