Adam and Eve
- UsagiTsukino
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Adam and Eve
I often wonder with often we are finding pre-modern human skeletons. Where does this place, Adam and Eve?
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Re: Adam and Eve
Scripture places Adam and Eve in Neolithic Mesopotamia (Genesis 2-4) and Scriptural Genealogies (specifically the Septuagint numbers) also place Adam and Eve somewhere in the 5000 BC to 6000 BC range.UsagiTsukino wrote: ↑Wed Oct 16, 2019 7:04 pm I often wonder with often we are finding pre-modern human skeletons. Where does this place, Adam and Eve?
The Scriptural time and location for Adam and Eve (and their son Cain) are validated by Mesopotamian history and archaeology... For instance the city of Enoch/Uruk.
If we look at the Scriptural sequence of events in Genesis, God creates mankind in his image in Genesis 1:26-27.
Adam doesn't appear in the Genesis narrative until chapter 2 which sequentially takes place some undetermined amount of time after God created mankind in his image back in chapter 1.
So from a Scriptural perspective there is no issue with finding human or pre-human skeletons that date prior to the time of Adam and Eve (around 5000 BC - 6000 BC).
- UsagiTsukino
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Re: Adam and Eve
God could have created mankind in his image (Gen 1:26-27) 200,000 years ago in Africa per your article.UsagiTsukino wrote: ↑Wed Oct 30, 2019 9:09 am I ask due to this article
https://www.inverse.com/article/60470-h ... ket-newtab
And then placed Adam and Even in the Garden of Eden (Mesopotamia) sometime later (5000-6000 BC) in Geneisis 2.
There is no Scriptural issue there.
- UsagiTsukino
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Re: Adam and Eve
I often thought Adam and Eve were the first human beings. I guess the first human beings to make contact with God?
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Re: Adam and Eve
Tradition does make that claim...UsagiTsukino wrote: ↑Wed Oct 30, 2019 12:41 pm I often thought Adam and Eve were the first human beings.
But Scripture doesn't.
Precisely...I guess the first human beings to make contact with God?
Adam and Eve were the first people to have relationship with God.
- UsagiTsukino
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Re: Adam and Eve
So before Adam and Eve was there no sin?
- RickD
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Re: Adam and Eve
There had to be sin before Adam and Eve sinned. How do we know? Logic tells us that Satan must have fallen before he tempted Eve. So, he must've sinned sometime before he tempted Eve.
John 5:24
24 “Truly, truly, I say to you, he who hears My word, and believes Him who sent Me, has eternal life, and does not come into judgment, but has passed out of death into life.
“A nation of sheep will beget a government of wolves.”
-Edward R Murrow
St. Richard the Sarcastic--The Patron Saint of Irony
24 “Truly, truly, I say to you, he who hears My word, and believes Him who sent Me, has eternal life, and does not come into judgment, but has passed out of death into life.
“A nation of sheep will beget a government of wolves.”
-Edward R Murrow
St. Richard the Sarcastic--The Patron Saint of Irony
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Re: Adam and Eve
Rick is correct...
We don't know when, but Satan rebelled against God sometime prior to the time of Adam and Eve, because he was there in the Garden of Eden tempting Adam and Eve prior to the Fall.
However, sin did become part of the human condition when Adam and Eve sinned.
Romans 5:12 tells that sin entered the world of men (spread to all men) when Adam sinned.
Genesis 3:22 tells us that Adam and Eve did not "know good and evil" prior to the Fall.
- Kurieuo
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Re: Adam and Eve
DB, what would be the number 1 book you'd recommend on recent human origins wrt Adam and Eve?DBowling wrote: ↑Thu Oct 17, 2019 6:53 amScripture places Adam and Eve in Neolithic Mesopotamia (Genesis 2-4) and Scriptural Genealogies (specifically the Septuagint numbers) also place Adam and Eve somewhere in the 5000 BC to 6000 BC range.UsagiTsukino wrote: ↑Wed Oct 16, 2019 7:04 pm I often wonder with often we are finding pre-modern human skeletons. Where does this place, Adam and Eve?
The Scriptural time and location for Adam and Eve (and their son Cain) are validated by Mesopotamian history and archaeology... For instance the city of Enoch/Uruk.
If we look at the Scriptural sequence of events in Genesis, God creates mankind in his image in Genesis 1:26-27.
Adam doesn't appear in the Genesis narrative until chapter 2 which sequentially takes place some undetermined amount of time after God created mankind in his image back in chapter 1.
So from a Scriptural perspective there is no issue with finding human or pre-human skeletons that date prior to the time of Adam and Eve (around 5000 BC - 6000 BC).
"Whoever will call on the name of the Lord will be saved." (Romans 10:13)
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Re: Adam and Eve
These three books have had a significant impact on my understanding of the historical context of the Biblical Adam and Eve.
1. Christian HIstorical
Historical Genesis: from Adam to Abraham
2. Christian Theological
The Lost World of Adam and Eve: Genesis 2-3 and the Human Origins Debate
3. Secular Historical
Legend: The Genesis of Civilisation
- Philip
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Re: Adam and Eve
Yes, Adam and Eve, the first persons to suffer the consequences of not paying closer attention to the stated Apple terms and conditions!
- Kurieuo
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Re: Adam and Eve
You don't have a digital copy of the first do you?
With belief in pre-Adamic race, there's so much theology and doctrine involved outside of the beginning of Genesis. It requires an entire system of reading and understanding to be developed, something I'm not sure has been done, but then that could be my own ignorance. No doubt re-interpretations will be developed over the generations to come.
To be honest, it's not something I think is a possible viability. There are many doctrines that hang on all being in Adam and Eve. I understand the attractiveness, if Adam and Eve is restricted to the Neolithic period (which seems likely). What is the be made of the human activity beforehand, while Christians can bury their heads and claim ignorance.
So then, one is left at a crossroad. Accept Genesis is more human than many Christians would like, and more restricted to ANE people by who had limited understanding (or didn't care to mention others), and as such, isn't historically accurate -- or if we're generous isn't historically "complete". This really starts shedding the skin of the doctrine of inerrancy. The other path is that one starts re-interpreting Scripture to try and conform and try absorb this relatively new information re: humanity (just like RTB attempted to with Day-Age).
I feel I went down the path with RTB, and now certain beliefs are unstuck. I'm not about to do it again, and really perhaps too lazy (or busy with other things) to do so. Open to it, but at the end of the day, the writing feels on the wall. Perhaps this is where I tip my hat to information that seems too hard to fit at this point in time.
With belief in pre-Adamic race, there's so much theology and doctrine involved outside of the beginning of Genesis. It requires an entire system of reading and understanding to be developed, something I'm not sure has been done, but then that could be my own ignorance. No doubt re-interpretations will be developed over the generations to come.
To be honest, it's not something I think is a possible viability. There are many doctrines that hang on all being in Adam and Eve. I understand the attractiveness, if Adam and Eve is restricted to the Neolithic period (which seems likely). What is the be made of the human activity beforehand, while Christians can bury their heads and claim ignorance.
So then, one is left at a crossroad. Accept Genesis is more human than many Christians would like, and more restricted to ANE people by who had limited understanding (or didn't care to mention others), and as such, isn't historically accurate -- or if we're generous isn't historically "complete". This really starts shedding the skin of the doctrine of inerrancy. The other path is that one starts re-interpreting Scripture to try and conform and try absorb this relatively new information re: humanity (just like RTB attempted to with Day-Age).
I feel I went down the path with RTB, and now certain beliefs are unstuck. I'm not about to do it again, and really perhaps too lazy (or busy with other things) to do so. Open to it, but at the end of the day, the writing feels on the wall. Perhaps this is where I tip my hat to information that seems too hard to fit at this point in time.
"Whoever will call on the name of the Lord will be saved." (Romans 10:13)
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Re: Adam and Eve
Let me push back on this a bit...Kurieuo wrote: ↑Fri Nov 01, 2019 3:56 am So then, one is left at a crossroad. Accept Genesis is more human than many Christians would like, and more restricted to ANE people by who had limited understanding (or didn't care to mention others), and as such, isn't historically accurate -- or if we're generous isn't historically "complete". This really starts shedding the skin of the doctrine of inerrancy.
I don't think understanding the Scriptural historical context of the book of Genesis and Adam and Eve damages the doctrine of inerrancy at all.
The history of Judaism and Christianity is full of examples of people imposing an extrascriptural context or interpretation on Scripture and then equating the authority that extrascriptural tradition with the authority of Scripture itself.
I do not equate shredding the skin of an extrascriptural tradition with shredding the skin of the doctrine of scriptural inerrancy.
I actually believe that RTB is on the right track with most of Genesis 1, and I still consider myself to be a Day-Ager.The other path is that one starts re-interpreting Scripture to try and conform and try absorb this relatively new information re: humanity (just like RTB attempted to with Day-Age).
I feel I went down the path with RTB, and now certain beliefs are unstuck. I'm not about to do it again, and really perhaps too lazy (or busy with other things) to do so.
I just happen to think that RTB is on the wrong track in regards to the historical Adam and Eve.
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Re: Adam and Eve
One more quick thing
However, I did post this lecture by Richard Fischer (author of Historical Genesis: from Adam to Abraham) in another thread.
Historical Adam, the First Man in Biblical History
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XMPW8PrBPsU
This lecture gives a good presentation about the Scriptural and historical context of the Biblical Adam.
Unfortunately I do not, and I couldn't find an online copy either.
However, I did post this lecture by Richard Fischer (author of Historical Genesis: from Adam to Abraham) in another thread.
Historical Adam, the First Man in Biblical History
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XMPW8PrBPsU
This lecture gives a good presentation about the Scriptural and historical context of the Biblical Adam.