Please elaborate because I think you're trying to say something here, but I'm missing it since to me there does exist at least one race that we're aware of that require no Savior. Help me understand why there being humans of this sort is an "all of a sudden..." moment.Byblos wrote:You can classify them as 'like angels' if you wish but they are still not subject to the fall and they are still human, capable of reproducing and creating descendants who themselves are 'like angels' and not fallen. All of a sudden we have an entire race of unfallens who require no savior.BavarianWheels wrote:Would it be wrong to clarify within this scenario that these "people who are not fallen" are simply like the angels? I mean, beings exist that are not fallen, would it be so far-fetched to think there might also be created humans in an unfallen state?Byblos wrote:The problem with this (as is with Danny's scenario) is that it allows for the existence of people who are not fallen. If Adam and Eve had children before the fall then those children (and all of their descendants) are not affected by the fall.
In continuation in this thought, would you say that there couldn't have been another since this is the only one Scripture speaks of? Not that God lies to us, but that the others didn't fit His point?Byblos wrote:One of many? Maybe, I don't know. But it certainly was the first. Scripture does not mention any other murder prior to that.BavarianWheels wrote:I suppose. One must ask then if Cain was the first murderer or if it was simply one of many of these situations that was used as the focal point for the example of right worship vs. wrong worship. Were there other murders between brothers that could have been retold in the Genesis account?Byblos wrote:But I would agree with your scenario if Adam and Eve had these children after the fall (which would make it the same as the classical view).
Again, I'm just thinking out loud.
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