After the Dreams: Day 7 Thru Seth

Posted on:

Modified on:

  1. Day 7
    1. The Sabbath
    2. Calendars
    3. The Host
  2. The garden
    1. Chapter 2 outline
    2. The garden’s function
  3. The temptation
    1. The serpent
    2. Satan or satans
    3. The banishment
  4. Adam’s children
    1. Cain and Abel
    2. Cain’s descendants
    3. Seth
  5. Coming next

In Genesis 1:1–5, Day 1 and a number of earlier posts I presented a case for Old Earth Creationism and why I believe that Genesis 1 can only be interpreted as a visionary prophetic revelation, not a historical account.

In my most recent post, Moshe’s Week of Dreams, I presented a hypothesis as to why Genesis 1 reads as it does, presenting a 6-day creation process, beginning with light, and building to a description of the cosmos that matches what ancient peoples imagined it to be, a flat, floating island earth protected from the ocean above by a dome, under which reside the sun, moon and stars. All of us would agree that this description doesn’t match what we observe today.

Yet another ancient cosmos diagram. I have posted at least a half dozen versions of this, because each ancient culture had a similar conception, differing mostly in small detail. This one matches the Genesis 1 description. ©Logos Bible Software

Interpreting Genesis 1 as visionary and not literally descriptive begs the question: What about the rest of prehistoric Genesis, i.e., Genesis 2:1–11:9?

Well, in my view it is all prophetically revealed, but it is not clear to me that any of it is visionary, or that much of it is even non-literal. Prophecy can reveal truth in subtle and symbolic ways, or it can show truth directly.

My own interpretations of prophecy make use of the so-called “Golden Rule of Biblical Interpretation”:

“When the plain sense of Scripture makes common sense, seek no other sense; therefore, take every word at its primary, ordinary, usual, literal meaning unless the facts of the immediate context, studied in the light of related passages and axiomatic and fundamental truths, indicate clearly otherwise.”
–Dr. David L. Cooper (1886-1965),
founder of The Biblical Research Society

If you aren’t a theology buff like me, you may not have heard of this particular Golden Rule outside of my blogs. Something very similar that you probably have heard of in high school science classes is called Occam’s Razor. Its actual wording is, “entities should not be multiplied beyond necessity”, meaning that, if you are faced with several alternative solutions to a problem, always start out with the simplest; or, alternatively, the one requiring the fewest assumptions.

Genesis 1 does not make “common sense” in the context of the universe as we can plainly see it today, so I choose to look for truth revealed more abstractly there.

The rest of the “prehistoric” material, though, is easier for me to accept literally. To a quite large extent, much of it does in fact meet the commonsense test for me. In this post and hopefully the next, I’m going to walk you through that material, starting in Eden and ending in the world after Babel.

There is actually a lot of material here, and since I’m confident that there is a lot of misunderstanding in Christian traditions about the era, I’m going to cover only the things I don’t think you are likely to have been taught… or taught correctly!

In this post, we’ll walk through the next three chapters of Genesis, where I’ll point out some more interpretations that you may not have heard before, regarding creation day 7, the Garden of Eden, the Temptation, and Adam’s most prominent children.

I’m sure you’ve noticed that my writing tends to get a bit deep occasionally, and what follows is no exception.

The reason for that is because I present a lot of interpretations (even occasionally one of my own) that veer from the “strictly orthodox“. When I challenge church traditions that have no, or in my view insufficient, textual backing, then I think I have to provide some solid evidence. If some of it goes over your head, then at least I hope you’ll try to skim through it for the gist. Whether I’m right or wrong, I don’t want you to think I’m making things up!

Day 7

Genesis 2:1–3

This “seventh day of creation” is appropriately split off into Chapter 2 in modern translations of Genesis because it is fundamentally different from the other six days. While this may be a continuation of the dream series I postulated for Genesis 1, the “evening and morning” motif is conspicuously missing.

The Sabbath

No creation is done on this day. Instead, it is used to set a spiritual principle for the importance of rest and renewal. More importantly, it is also a celebration of Creation, in particular for the Creator Himself, Yahweh.

The suggestion that God needed a day to rest from His labors is of course a literary device, not a serious concern. God is a spirit (רוּחַ, ruach), physically encompassing and controlling the entire universe. He has no nutritional requirements, and evidently His activities expend no energy that would require replenishment.

He is, however, the ultimate source of order on earth and in the universe at large! Much of what follows is about God maintaining and, when necessary, reestablishing order in Creation as evil spreads on earth, and even in the celestial realm.

Calendars

The concept of weeks as a calendar-ordering system predates Moses. The earliest archaeological evidence for the grouping of solar days into weeks (usually, but not always, 7-day cycles) appears in the era of Nimrod, about 2300 BC. The practice of assigning ceremonial purpose to one or more days each week may go back almost as far.

The Hebrews were apparently first to sever the cycle of weeks from the monthly and annual cycles—meaning, for example, that a calendar week for most of the modern world is always exactly seven days, irrespective of how many days may constitute a month or a year.

The Host

One very important factor that’s usually missed in studies of these three short verses is the word “host.” Ignoring here the modern “host and hostess” concept, “host” is the Hebrew: צָבָא (tsaba) meaning a large number of something, an army, or war.

[2:1] Thus the heavens and the earth were finished, and all the host of them.
—Genesis 2:1 (ESV)

In modern English, we think of “host” in generic terms, for example, “a host of reasons.” ESV, NKJV and YLT, like KJV, have left further interpretation of the term, as it appears in verse 2:1, up to the reader, but many modern translations go further and assume that it is speaking of a large number of created “things”, like stars, planets, etc. Examples of such translations include:

  • “Everything in them”, CJB, HCSB
  • “All that filled them”, NCV
  • “In all their vast array”, NIV
  • “In all their multitude”, NRSV
  • “All their inhabitants”, AMP
  • “All their heavenly lights”, NASB

A Biblical lexicon or a concordance lists the various ways that a word has been translated, without passing judgement on how it should have been translated. I believe that the term “host” in Genesis 2:1 and other passages with a similar context is speaking not of inanimate or miscellaneous things, but specifically of the angelic armies that God created to manage the cosmos. Translators have mostly missed this connection because angelology is so poorly understood and under-appreciated by most theologians.

Note that God is often referred to in Scripture as Adonai Sabaoth, “The Lord of Hosts/Armies.” Angelic beings are not just an afterthought, pets, slaves, or “gofers” of any kind. They are important residents of the created universe, members of God’s heavenly family.

I believe that this verse sets the time of their creation: At or near the beginning of the 13+ billion-year life of the universe.

Of course, that also fits with the concept that the Host was created to do for the universe what humankind was to do for the inhabitable earth: To subdue it and maintain it.

The garden

Genesis 2:4–24

I discussed Genesis 2 and 3 in detail in Exploring the Garden of Eden. Briefly, I believe that they were real people living in a real Garden of Eden, and their temptation and failure were real events. Beyond that, as explained there I do have some issues with traditional interpretations:

Chapter 2 outline
  1. Gen 2:4 is a toledah, a genealogy marker, separating the previous text from what follows, which I believe is a separate creation story, not a retelling of any part of chapter 1. Gen 1:26 describes the creation of early man, before Adam and Eve were added to their number to perform a specific function.
  2. Gen 2:5–6 describes conditions, not over the entire earth, but just over the land (אֶרֶץ, eretz) that would become the holy Garden. Eden was too arid to support any “bush of the field” (wild vegetation) and it was not as yet inhabited, or under cultivation.
  3. In Gen 2:7, Adam was formed (יָצַר, yatsar) by God, not created ex nihilo (בָּרָא, bara’) as in Gen 1:26. “Dust of the ground” refers simply to the chemical elements occurring on earth, perhaps specifically in the soil of the Garden. The “breath of life” is something that I don’t believe can happen spontaneously through any “Biopoiesis” process, i.e., “a supposed origination of living organisms from lifeless matter” as assumed by all non-theistic evolutionary theories. Note: “Panspermia” theories (life seeded on earth from extraterrestrial sources) don’t solve the ultimate question: How did the first life arise? It has never been shown how non-life can become life, aside from creation.
  4. In Gen 2:8–9, God then (after forming Adam) planted (נָטַע, nata, not a creative act, though no doubt done with a supernatural boost) a garden (גַּן, gan, an enclosed area, normally in those days planted with trees) “eastward in Eden“. This garden was not Eden itself but was an area evidently on the eastern side of a region by that name.
  5. In Gen 2:10–14, “A river flowed out of Eden to water the garden…”. The river flowed out of Eden and into the Garden. “There [presumably in Eden, upstream of the Garden!] it divided and became four…” Not simply “rivers” or “streams” as most translations state, but רֹאשׁ (ro’sh), meaning in this case “headwaters“, that is, the source waters that filled the river running into the Garden. In my Garden of Eden post, I explain why rivers that divide running downstream are unstable and quickly either recombine, divert into a single channel or dissipate altogether. I then use this information to firmly establish the location of the Garden in present-day southern Iraq—from information contained in the Biblical account.
  6. In Gen 2:15–17, there is no prohibition of eating from the Tree of Life. Gen 3:22 implies that it was in the Garden in order to give Adam and Eve a semblance of immortality, which further suggests that they were not created immortal to begin with. See Romans 5:12 and Death Before the Fall.
  7. In Gen 2:18–24, once God announced (surely to His Divine Council) that He intended to make a suitable helper for Adam, He first allowed the man to observe what that concept meant to other creatures. Animals had already been created (bara’, ex nihilo) outside the Garden. Rather than resume the creation (bara’) process discussed in Gen 1, He chose now to form (yatsar) new animals from the elemental “dust”, in the same way He had formed Adam. From the context, these were male/female pairs. Whether they were existing species or freshly designed for the Garden is unspecified. My own assumption is that Adam’s task was to become familiar with them to the extent that he gave them personal names, like Mickie and Minnie, for instance, rather than “male and female deer mouse” (Peromyscus maniculatus). Once Adam understood the picture, God made him an appropriate human companion.
The garden’s function

Over the years I’ve heard several suggestions that the Garden of Eden, in addition to being an idyllic home for Adam and his family, was actually a prototypical tabernacle for worship of Yahweh.

This is fodder for a future full article on its own, but for now I’ll just say that I agree! All of the necessary elements are in place, and the Garden as Temple/Tabernacle fits nicely with my knowledge of the way God typically does business. When you study the history of such facilities, you see that the Temple serves as a “home” for Yahweh in the midst of His people. We know that God is omnipresent in the universe, but as long as His people are obedient, He delights in maintaining an “interface” with them, as for example, His sh’kinah presence hovering over the Ark of the Covenant in the Holy of Holies.

In this verse, the picture is not one of God dwelling in heaven and periodically visiting in the Temple. It is one of God remaining in the Temple where He is accessible. For example, among the blessings of keeping His commandments, God promises:

[11] I will put my tabernacle among you, and I will not reject you, [12] but I will walk among you and be your God, and you will be my people.
—Leviticus 26:11–12 (CJB)

When King David offered to build a permanent Temple in Jerusalem, God replied:

[6] Since the day I brought the people of Isra’el out of Egypt until today, I never lived in a house; rather, I traveled in a tent and a tabernacle. [7] Everywhere I traveled with all the people of Isra’el, did I ever speak a word to any of the tribes of Isra’el, whom I ordered to shepherd my people Isra’el, asking, “Why haven’t you built me a cedar-wood house?”’
—2 Samuel 7:6–7 (CJB)

The concept of God “tabernacling” with His people is so important that, out of the seven feasts that Israel was ordered to observe every year in perpetuity, it is celebrated by the most joyous and anticipated feast of all. The Feast of Tabernacles is celebrated in Jerusalem and around the world beginning on Tishri 15 every year. In fact, it is such an important occasion that Tishri 15 of the Gregorian year 4 BC was the date that Yahweh chose for the Son to be born in Bethlehem (see The Jewish Feasts: Part 14, Tabernacles)!

Jesus’ birth date, the first day of the 8-day Feast of Tabernacles in AD 4. His circumcision was on the final day of the Feast. Among other functions, all the Leviticus 23 feasts prophesied events in Jesus’ two advents. ©Ron Thompson

Given the above, God’s activities in verse 8, below, are explained very well:

[8] They heard the voice of ADONAI, God, walking in the garden at the time of the evening breeze, so the man and his wife hid themselves from the presence of ADONAI, God, among the trees in the garden.
—Genesis 3:8 (CJB) emphasis mine

The temptation

Genesis 3

This is a vitally important passage of Scripture, and I am 100% convinced that the essential lesson—that the very real Satan tempted the very real Adam and Eve and brought about very real and horrendous curses that still afflict this planet—is absolutely true.

I would refer you to Exploring the Garden of Eden for a fairly comprehensive exposition of this chapter. I do, however, have a lot more to say here about one of the principal characters of the story:

The serpent

I have read somewhere that the serpent, prior to its curse, was a quadruped and the most beautiful of all the animals on earth. How could anyone know that? Obviously, the idea is pure fantasy!

As a matter of fact—don’t hang up on me here—by today’s literary standards the serpent story is a fable, along the lines of Rudyard Kipling’s famous tales like How the Camel Got its Hump, or How the Leopard Got its spots. But read on before you judge me too harshly…

In the ancient world of the fertile crescent, the genre of “fable” was a common and respected way of transmitting real history. What made a story a fable was not that it was necessarily fiction, but that it contained a moral lesson. In mid-2024 I wrote a short (believe it or not) article titled Religion vs. Mythology in which I quoted Egyptologist Bob Brier: “Mythology contains stories [set in the primordial past] that are not [necessarily] to be taken literally but answer basic questions about the nature of the universe.”

In other words, mythology usually contains at least some metaphorical historical content but always seeks to teach a useful lesson about reality. The question here becomes, “What part of the Serpent story, if any, is metaphorical? I’ll answer that with a brief analysis framed as a Q&A:

  • First, was the serpent really Satan, as we’ve all been taught?

    Absolutely! That point is clarified several times in Scripture, including:

[20:1] Then I saw an angel coming down from heaven, holding in his hand the key to the bottomless pit and a great chain. [2] And he seized the dragon, that ancient serpent, who is the devil and Satan, and bound him for a thousand years,
—Revelation 20:1 (ESV)

  • Was Satan really a snake?

No, that’s the metaphor part. To unbelievers, everything supernatural in the Bible is by definition metaphorical. That is no reason for believers to dismiss the possibility that God used metaphor at times when the cultural context made metaphor the best way to dramatize a truth.

King Tut’s Mask. Note the two snakes, symbolizing the two kingdoms, Upper and Lower Egypt.

If you find slithering snakes to be creepy, well, so did the ancients. Not only are their appearance and habits unsettling and their nests often hidden and/or in the wilderness, which is where all matter of evil spirits were known to reside, but they are of course potentially very deadly.

Snakes were plentiful in the Ancient Near East (ANE), and they were of course the subject of much supernatural dread. Snake images were associated with a number of the pagan gods and were appropriated by pagan human rulers to demonstrate their association with those gods.

  • If Satan wasn’t a snake, what was he?

Satan was a corrupt, high-ranking angelic being, a spirit with the ability to take on corporeal form, like a human or, in this case, a reptile. Specifically, he was a cherub:

[14] You were a keruv [cherub], protecting a large region;
I placed you on God’s holy mountain.
You walked back and forth
among stones of fire.
—Ezekiel 28:14 (CJB)

Cherubim and Seraphim (while not technically “angels”) are spirit beings created to guard God’s throne and other sacred objects. The terms “garden of God” and “mountain of God” refer to any location where Yahweh is “officially” in residence. The “stones of fire” are the spirits present: Yahweh, His guardians, and the “sons of God” on His “Divine Council.

I won’t document those definitions here, except to point out that God didn’t “come down” to visit with Adam and Eve; He was coresident with them in Eden, along with His spirit retinue. Satan was present, as a matter of course. He violated the trust given him by God. The verses following the passage last quoted tell the consequences:

[15] You were perfect in your ways
from the day you were created,
until unrighteousness
was found in you.
[16] “‘When your commerce grew,
you became filled with violence;
and in this way you sinned.
Therefore I have thrown you out, defiled,
from the mountain of God;
I have destroyed you, protecting keruv,
from among the stones of fire.
[17] Your heart grew proud because of your beauty,
you corrupted your wisdom for the sake of your splendor.
But I have thrown you on the ground;
before kings I have made you a spectacle.
—Ezekiel 28:15–17 (CJB)

  • Did Adam and Eve see a snake, or something else?

Yes… Okay, my guess is that they saw a snake, but whatever they saw or sensed, they recognized him as one of the resident cherubim. There is no mention of fear, or of surprise at a talking snake.

  • If Satan wasn’t really a snake, then why did God curse snakes?

Good question! The answer is, He didn’t!

A Coast garter snake. ©Steve Jurvetson

It sounds like He did, but remember that I’m billing this as “mythologized” history. Real history, told in the dramatized way that history was frequently taught in antiquity. Snakes weren’t beautiful quadrupeds before the fall, they were beautiful… snakes! God designed snakes to “crawl on [their] belly” because that is what best suited them for their ecological niche. As for “eating dust”, that isn’t a snake function, but I imagine it does happen from time to time, given their proximity to the ground. I’m confident that snakes are quite happy in their own niche! And many of them are still quite beautiful.

  • But why would a Cherub be given a snake’s punishment?

What God actually cursed was the being that was impersonating a snake: Satan, a.k.a., the Serpent. The persona that Satan chose to adopt, or that Moses chose to assign to him, was that of a Serpent, and Satan’s curse was worded accordingly.

That curse is given in Genesis 3 and is explained in the Ezekiel passage quoted above and in Isaiah:

[11] Your pride has been brought down to Sh’ol
with the music of your lyres,
under you a mattress of maggots,
over you a blanket of worms.’
[12] “How did you come to fall from the heavens,
morning star, son of the dawn [Lucifer, son of the morning in KJV]?
How did you come to be cut to the ground,
conqueror of nations?
[13] You thought to yourself, ‘I will scale the heavens,
I will raise my throne above God’s stars.
I will sit on the Mount of Assembly
far away in the north.
[14] I will rise past the tops of the clouds,
I will make myself like the Most High.’
[15] “Instead you are brought down to Sh’ol,
to the uttermost depths of the pit.
—Isaiah 14:11–15 (CJB)

It takes some context to understand it:

[14] ADONAI, God, said to the serpent, “Because you have done this, you are cursed more than all livestock and wild animals. You will crawl on your belly and eat dust as long as you live.
—Genesis 3:14 (CJB)

  • In Biblical imagery, the celestial “angels” are compared to stars in heaven. The highest ranking of these beings are called the “sons of God,” and are likened to the “morning stars“, stars that are bright enough to shine even as the sky lightens near sunup.
  • Ezekiel says that “When your commerce grew, you became filled with violence”, and Isaiah calls him a “conqueror of nations.”Growth of commerce” means increase in power and renown. Just like humans, spirit beings have free will and thus a propensity for pride, arrogance, and envy. I don’t know what, specifically, the prophets had in mind here, but evidently at some point in his 13-billion-year life, he became involved in battles involving either other angelic beings, or humans, or both.
  • Genesis 3 marks the last straw for God. Satan’s lies to Eve and contradiction of God rose to open rebellion, which the Most High could no longer tolerate. [Note: this is the first of three angelic rebellions in Scripture; the other two will be covered in my next post.]
  • Because of the context in which it was uttered, “You will crawl on your belly and eat dust as long as you live” does indeed sound like perhaps a quadruped is being cursed to lose its four legs and instead slither from place to place. But what are we left with if we remove the mysterious quadruped from the snake story?

In Ezekiel 28:17, we read “But I have thrown you on the ground” and in Isaiah 14:15, we have “Instead you are brought down to Sh’ol, to the uttermost depths of the pit.”

In Ezekiel, the Hebrew word translated ground is אֶרֶץ (eretz). Eretz can, in some instances, be translated country, earth, field, ground, nations, way, and a few more alternatives. In the NAS Exhaustive Concordance, the word is most commonly (1,581 times) translated as “land.” In such cases the application is almost always to holy land, usually to the Land of Israel (eretz Yisrael), but also to the Garden of Eden, Mt. Sinai, the Tabernacle and other places marked for worship of Yahweh.

Key here, though, is that eretz is often used, especially in ancient Hebrew extrabiblical writings, as a euphemism for Sh’ol, a.k.a., the underworld, the pit, or the place of the dead. This immediately brings Ezekiel 28:17 into alignment with Isaiah 14:15, where Sh’ol is mentioned explicitly.

I have no doubt whatsoever that this is the Serpent’s curse, stated pictorially in accordance with the fable genre.

Satan or satans

With Satan kicked out of heaven as early as the Garden of Eden, you may wonder how it is that he is apparently welcomed back to have cordial chit-chats with God over things like Job’s faith…

A lot of my material in this post comes from the books of the late Michael S. Heiser: The Unseen Realm, Demons, Angels, Reversing Herman, etc. Also, books and papers that he cites. Most of what he teaches strikes me as solid exegesis, and makes good, common sense. With respect to his angelology and demonology, and his Old Testament theology and ANE history, I’m pretty much fully onboard with him. But though I am a Trinitarian, his arguments in support of that doctrine seem weak to me, and I leave his train altogether when he talks about the Church now being “the true Israel.”

With respect to this particular section, I’m firmly onboard with him, but many scholars are not. This is perhaps a good place to remind you that, while I think my principal spiritual gift is theological discernment, you are free to disagree. Please remember that I don’t believe that inspired prophets still exist among men, and I have no illusions that my posts are “inspired.” Neither are Heiser’s books.

As with so many other “fringe” doctrines that we’ve grown up believing, the idea that the Serpent of the Garden, the “archenemy“, is the “satan” of Job is an assumption made long ago that can’t be proven from Scripture.

I’m way past caring about “orthodoxy”; my desire is to understand the Person and Word of God to the best of my ability. If I’m wrong, I’m wrong…

Heiser points out that the Hebrew noun, שָׂטָן (satan), occurs only a couple times in the Old Testament without a definite article. Every other occurrence is in the form הַשָּׂטָ֖ן (hasatan), meaning “the satan“, i.e., “the adversary“, or “the accuser.” This is probably not the same guy!

The grammatical rules for Hebrew match English in this respect: When prefixed by an article (“a”, “an”, or “the”), a noun is meant to be used as a common noun. “Satan” is a name for one particular being. “The satan” describes Satan and other beings, presumably of much lower rank than the Serpent.

As Heiser says, you can call him “Mike”, but it isn’t grammatically correct to address him as “the Mike.”

Considering the satan in Job:

[6] It happened one day that the sons of God came to serve ADONAI, and among them came the Adversary [the satan, Hebrew: hasatan]. [7] ADONAI asked the Adversary, “Where are you coming from?” The Adversary answered ADONAI, “From roaming through the earth, wandering here and there.” [8] ADONAI asked the Adversary, “Did you notice my servant Iyov [Job], that there’s no one like him on earth, a blameless and upright man who fears God and shuns evil?” [9] The Adversary answered ADONAI, “Is it for nothing that Iyov fears God? [10] You’ve put a protective hedge around him, his house and everything he has. You’ve prospered his work, and his livestock are spread out all over the land. [11] But if you reach out your hand and touch whatever he has, without doubt he’ll curse you to your face!” [12] ADONAI said to the Adversary, “Here! Everything he has is in your hands, except that you are not to lay a finger on his person.” Then the Adversary went out from the presence of ADONAI.
—Job 1:6–12 (CJB)

The occasion is a standard gathering of the Divine Council. The “sons of God” were created for the purpose of assisting God in the administration and governance of the vast universe. Their duties included advice and council, which was the function of this assembly. Does God need any of this help? I assume not (He’s God!), but they are His created family, and He values their fellowship and assistance. Just as we believe God values the fellowship and assistance of His earthly family—us!

Ranking below the sons of God in the Heavenly Host are a group of “satans”, whose function is to “roam through the earth, wandering here and there” (Job 1:7), keeping tabs and reporting back. Heiser compares them to a prosecutorial staff. Or, as I think of it, a “Heavenly OSHA.” In this passage, the satan is just doing his assigned task. He’s not behaving in an evil fashion at all, and there is no hint of rancor in the conversation.

If you think that is a fanciful interpretation of Job, consider the following Divine Council example from 1 Kings: This is the prophet Micaiah describing his vision of a meeting of the Council in which Yahweh has asked for advice on how best to entice the evil King Ahab into a hopeless battle:

[19] And Micaiah said, “Therefore hear the word of the LORD: I saw the LORD sitting on his throne, and all the host of heaven standing beside him on his right hand and on his left; [20] and the LORD said, ‘Who will entice Ahab, that he may go up and fall at Ramoth-gilead?’ And one said one thing, and another said another. [21] Then a spirit came forward and stood before the LORD, saying, ‘I will entice him.’ [22] And the LORD said to him, ‘By what means?’ And he said, ‘I will go out, and will be a lying spirit in the mouth of all his prophets.’ And he said, ‘You are to entice him, and you shall succeed; go out and do so.’ [23] Now therefore behold, the LORD has put a lying spirit in the mouth of all these your prophets; the LORD has declared disaster for you.”
—1 Kings 22:19–23 (ESV)

One of God’s spirit advisors has suggested a plan. Yahweh approves it, and Yahweh assures that it succeeds.

Don’t misunderstand… Satan, the Serpent, is real and malevolent, the Archfiend. This is Paul’s “roaring lion”, and the Dragon of Revelation.

Nevertheless… I’m saying that not all mentions translated “Satan” in the Old Testament are about Satan, the Serpent of the Garden. Most of them are random satans (small “s”), including the satan of Job. Jesus Himself was functioning as “a satan” (an adversary) when He cleansed the Temple.

The banishment

A few observations from verses 20–24:

  • What Adam actually named his wife, in Hebrew, was חַוָּ֑ה (Chavah). I know, it’s impossibly idealistic, but if someone goes by José, it seems to me to be insulting to call him Joe. Unfortunately, the Hebrew “ch” sound is a very difficult guttural for English speakers to pronounce.
  • I’ve seen many suggestions that the animal-skin garments that God made for Adam and Eve (sorry, Chavah!) were from animals sacrificed as a blood atonement. No. They got what God promised they would get for eating the forbidden fruit! But let’s examine the rationale for the view:

The verse most often quoted is:

[22] And almost all things are by the law purged with blood; and without shedding of blood is no remission.
—Hebrews 9:22 (KJV)

But this is a general statement about the use of blood in cleansing rituals of all kinds, and the immediate context is more about the purification of objects than of people. The Hebrews author is using an Old Testament scripture midrashically.

Midrashically refers to the method of interpreting biblical texts through midrash, which involves exploring deeper meanings, filling in narrative gaps, and providing ethical or theological insights. This approach allows for creative and expansive readings of scripture beyond the literal text. myjewishlearning.com

A midrash is by nature a secondary source that applies the primary source in ways that were not necessarily intended in that original. This is done frequently in the NT, particularly by Paul. It would be much more to the point here to quote the OT text being referenced by the Hebrews passage:

[11] For the life of a creature is in the blood, and I have given it to you on the altar to make atonement for yourselves; for it is the blood that makes atonement because of the life.
—Leviticus 17:11 (CJB)

The context here is that God, through Moses, is giving two reasons that consuming blood, or meat with the blood still in it, is prohibited to Jews under the Covenant: (1) because blood is necessary for life, it is considered to be virtually the same as that life; and (2) God has sanctified blood that is shed on the altar as a means of atonement.

But even that has to be analyzed further:

  1. Some primitive forms of animal life do not in fact, require blood for life, which doesn’t negate the point of the prohibition.
  2. Not all animal blood is efficacious for atonement, only the blood of ritually clean animals. Again, the prohibition stands.
  3. Every sacrifice, to be effective, must be done in accordance with the rules set down in the Covenant.
  4. Though sacrificial offerings were made as early as Cain and Abel, we know of no specific cultus yet available to govern them, nor of any specific rationale for doing them.

I contend that it is a misappropriation to assume from either passage that Yahweh has made a “blood sacrifice” on behalf of Adam and Eve. Animal skins are more durable and provide better insulation and padding than plant leaves. It’s enough for me to know that God was compassionate with respect to the physical and emotional needs of the freshly cursed humans.

  • “Behold, the man…” הָֽאָדָם֙ (haadam). The same interpretive principal applies here as for Satan/hasatan: where the article is absent, a proper noun is intended; where it is present, expect a common noun. Adam (ah DAHM) is a name; haadam (hah ah DAHM) is a noun meaning “man”, “mankind”, or “human.” The latter is in view in verse 22.
  • “…eat, and live for ever.” See above for the implication of the Tree of Life in the Garden.
  • “…to till the ground from whence he was taken.” This is a bit ambiguous on its own and might give you pause. “The ground” is הָ֣אֲדָמָ֔ה (haadama). “Adam” comes from a Hebrew root meaning “red.” As does the related word adamah, meaning “earth” but referring not to the planet, but rather to the ground, especially (over 200 times in the Old Testament) to tilled land, productive soil, or Israel’s productive land in particular. The “ground” here refers not to the acreage within Eden, but rather more specifically to the “dust” from which he was formed.
  • “…the east of the garden…”. Given the presumed nature of the Garden as a tabernacle, it’s no surprise that its access was on the east side. The same is true of all correctly built temples and synagogues. Prayer is directed towards Jerusalem’s Temple Mount, wherever you might be, but access to the “holy space” is always from the east, where the sun rises.
  • “Cherubims” I’ve been quoting KJV in this list, and this word is grammatically incorrect, at least in this century. The Hebrew is הַכְּרֻבִ֗ים (hakerubim). “The cherubim” is plural without a trailing “s.” The singular of “cherubim” is “cherub“, which is an Anglicized transliteration of the Hebrew “kerub.” Cherubim, along with Seraphim, are heavenly “throne guardians.” Satan is a cherub. You probably picture just one cherub guarding the gate with a big sword in his fist, but there is a team of cherubim on hand here.
  • “…a flaming sword…” I don’t know if this is a literal sword or some other device, and whether it is handheld, mechanized, or animated. Evidently there is only one, so if handheld, only one of the cherubim would be armed with one.
  • What finally happened to Eden? My guess is that it was probably guarded until either it was finally destroyed, or until the Tree of Life was moved somewhere else. If it (the Garden) didn’t survive the centuries, it may have been swept away by the receding waters of the Great Flood.

Adam’s children

Genesis 4

Cain and Abel

Why was Cain’s veggie offering unacceptable? Maybe it included cauliflower or beets… That would do it for me!

Many will tell you that Cain’s offering was refused because it was not a blood sacrifice. Maybe, but I seriously doubt that interpretation. The Mosaic Covenant was still well over a thousand years in the future, so there was no standardized command for offerings that we know about. Abraham was over a thousand years in the future, too, so it wasn’t a Jewish thing.

(He did finally make a blood sacrifice, by the way… his brother!… that was refused, too.)

It has been suggested that God gave Adam a sneak preview of what offerings He was going to require in the future. Maybe.

In any case, they both made offerings from their own “sweat of the brow”, which would seem to be a good thing. With no information to the contrary, I would have to think that it had something to do with their respective motivations, or maybe he stole the veggies from Eve.

Other passages shed additional light:

[4] By faith Abel offered to God a more acceptable sacrifice than Cain, through which he was commended as righteous, God commending him by accepting his gifts. And through his faith, though he died, he still speaks.
—Hebrews 11:4 (ESV)

[24] and to Jesus, the mediator of a new covenant, and to the sprinkled blood that speaks a better word than the blood of Abel.
—Hebrews 12:24 (ESV)

[12] We should not be like Cain, who was of the evil one and murdered his brother. And why did he murder him? Because his own deeds were evil and his brother’s righteous.
—1 John 3:12 (ESV)

Aha! That last one is the answer. Cain’s rejection was not because of the form of his offering at all. Any offering he brought would have been rejected because God knew his heart!

Moving on, what was “the mark of Cain?” Don’t know, can’t know, so don’t care.

Where is the Land of Nod, to which Cain fled? The Bible says, “east of Eden,” which makes me think maybe Elam, or farther east than that. “Nod” is from the Hebrew נוּד (nuwd, pronounced “nude”), meaning to move to and fro, wander, flutter, or show grief.

Cain’s descendants

Genesis 4:17–24

As I explained above, I regard Genesis 2:4 as, in essence, a toledah (singular), or genealogical “spacer” to separate the various historical threads that Moses wrote about in the book.

Technically, the toledoth (plural) are genealogies, the “begats” of KJV. The beginning of Gen 2:4 is translated by KJV and ESV as “These are the generations of the heavens and the earth…”, where “generations” is in fact the Hebrew תוֹלְד֧וֹת (toledoth). Other popular translations render it as, for example, “Here is the history…” (CJB) or “This is the account…” (NAS), which are paraphrases and not necessarily incorrect. But presence of the Hebrew term makes it officially a toledah and that strengthens my opinion that the forming of Adam and Eve is a different event than the creation of mankind in general.

Gen 4:17–22 is a genealogy of Cain, and it separates Cain’s part of the history from Seth’s, so technically the passage is a toledah, but because that term doesn’t appear in the text, it isn’t generally included in lists of the toledoth. The reason may be that if you remove verses 23 and 24, the entire passage, Gen 4:17–5:32 is a single long toledah. Alternatively, 4:17–22, are also about Cain’s extended family, so it could perhaps be included as part of the toledah.

©biblestudy.org

My first reaction to verses 23 and 24 was to think, “well, they don’t conform to the way small bits of biographical information are inserted into some genealogies (see Genesis 10, which is itself one long toledah), but that must be what they are”, but looking at it today, it dawns on me that they seem out of place here, but they would fit perfectly in Chapter 6, which I will cover in a sequel to this post, under the heading “Corruption.” If this snippet wasn’t misplaced by scribal error, then it is simply an issue of author’s choice. Not a big deal.

I have just one more observation about Cain, until the next post.

Everyone wants to know… Where did Cain find a wife? Young Earth Creationists would say he took a sister with him to Nod. Possible, but creepy, so I’d rather it not be so. In any case, to me it is more likely that she was a member of one of the pre-Adamic races descended from the humans created in Genesis 1:26.

Seth

Genesis 4:25–26

[25] And Adam knew his wife again, and she bore a son and called his name Seth, for she said, “God has appointed for me another offspring instead of Abel, for Cain killed him.”
—Genesis 4:25–26 (ESV)

Seth’s name in Hebrew is שֵׁ֑ת (Sheth, pronounced “shayth”). It is a play on the similar word שִׁית (shiyth, pronounced “sheeth”), a verb meaning, “to place.” Both of these words appear in verse 25. The latter is translated as “appointed” in the KJV and ESV, and that is close enough. Interestingly, it is the same word as used in Genesis 3:15, “I will place (shiyth) enmity between [Eve’s and the Serpent’s seeds].”

Verse 26 mentions Seth’s son, Enosh, a name which I’ll point out in the next post is a mildly derogatory word denoting a man but connoting one who is not quite top-drawer. Perhaps he is mortal or not a gibbor, or hero.

Not much is reported about Enosh, but the verse states that during his lifetime, “…people began to call on the name of Yahweh.” All that this means to me is that it wasn’t until the time of Adam’s grandchildren that humans from the family of the Garden began to appreciate the power of God and to seek His favor.

Many scholars, though, quote this verse in order to advance the theory that the “sons of God” in Genesis 6 are humans from the “godly lineage of Seth,” which I consider to be a ridiculous interpretation. I will address that issue in that next post.

Coming next

Usually, I don’t pick my next topic until I’ve had a week or two to recover from the last. This time, I’m well into the next one already, because it is third in a sequential trio.

In the third, I am focusing on the last chapters of what I’ve called my survey of Moses’ prehistoric account of the days before Abraham.

I’ll start with a section titled “Corruption“, which covers the period from Cain and Seth until Noah. The core of that material is from the first five verses of Genesis 6. Everyone is familiar with the words of that passage, but because it is so bizarre, it is rarely taught, and from the days of Augustine of Hippo (who was the first patristic father to butcher it), understanding has been almost non-existent.

Yet, despite the intervening flood, its effects reverberate through both the Old and New Testament, to the last verses of Revelation.

I’ll gloss through the Flood story, because I have already covered that thoroughly in several posts.

Then I’ll spend some time with Babel and the scattering. You will probably be surprised at my commentary on Nimrod.

The time span of this triptych of articles covers all three major angelic rebellions, and the three combined (not just the Temptation) account for the horrible state of the current world and the need for Jesus’ hopefully imminent return.


Moshe’s Week of Dreams

Posted on:

Modified on:

  1. Previous statements of my views
  2. How did Moses know?
    1. Evening and morning
    2. A hypothesis
    3. A speculative scenario
      1. Day 1
      2. Day 2
      3. Day 3
      4. Day 4
      5. Day 5
      6. Day 6
  3. Appendices
    1. Adaptation vs evolution
    2. Birth as analogy

My last published article was Prophetic Visions: Through a Glass Darkly, released on August 25, 2025. Because of the length of that post, I left out a few things that I still want to discuss in more detail, so I have saved outtakes that I will elaborate on in much shorter articles as time permits.

This, the first, is a discussion of Genesis 1 as a prophetic (preterist) snapshot of creation.

Previous statements of my views

As you know if you have followed my series on Creation, I am an Old Earth Creationist and believe that God planned the design of the universe the way He wanted it to exist and develop over all future times.

Obviously, Old Earth Creationists don’t interpret Genesis 1 in a conventional, hyper-literal sense. I see it as prophetic poetry. Conservative Evangelical scholars generally use a hermeneutic (principles for interpreting Scripture) that gives latitude for interpreting some poetry and some prophecy as symbolic. By that I mean symbolic of something that is true and important!

My 2024 post, Genesis 1:1–5, Day 1 is a lengthy article in which:

  1. I discussed the concept of hermeneutics and the hermeneutical principles which I and many other interpreters use to understand Biblical text.
  2. I presented my views on the values and limitations of the scientific process.
  3. I introduced Moses as a prophet and speculated on how he might have received his knowledge of prehistory. This is the subject of the current post.
  4. I then began the interpretation process with a discussion of the first two verses of Genesis 1, and whether they are a summary of the rest of the chapter, or alternatively the first event before the creation of light. Young Earth Creationist are split on this issue.
  5. Next, I explained what “light” is and is not, and why, given the way God created it and it in fact exists, it is paradoxical to think that it was created either before the creation of matter (the summary view of verse 1) or after the creation of matter (the first event view of verse 1). By theological definition, God’s omnipotence excludes the possibility of paradoxical absurdities.
  6. Finally, under the heading, A better idea, I presented my current views on how Genesis 1 should be interpreted. This is a fairly short section, so I suggest reading it now.

I don’t believe I stated it quite this way, but the viewpoint expressed in that post treats Genesis 1, not as a description of how God made the universe, but rather as an organizational description of what He made.

What I did state, however, is that its primary purpose was as a polemic against the pagan cultures of the day. God saying, “Everything you see was created by me, including the gods (elohim, the spirits that rule the world) that you worship.”

I stated it this way earlier in The Implication of Genre in Job, Ezekiel and Genesis:

Every ancient civilization had a pantheon of pagan “gods”, and with each of those came a “creation myth.” In Genesis 1:1, the one true God said, “I did it—not them! Period!”

Theologically, that is really all we need to know about creation. God had no obligation to tell us exactly how he did it, or in what order, and if He had done so, nobody in the ancient world could have possibly understood it. …

To me, the “Plain sense” of Genesis 1:1 makes perfect “common sense” in a book about God: He created the entire universe, which is everything that exists other than Himself, and He had the sovereign right and ability to do it however He chose to.

The plain sense of Genesis 1:3–31 does not make common sense to me, if indeed it describes creation at all. To me, it is strongly reminiscent of visions recorded by a number of prophets, including John. The age of man on earth starts with a vision and ends with a vision!

How did Moses know?

The better idea that I’ve now adopted, I owe primarily to the conservative scholar John H. Walton from Moody Bible Institute and later with Wheaton College, who I greatly admire, but who of course is anathema to Young Earth Creationists.

Attribution of Moses’ knowledge to preterist prophecy is my own slant on the subject. Having now completed a more in-depth study of prophetic dreams and visions, I am ready to go a little deeper here with a theoretical proposal of the form in which Moses may have received his Genesis 1 insights.

Evening and morning

Consider Moses’ demarcation of creation days: “And there was evening and there was morning, the [nth] day.” Exactly what that means has been disputed for centuries.

The phrasing is important within Judaism because it sets the pattern, followed through most of the Bible and apparently most of Jewish history, of the Jewish calendar day beginning and ending in the evenings. As such, it seems to imply that literal calendar days are in view.

But verse 5a raises another issue: “God called the light Day, and the darkness he called Night.” That means that “day” doesn’t by default mean a calendar day!

In fact, Biblically, the term “day”, by itself means specifically the 12-hour period between sunrise and sunset. You say, “But there aren’t ever exactly 12 hours between sunrise and sunset!” For halachic Judaism (think, “for ceremonial purposes”), one would divide the number of standard minutes between sunrise and sunset by 12. As I am writing today, near the Autumnal Equinox, a “proportional hour” (sha’ah zemanit) is 58.78 minutes long. Near the solstices, the discrepancy is much bigger. And of course, that number is dependent on my latitude and my altitude.

By contrast, “night”, the period between sunset and sunrise, is divided into 4 “watches”, not hours.

In practice, the term “day” can mean a number of different things to a Jew: the daylight hours; a calendar day; a recurring day, as the “Day of Atonement”; an extended period in the past, as “in Jesus’ day”; a prophetic period to come, as “the Day of the Lord.”

Many of those usages are obvious from the context, but sometimes, not so much. I can’t document this, but I assume that a need to distinguish calendar days from the others probably led to the development of an idiom that is well known to Jews but denied by some Christians: The term “days and nights” refers to calendar days, in whole or in part. For example, when Jesus’ said, “As Jonah was in the belly of the fish 3 days and 3 nights…”, none of His hearers would have taken this as meaning 72 full hours. It simply meant, “a period spanning parts of three calendar days.

Young Earth Creationists will generally take one of two approaches to understanding the implication of “evening and morning.” Either it is the calendar day idiom, or it is simply stating that God finished His creation act of the day by evening and didn’t start work again until the next morning.

But it isn’t as easy as it sounds. Yes, Genesis 1 records the creation of light on Day 1, and immediately then He “called the light Day, and the darkness he called Night.” But it wasn’t until Day 4 that He created the sun, moon and stars, which, first of all, were to “divide the day from the night.” Which implies that there were no evenings or mornings before Day 4.

As an Old Earth Creationist, the only part of Genesis 1 that I insist is literal is the first one or two verses. But if the rest is symbolic, that does not mean that it is useless, or a lie! Almost all conservative Bible scholars would agree that Biblical symbolism is absolutely allowed, and though the symbolism may be obscure for a time, it will eventually become clear. In God’s own time!

A hypothesis

Now please don’t take the following hypothesis as gospel truth. It makes sense to me, but it is only a suggestion, prompted by my recent concentration on how to interpret prophetic dreams and visions. The “evenings and mornings” formula of Genesis 1 may serve some entirely different symbolic purpose, but what if it sheds some light on how Moses received this information from God?

I firmly believe that Genesis 1 is preterist prophecy, reporting either something that God showed him in one or more dreams or visions, or words that God verbally told him to write. My experience with the Bible leads me to favor the former, rather than the latter.

I’m wondering if perhaps “evenings and mornings” might be a hint that God sent dreams to Moses at night?

Consider then the following scenario, which is perhaps 98% speculative.

A speculative scenario

I’m going to suggest here a pattern to the way God chooses to inform Moses. It should be no surprise; God doesn’t do anything randomly! Here is the pattern I see, arranged only roughly chronologically:

  1. On day 1, God showed Moses very tersely how He built the universe, from nothing down to the foundations of Earth, the home He designed for man, His climactic achievement.
  2. On day 2, God began showing Moses (and us!) His provision of the first environmental factor necessary for our survival, a breathable atmosphere. This is first in mention, not necessarily the first to develop.
  3. On day 3, we see Earth divided into two domains, land and sea. Into both, He then introduced plant life, which was to become the base of the food chain, the ultimate source of nutrition, and the carbon/oxygen cycle, necessary for respiration.
  4. On day 4, He brings our attention back to the “second heaven”, the cosmos beyond the atmosphere. We need to see the source of energy and to have a better idea of the flow of time before the sentient creatures are introduced.
  5. On day 5, we see that introduction of sentience on Earth. Starting with sea creatures and birds.
  6. On day 6, we get to the climax, sentient life on earth, starting with the animals, and then with primitive man.
Day 1

One night while encamped in the Wilderness, during the 40 years of wandering prior to his people crossing the Jordan into the Promised Land, while either dozing by the campfire or asleep in his tent, God sends Moses a dream of what came before. In the dream…

The prophet is floating in empty space, with nothing in sight—just an unlimited, silent, dark, cold void in all directions. There is no sound to be heard in the vacuum other than a sudden command from God. Unseen by Moses, as if a tiny hole had opened in a gigantic dike, vast quantities of invisible energy began pouring into the region in front of him and expanding to immense size.

Very quickly then, with still with no sound whatsoever, but following rules of physics laid down by the Almighty, there is a bright glow as hot, subatomic particles begin condensing out of the energy and radiating light into the surroundings.

“Let there be light!”, ©Vecteezy

Though Moses can’t see much, beyond a blur of motion, and understands very little of what he sees, the gigantic ball of energy rapidly cools, and as it does, more particles are formed. With further cooling, those particles begin to combine to form hydrogen and helium ions, which then pick up electrons and take on the properties of atoms and diatomic molecules.

Still later, electromagnetic and gravitational forces begin collecting the hydrogen and helium into clouds that become denser and denser, until the pressure becomes great enough in many clumps to ignite nuclear fusion—stars are born. The products of fusion are heavier elements, and those also undergo fusion to form still heavier elements. The heaviest that can form this way is iron, but once the larger stars have burned up most of their fuel, they collapse and supernova. The enormous power generated by these colossal implosions forms still heavier elements, and both the heavier and the lighter elements alike are scattered throughout space, forming clouds of dust, and congealing into planets.

After billions of years and still following the instructions build into the universe by God’s design and at His command, the universe is populated by billions of billions of stars, organized into galaxies and clusters of galaxies, with planets and other solid objects orbiting most of the stars.

Because God trusts His design and loves the idea of allowing spontaneity in His universe, He has included quantum mechanical randomness in the blueprints. Randomness means that occasional adjustments have had to be made in order to prepare for the beloved human family He plans to install on one planet. For this He created a race of angelic beings to subdue the Cosmos, as He will task His humans to do on earth.

All of this has been shown to Moses like a movie run at incredible speed, so that before he wakes up in the morning, all but the last few billion years has been viewed. More than ten billion years have been compressed into a single night, so all Moses has is memory of the flood of light followed by a vague impression of expansion and differentiation. God now directs Moses’ to look down. He does so, and right below him is a cold, dark sea with little if anything breaking the surface. He’s too close now to see the curvature of the surface, but he does sense God’s Spirit hovering over the water.

Moses awakes…

This scenario views Genesis 1 from a “first event” perspective (see the 6-point summary of Genesis 1:1–5, Day 1, above. I envision Moses waking up from his dream and musing on the last thing he saw,

1 In the beginning God created the heavens and the earth. 2 The earth was unformed and void, darkness was on the face of the deep, and the Spirit of God hovered over the surface of the water.
—Genesis 1:1-2 (CJB)

Then recalling the bright light that he saw at the beginning of the dream, before the replay of billions of years of cosmic history, he wrote

3 Then God said, “Let there be light”; and there was light. 4 God saw that the light was good, and God divided the light from the darkness. 5 God called the light Day, and the darkness he called Night. So there was evening, and there was morning, one day.
—Genesis 1:3-5 (CJB)

Some research suggests that some 3.2 billion years ago the temperatures in the earth’s mantle transition zone must have precluded retention of the vast quantities of water stored there now. Much like the days of Noah’s flood, this water can only have resided at the surface, resulting in the planet existing as a “water world,” completely inundated.

Day 2

On another night, Moses falls asleep again to find himself in the same place, looking down at the sea and God’s Spirit.

Ancient philosophers and wise men all over the earth looked around them in those early days, and what they all agreed on was that the world they observed is an island submerged in a vast sea and protected from the water above by a gigantic dome, the “firmament” of KJV. The stars moved from east to west through grooves below the dome. The sun and moon, below the stars, were either carried along beneath the stars by gods or were themselves gods.

As for the sea, it was the ultimate source of all water on earth. The “water above” was connected outside the periphery of the dome to the “water below” (the rav tehom, or “great deep“) and spring water also flowed from the sea through underground passageways. Rain fell when gods or angels opened windows, or floodgates, in the dome. The underground passages, “fountains of the deep“, were, like the sea itself, inhabited by demons, and the source of much fear, especially by sailors and fishermen who owed their livelihood to it.

What the ancient world believed.

All of these things were assumed to have been created by one or more of the gods, who themselves were created by a superior god or were magically born from the primordial chaos.

Of course, this ancient model of the cosmos was completely wrong, but it was sufficient for the day, and more detail would only have confused them even more than they were. Even today, thousands of years later, the more we discover about the cosmos, the more we know that we are still missing key details.

So why would our God care if the ancients knew all truth about such a complex structure? It was way too early to ask humanity to grasp the incredible complexity of the universe.

The important thing was that they be taught that He is the true creator and He preexisted all else that exists.

So, God has summoned Moses back to his vantage point above the sea. He tells him to look up this time. When he does, he sees nothing but dark clouds. As he watches, God sends the wind to blow away the lower clouds. Layer after layer, the clouds part until nothing is left but what appears to be the dome, perhaps obscured by high, dark altostratus clouds that allow only a general glow to penetrate.

6 God said, “Let there be a dome in the middle of the water; let it divide the water from the water.” 7 God made the dome and divided the water under the dome from the water above the dome; that is how it was, 8 and God called the dome Sky. So there was evening, and there was morning, a second day.
—Genesis 1:6-8 (CJB)

Day 3

For a third time, Moses falls asleep and is carried in his dream to a vantage point above the primordial sea. Again, God speaks, and another long expanse of years rolls by in the course of the night, as on Day 1.

Moses observes during this dream another compressed passage of a great deal of time. The sea level falls as excess ocean water returns to the earth’s mantle. Land masses emerge and constantly deform and move under the influence of numerous processes, including plate tectonics, vulcanism, tidal forces, weathering, erosion, deposition, and many more, all decreed by God to assure a healthy and dynamic planet.

9 God said, “Let the water under the sky be gathered together into one place, and let dry land appear,” and that is how it was. 10 God called the dry land Earth, the gathering together of the water he called Seas, and God saw that it was good.
—Genesis 1:9-10 (CJB)

Now that God has shown Moses the magnitude of His glory in creation of the greater cosmos and earth, as understood by the ancients, He is ready to begin demonstrating that it was also at His hand that earth was filled with life.

God speaks once again and Moses sees many species of plant life that have begun to develop, spread, and differentiate to fill vast areas of the land and sea, adapting to environmental changes over many generations. From time to time, God or His angels intervene to bridge wider gaps and fill niches that adaptation alone can’t cross. I discuss “adaptation” vs. “evolution” in an appendix below.

11 God said, “Let the earth put forth grass, seed-producing plants, and fruit trees, each yielding its own kind of seed-bearing fruit, on the earth”; and that is how it was. 12 The earth brought forth grass, plants each yielding its own kind of seed, and trees each producing its own kind of seed-bearing fruit; and God saw that it was good. 13 So there was evening, and there was morning, a third day.
—Genesis 1:11-13 (CJB)

Day 4

I don’t believe that God is showing Moses anything new on this night. The sun, moon and stars were in their place in the sky at the close of the first night’s dream, though Moses probably was unaware of them until now. The way I presented this scenario above, billions of years of history scrolled by Moses in one night, which he couldn’t possibly have taken in. Perhaps he was only shown the beginning and end of the process—from the flash of light to the surface of water-world Earth. And perhaps during dreams 2 and 3 the sky has been obscured by clouds. In any case, now God wants to draw his attention to the cosmos above, so we have a clear sky.

Just what did Noah see? Just exactly what he expected to see, and what he had seen every day of his long life, which from his limited perspective was stars rolling by in grooves at the bottom surface of the sky dome, and the sun and moon being carried from east to west by, as he now would have seen it, God’s angels. Once again, the emphasis is on, “I, Yahweh, did it all, Moses!”

14 God said, “Let there be lights in the dome of the sky to divide the day from the night; let them be for signs, seasons, days and years; 15 and let them be for lights in the dome of the sky to give light to the earth”; and that is how it was. 16 God made the two great lights — the larger light to rule the day and the smaller light to rule the night — and the stars. 17 God put them in the dome of the sky to give light to the earth, 18 to rule over the day and over the night, and to divide the light from the darkness; and God saw that it was good. 19 So there was evening, and there was morning, a fourth day.
—Genesis 1:14-19 (CJB)

Day 5

This is where God begins showing Noah the climactic introduction of sentient life (conscious creatures, with sensations and perceptions). Beginning with denizens of the seas and the air.

As with the plants, God has created numerous species, to fill many habitats. They are designed for adaptation to changing conditions, but, like the plants, they need an occasional nudge. Once again, I discuss “adaptation” vs. “evolution” below.

20 God said, “Let the water swarm with swarms of living creatures, and let birds fly above the earth in the open dome of the sky.” 21 God created the great sea creatures and every living thing that creeps, so that the water swarmed with all kinds of them, and there was every kind of winged bird; and God saw that it was good. 22 Then God blessed them, saying, “Be fruitful, multiply and fill the water of the seas, and let birds multiply on the earth.” 23 So there was evening, and there was morning, a fifth day.
—Genesis 1:20-23 (CJB)

Day 6

On day six, God is approaching the climax of the dream series with Moses. Sentient animal species other than sea creatures and birds. Animals first, and then pre-Adamic mankind. Evidence for mankind goes back for some three million years. Evidence for Homo sapiens for 300,000 years. See “adaptation” vs. “evolution” below.

In my opinion, Adam and Eve were not part of general creation as revealed in Genesis 1!

As discussed in Exploring the Garden of Eden, I believe that both scripture and theological logic raise a pretty good case that they were created separately, about 6,000 years ago.

24 God said, “Let the earth bring forth each kind of living creature — each kind of livestock, crawling animal and wild beast”; and that is how it was. 25 God made each kind of wild beast, each kind of livestock and every kind of animal that crawls along the ground; and God saw that it was good.

26 Then God said, “Let us make humankind in our image, in the likeness of ourselves; and let them rule over the fish in the sea, the birds in the air, the animals, and over all the earth, and over every crawling creature that crawls on the earth.”
27 So God created humankind in his own image;
in the image of God he created him:
male and female he created them.
28 God blessed them: God said to them, “Be fruitful, multiply, fill the earth and subdue it. Rule over the fish in the sea, the birds in the air and every living creature that crawls on the earth.” 29 Then God said, “Here! Throughout the whole earth I am giving you as food every seed-bearing plant and every tree with seed-bearing fruit. 30 And to every wild animal, bird in the air and creature crawling on the earth, in which there is a living soul, I am giving as food every kind of green plant.” And that is how it was. 31 God saw everything that he had made, and indeed it was very good. So there was evening, and there was morning, a sixth day.
—Genesis 1:24-31 (CJB)

Appendices

Adaptation vs evolution

For my whole life until lately, I’ve avoided taking a stance on evolution, because biology and genetics aren’t my scientific strong suits. I’ve always been extremely skeptical of biological evolution, but I figured if that’s the way God chose to design life, He is entirely free to have done it. With a little help, I’ve finally decided on the stance I will take going forward.

First, let me point out that, despite usage of the term in both religious and secular circles, “evolution” in this context applies only to the development of living things. In its generic sense, the word simply means change over time, so yes, everything evolves. But “biological evolution” is a specific set of processes that change the ontological properties of living things. The non-living universe does not experience “survival of the fittest”, and it does not rely on mutation and genetic transmission. It simply follows the physical laws that God built into it, including quantum uncertainty, and takes an orderly path of cause and effect. I don’t call this evolution!

As for biological evolution, there are still two things that prevent me from considering myself an evolutionist:

The first is that, though many proposals have been made and many experiments have been conducted, nobody has ever come up with a workable explanation for how non-life becomes life! The latest theory is that life originates at deep-ocean geothermal vents, white or black “smokers.” But there has never been a test conducted or an equation written that can explain a mechanism for going from non-living to living even here. The closest thing is that there is generally a huge abundance of life around these vents. But does a huge crowd at a Kansas City Chiefs Superbowl rally prove that life originated inside Union Station? Probably not.

A competing theory that has been around for ages and has been getting a lot of attention lately is called Panspermia. Life was “seeded” on earth by aliens (other than God) or an impact event—a comet or an asteroid. This idea just shoves the problem off of this planet onto another.

The second problem with biological evolution, “irreducible complexity“, was introduced to the Christian community by Lehigh biochemist Michael Behe in his well-articulated book, Darwin’s Black Box (1966) and two subsequent books, The Edge of Evolution (2007) and Darwin Devolves (2019).

Behe is best known popularly for his support of Intelligent Design, but he is not a Young Earth Creationist. Like me, he believes that God created the universe billions of years ago. He believes that God created life, that He gave it the ability to adapt, and that the new science of genomics proves “line of descent.”

That latter means that the Darwinian Tree of Life is more or less accurate—but irreducible complexity means that God’s intervention is necessary for adaptation to cross certain boundaries.

Creationists in general agree that adaption occurs within species. Behe only disagrees to the extent of saying that it occurs within biological Orders, or perhaps Families.

I find that I can agree with Behe’s approach. It makes logical sense to me and leaves God in control!

I just go one step farther and claim that Adam and Eve were a separate creation, approximately 6,000 years ago. Nowhere does Scripture state that Genesis 2 is a restatement of Day 6. That assumption is Judeo-Christian tradition, and in fact there are discrepancies in the two accounts if they are taken literally.

Birth as analogy

Many of you will still say that creation 13.8 billion years ago at the Big Bang is not as elegant as creation 6,000 years ago as recorded in a literal translation of Genesis 1.

I don’t see it that way at all! Perhaps it is because from an early age I have been fascinated by both the Creator and His creation. Creation is His art, His medium and His signature accomplishment.

Consider the following well-known verse:

For you formed my inward parts;
you knitted me together in my mother’s womb
—Psalm 139:13 (ESV)

If you read this in the exact same way as you read Genesis 1, you can interpret it as saying that God Himself personally assembled all of your component parts in your mother’s womb during those nine months, or even (why not) on the day you were born.

You say, “It couldn’t be on the one day, because she saw me on an ultrasound, and she felt me kick, and besides, we all know how gestation works.”

But wait, did you really see any of that, or are you believing doctors, researchers, and medical equipment. Maybe that kick was actually a gas bubble! You believe them just as I believe my telescope and my astrophysics training in college. My bachelor’s studies were in math and physics, preparing (alas, it didn’t happen) for astrophysics as my graduate field.

Let me now approach this from a different direction. My wife gave birth to both of our children. Not all smooth sailing, but at least she can smell popcorn now without getting sick. Would she trade those 18 difficult and uncomfortable months of pregnancy for an easy adoption? No. Adoption is a good thing, but gestation and birth are transcendent.


Romans 5:12 and Death Before the Fall


Posted on:

Modified on:

  1. Introduction
  2. Background and grammar
    1. Life
    2. death
    3. Death in antiquity
    4. Death in Hebrew
    5. Death in Greek
  3. Romans 5:12, “death by sin”
    1. The Romans context
      1. Background
      2. Outline
      3. A focus on the theology
        1. Literal death in Romans 1–4
        2. Death and life in Romans 5:1–11
        3. Death and life in Romans 5:13–21
        4. A different metaphor in Romans 6–7
        5. Romans 8
    2. Interpreting Romans 5:10–14
  4. Death in Eden
    1. The sin in Eden
    2. The curses of Eden
      1. The Serpent
      2. The Woman
      3. Adam
  5. Good and Very Good
  6. Philosophical bias
    1. Nature vs Eternity
    2. Fecundity
    3. Natural Life

As an Old Earth Creationist (OEC), Young Earth Creationists (YEC) have frequently asked me about, or scolded me over, the question, “Doesn’t your theology presuppose the unbiblical idea of death before the Fall?”

My response is that, yes indeed, an old earth (4.5 billion years old) and an older universe (13.8 billion years old) does in fact imply that there was life and death on earth long before the creation of Adam, and his subsequent fall.

I will try here to refute the claim that death before the fall is “unbiblical” and to support my opinion that death was an intended part of God’s design that did not begin with Adam’s sin.

Unknown artist’s conception of Hades as described by the parable of The Rich Man and Lazarus. I presume that’s the Rich Man walking alone on the left bank of the chasm, while Lazarus is off lounging somewhere in Abraham’s Bosom, on the right bank. Remember that this is a parable, so you aren’t expected to take the vision of Hades’ layout or structure too literally.

Introduction

If you subscribe to a YEC interpretation of Scripture (and most of my friends do), then you should believe that all life, human, animal, vegetable, fungi, single-celled and microbial, was created some 6,000 years ago, over a span of only days. Is it conceivable, in that case, that the Fall took place soon enough after creation that no living thing got eaten, stepped on, or fell off a cliff? Was life physically indestructible, as well as immune from natural death? Life is far more complicated than that, but to Henry Morris and his disciples, the question is moot, because to them the Bible prohibits even the possibility of any kind of death before the Fall.

In this post, after first presenting some background and grammar, I’m going to comment on a few of the key YEC arguments for and against pre-fall immortality.

Background and grammar

Life

Not all YEC scholars think that a denial of physical death before the fall applied to plants and microbes, or anything else with no brain. I’m not aware of any scripture that grants this exemption, unless it is implicit from,

29 And God said, “Behold, I have given you every plant yielding seed that is on the face of all the earth, and every tree with seed in its fruit. You shall have them for food. 30 And to every beast of the earth and to every bird of the heavens and to everything that creeps on the earth, everything that has the breath of life, I have given every green plant for food.” And it was so.
— Genesis 1:29-30 (ESV)

Some say that only vertibrate animals were exempt from death. Where is that written?

Some say that anything without blood was never “alive”, in a Biblical sense, because “the life of the flesh is in the blood…” But that isn’t meant to define what “life” is or is not, it’s merely the stated reason that God views the consumption of blood as abominable. There is unfortunately a huge tendency for hyper-literalists (those who won’t let the Bible use figurative language or poetic exaggeration to prove a point) to read theology into every word of every verse, without regard to context.

Far from looking for exemptions, Morris even taught that entropy could not have increased before the fall. Morris was not a scientist and never had a full grasp of what entropy even means until later in his life.

Entropy is a fundamental thermodynamic property of the physical universe. Formally, it is a statistical measure of the number of mathematical “degrees of freedom” in any physical system. The Second Law of Thermodynamics states that the entropy of the universe always increases.

Entropy is often described to novices as “a measure of randomness”, but that is misleading. A common claim is that “shuffling a pack of cards increases its entropy because of the increased randomness of the shuffled deck but sorting it back into its original order decreases its entropy since its randomness is lower.” That isn’t at all true! The increase of entropy is due to the energy expended in shuffling. Reordering requires another expenditure of energy, say from a person or a machine, thus further increasing entropy. The entropy of 52 cards at rest is the same whether they are in an ordered or a shuffled state.

If Morris was right about entropy, cells could not divide, food could not digest, muscles could not contract, balls could not roll downhill and, oh yes, the sun could not shine, and gravity could not work. If so, then after the Fall, God must have completely redesigned the laws of physics, plus the nature of every last object in the universe, from subatomic particles on up to spacetime itself.

But the text of Scripture doesn’t, to my knowledge, hand out exemptions, so who gets to say that any human or nonhuman life was exempt from death? To my way of thinking, it is arbitrary and presumptuous for us mortals to “exempt” anything that is cellular and reproduces in a biological sense or to include anything else. Life is life!

death

For this discussion, we have to be more precise when we talk about “death.” That concept, as used in the Bible, can mean different things in different contexts:

  • Everybody on earth recognizes that anything post-Fall that has physical, tangible, cellular life will ultimately suffer a “physical death,” that is, a termination of all self-powered physical processes. After that, external processes take over to break down the physical components of that once-living carcass and “return it to the dust.”
  • Most contemporary Christian scholars also recognize that the Bible frequently talks about an analogous “spiritual death,” which Thayer describes as “the misery of soul arising from sin, which begins on earth but lasts and increases after the death of the body”; “the miserable state of the wicked dead in hell”; and “all the miseries arising from sin.”
  • Paul also defined death as voluntarily putting away, or killing, the evil inclinations of all humankind. See my recent Yetzer, Yotzer and “The Law” in Romans 7:1–6 for a detailed discussion of this usage.

While “death as separation” is not a highly developed Biblical concept, per se, it is functionally an apt description: separation of the body and spirit; separation of the eternal spirit from God; and separation of man from his own nature, respectively.

Death in antiquity

Human beings have an innate curiosity about their origins, both individually and culturally, and I think that this curiosity is at its strongest when communities are more isolated and less technologically distracted. In prehistoric times—that is, before the development of writing—history was very efficiently retained and spread verbally, both within families and cross-culturally by traveling storytellers. It should come as no surprise that all the ancient civilizations, with their common origins in Babel, would share common “legends” about their pasts and common beliefs about the unseen.

From Greece to Egypt and all across the Fertile Crescent, way over to India and China, and across the pond in the Americas, every culture that left records in early history shared one cosmology and one belief in the afterlife, differing only in small regional details.

I’ve shared several versions of the universal flat earth model of cosmology in earlier posts. Here I’ll add the Greek view, which is very similar to the others.

Ancient Greek cosmological diagram.

In all cases, the earth is depicted as a flat disk floating on a broad ocean and covered by a dome (the “firmament” in KJV). Beneath the surface of the disk is the underworld, Hades, the abode of the (physically) dead.

As I’ll show in the following two sections, both Hebrew and Greek have terms that refer to death and the remains of the physically dead, but neither language has any term that differentiates between physical and spiritual death. Though “death” can refer to either, only the context can indicate which is being discussed. Unfortunately, very often the context alone is insufficient for total clarity.

Why would that even be?!

I would suggest that, aside from corruptions in the retelling, all early civilizations shared the assumption that physical life was only one phase of personal existence.

Human life on earth is short. Adam’s descendants in the period between the Garden and the Flood lived long lives, as recorded in the Bible, but most cultures in the ancient world had life expectancies of no more than a few decades. Physical death was no shock. It was pretty much universally believed that when a human died, his spirit survived and was relegated to the underworld. The Bible calls that underworld Sh’ol, or Sheol, in Hebrew, Hades in Greek.

Physical death, in other words, was little more than the shedding of a mortal shell not needed by the immortal spirit as it moved into its new abode in the underworld.

There was no concept of death or annihilation of the spirit in the underworld until much later. In fact, there apparently was no real concept of suffering spirits, either. Even in the Old Testament, where the Psalmist said, “The wicked go down to the realm of the dead, all the nations that forget God” (9:17) and “Let me not be put to shame, Lord, for I have cried out to you; but let the wicked be put to shame and be silent in the realm of the dead” (31:17), the sense is, “I’m righteous, so let me live, because when I die, I’ll be relegated to the drab and boring underworld.”

The picture of Sheol/Hades presented in the parable of the Rich Man and Lazarus appears nowhere in the Old Testament. That is a view apparently developed in Second Temple Judaism and propagated in Jewish pseudepigraphal works like The Apocalypse of Zephania and 1 Enoch. In telling this parable, Jesus was using a well-known popular concept to illustrate His teaching.

Death in Hebrew

Biblical Hebrew has several words that are used extensively with respect to death:

פֶגֶר (peger, pronounced peh’-ger) is a noun referring to a corpse, carcass, or dead body, human or animal. It was also used figuratively on occasion to refer to idols.

מוּת (muwth, pronounced mooth) is a verb meaning to die, to kill, or to be dead. The subject could be human, animal, vegetable, or even a nation. It can refer metaphorically to the death of some characteristic, e.g., the death of courage. Manner of death could be natural causes or violence. It could also refer to a death judgement, or to an agent of death.

מָוֶת (maveth, pronounced MAH-veth) is a noun, closely related to muwth, that means death, the dead, the place of the dead or state of being dead, or sometimes pestilence or ruin. Rarely, it can be used metaphorically to indicate spiritual death or separation from God, as perhaps in Hosea 13:14, or divine judgement, as in Ezekiel 18:4.

נֶפֶשׁ (nephesh, pronounced neh’-fesh) is a noun, often translated as soul, but primarily meaning any living and breathing creature, human or animal. It also refers to many of the characteristics of life, including life itself, self, person, desire, passion, appetite, or emotion. To lose one’s nephesh is to die, after which the peger, or remains, decay, while the nephesh (now a disembodied spirit) lives on in Sheol, “the grave”, meaning the underworld.

Note that in the Hebrew Scriptures, there is almost no development of the idea of spiritual death, or of divine retribution in the afterlife.

Whatever your hand finds to do, do it with your might, for there is no work or thought or knowledge or wisdom in Sheol, to which you are going.
— Ecclesiastes 9:10 (ESV) emphasis mine

Death in Greek

There are many similarities, but also significant differences in the Biblical Greek vocabulary of death:

σῶμα (sóma, pronounced SO-mah) is a noun meaning body or flesh. Unlike the Hebrew peger, this word speaks of a body that can be either living or dead, or in some cases metaphorically, of the body of the Church, or the visible aspect of a disembodied spirit, e.g., an angel.

θάνατος (thanatos, pronounced THAH-nah-tos), like the Hebrew maveth, is a noun meaning death. Unlike maveth, where the figurative sense of “spiritual death” is rare, that concept is well developed in the 1st century AD. In biblical Greek, the figurative meaning is present at least as often as the literal. Unfortunately, only the context can reveal which meaning is in play, and even then, it is sometimes not clear.

As a foil for thanatos, I’ll include here its opposite, ζωή (zóé, pronounced dzo-ay’), a noun meaning life. Interestingly, thanatos is a masculine noun, while zóé if feminine. I’ll not suggest any significance to that fact.

νεκρός (nekros, pronounced nek-ros’) is an adjective meaning dead, deceased, or corpse-like. Like thanatos, the New Testament often uses it to refer to spiritual death. Once again, only the context can determine which meaning to attach.

νεκρόω (nekroó, pronounced (nek-ro’-o) is a verb form of νεκρός meaning to put to death, or render powerless or ineffective.

ἀποθνῄσκω (apothnéskó, pronounced ä-po-thnā’-skō) is a verb meaning to die, to lie dying, or to be killed. Similar to Hebrew muwth, but once again, in the NT it often has a strong spiritual, rather than literal, connotation.

κρίμα (krima, pronounced KREE-mah) is a noun meaning a condemnatory sentence, penal judgment, or sentence.

κατάκριμα (katakrima, pronounced kä-tä’-krē-mä) is a noun meaning punishment following condemnation, penal servitude, penalty. Quoting from Bible Hub’s Topical Lexicon: “The word κατάκριμα is used in the New Testament to describe the state of being under condemnation, particularly in a spiritual or moral sense. It is often associated with the consequences of sin and the judgment that follows.”

Romans 5:12, “death by sin”

Therefore, just as sin came into the world through one man, and death through sin, and so death spread to all men because all sinned
— Romans 5:12 (ESV)

To most YECs, Romans 5:12 is the definitive last word on the subject, because it seems to clearly state that no death of any kind, to any created life form (subject to possible exemptions discussed above), was possible before Adam sinned.

But is that so?

“Proof-texting”, i.e., casually picking one verse out of Scripture to prove a theological point of view, is always risky because no single verse, in a vacuum, is likely to reflect the writer’s complete thoughts on the subject of the verse, or on the circumstances under which he is writing. Other factors almost always need to be considered, such as:

  • The grammar, genre, and figures of speech.
  • The issue or issues that prompted the writing.
  • The textual, historical, and cultural context.
  • The identity and background of the writer.
  • The identity and background of the original readers.

The grammar of 5:17 tells us that Paul is combining two thoughts:

  1. Adam’s sin introduced sin and death (thanatos) into the world.
  2. All humans sin, so all humans die.

These two thoughts are conjoined by the Greek phrase kai houtōs, but it is unclear how that should be translated. A quick survey of translations yields “and so”, “in this way”, “this is why”, “and thus”, and the New Century Version (NCV) even puts the second thought into a new sentence. “This is why everyone must die—because everyone sinned.”

Whichever one of those translations you go with, without more context there is a logical disconnect between the two halves of the verse. YECs use Thought 1 to prove that Adam’s sin introduced both physical and spiritual death into the world. Yet they would agree that Thought 2 says that humans die individually because they sin individually. Do animals not die individually because they sin individually?

The Serpent of Genesis 3 sinned, but that was Satan, not a common Garden of Eden Snake. Balaam’s donkey spoke sinful words (Numbers 22:28), but that was spiritual ventriloquism (“The LORD opened [its] mouth”). In Luke 8. 26–39, Jesus was speaking with demons, not with pigs.

I think we can agree that animals aren’t capable of sin, and neither are they subject to spiritual death. Therefore, animals probably have nothing to do with Thought 2 in Paul’s teaching. Given the multiple shades of meaning in thanatos (or the English, “death”) are we as Biblical literalists required to read all possible definitions into that one word here? Not unless we can find something in the context to back it up.

As a matter of fact, the subject in Romans 8, and in fact, the theme of the first 8 chapters, is salvation by faith in the Messiah, for both Jew and gentile. He brings up Adam for two reasons: First, because Jesus provided the means of undoing what the sin of Adam did to humanity; and second, because unlike Abraham, Adam is the father of both Jew and gentile. (Note that the overall theme of the Epistle to the Romans is Paul’s call for unity between Jews and gentiles in the Roman churches.) Among other verses in chapter 8, the following two provide all the explanation needed to understand 5:12:

18 So then, through the transgression of one, condemnation came to all men; likewise, through the righteousness of one came righteousness of life to all men. 19 For just as through the disobedience of one man, many were made sinners, so also through the obedience of one man, many will be set right forever.
— Romans 5:18-19 (TLV)

There is nothing at all in that message that applies to animals (or pre-Adamic hominids if you believe in them). Animals are explicitly mentioned only once in all of Romans:

22 Claiming to be wise, they became fools, 23 and exchanged the glory of the immortal God for images resembling mortal man and birds and animals and creeping things.
— Romans 1:22-23 (ESV)

We’ll approach an understanding of whether Romans 5:12 is speaking of physical death, spiritual death, or a combination of the two in this section. Because the language alone can’t answer that question, we’ll look primarily to the context of Paul’s letter, particularly chapters 1–8, concentrating on chapters 5–8. In the process, we’ll also strengthen our case for human-only death being in view.

The Romans context

In this section, I will now provide a thorough exposition of the topic of death, as it relates to 5:12, in Paul’s theological writings to the churches in Rome.

Background

Though Romans is packed with theology, Paul’s reason for writing the letter was primarily to act as a peacemaker between the Jewish and Gentile believers in the Roman churches.

On his missionary journeys, Paul’s habit was to first approach the Jewish synagogues and preach to their congregations, then to expand his approach to gentiles in the community. Where did the new believers then meet together? The practice of Jewish believers in Jerusalem was to continue their normal Sabbath activities in the synagogues alongside non-Messianic Jews, then at dusk, at the close of Shabbat, the Messianics would adjourn to private homes to meet and fellowship together until well into the night.

This same practice was likely followed in the Diaspora as well, with gentile believers joining at homes after the synagogues closed for the night. This was of course a great demonstration of the intercultural tolerance demanded by Paul.

[Note: Since “the 7th day of the week” gave way to “the 1st day of the week” at dusk, I believe that this evening adjournment is what truly led to the Christian custom of meeting on Sundays.]

In AD 49, Emperor Claudius expelled all Jews from the City of Rome, including Messianic believers. When the expulsion was ended after Claudius’ death in AD 54, two to four years before Paul’s letter, those Jews who returned found that Gentile believers had taken over their synagogues, and the result was bad blood between the returning Messianic Jews and the gentile usurpers.

Outline

That background explains, I think, why the bulk of the letter consisted of round after round of explanation and exhortation to first one, then the other, component of the Church.

In broad strokes, I personally outline Romans as follows:

  1. Greetings and personal notes, 1:1–15.
  2. A unifying theology of righteousness through faith, 1:16–8:39.
  3. Paul’s burden for Israel, 9:1–11:11.
  4. Gentiles and Jews together, 11:12–36.
  5. Christian ethics for all, 12:1–15:13.
  6. Paul’s closing statements, 15:14–16:27.
A focus on the theology

In Romans 1:16–8:39, Paul’s emphasis was on theology, in particular the roles of faith and Torah obedience in the quest for righteousness as required by God in the united Church.

In order to stay within the limited scope of this paper, I will concentrate here on Paul’s discussions of death, in order to set a context for 5:12.

Literal death in Romans 1–4

In the following passage, Paul is speaking of the faith of Abraham who, despite being an old man and “as good as dead”, maintained his strong faith in God, who not only creates the body, but gives it life. Both of these references to death are forms of nekros, and it seems reasonable to assume that they are referring either strictly or primarily to physical death; however, in my judgement they don’t help set the context of 5:12.

17 as it is written, “I have made you the father of many nations”—in the presence of the God in whom he believed, who gives life to the dead [nekros] and calls into existence the things that do not exist. 18 In hope he believed against hope, that he should become the father of many nations, as he had been told, “So shall your offspring be.” 19 He did not weaken in faith when he considered his own body [soma], which was as good as dead [nekroó], (since he was about a hundred years old), or when he considered the barrenness of Sarah’s womb.
— Romans 4:17-19 (ESV) emphasis mine

In 4:24 (“him who raised from the dead [nekros] Jesus our Lord”,) and 5:10 (“we were reconciled to God by the death [thanatos] of his Son”), the subject is the death and resurrection of Jesus, which again I think is not terribly helpful in setting the context for death in the following chapters.

Death and life in Romans 5:1–11

Beginning in chapter 5, the emphasis changes from justification to sanctification and the peace that comes with it.

Therefore, since we have been justified by faith, we have peace with God through our Lord Jesus Christ.
— Romans 5:1 (ESV)

“Death” terms now begin to appear more frequently in the text.

6 For while we were still weak, at the right time Christ died [apothnéskó] for the ungodly. 7 For one will scarcely die [apothnéskó] for a righteous person—though perhaps for a good person one would dare even to die [apothnéskó]— 8 but God shows his love for us in that while we were still sinners, Christ died [apothnéskó] for us.
— Romans 5:6-8 (ESV)

These references to death all speak of Jesus’ crucifixion, which was of course very much a literal death. The same applies in verse 10:

For if while we were enemies we were reconciled to God by the death [thanatos] of his Son, much more, now that we are reconciled, shall we be saved by his life [zóé].
— Romans 5:10 (ESV)

A key question now arises: If thanatos and zóé refer to literal, physical death and life in 5:10, as I think we all would agree, then is this verse speaking of physical salvation of our bodies, or of spiritual “salvation of our souls”?

“Saved” in verse 10 is σῴζω (sózó, pronounced sózó), a verb meaning (per Thayer’s), either (a) to save, to keep safe and sound, to rescue from danger or destruction; or (b) to deliver from the penalties of the Messianic judgment, i.e., to make one a partaker of the salvation by Christ.

Once again, I think that most of my readers would agree that (b) is the sense meant in verse 10.

Up to here in Paul’s theological discourse, the subject has been primarily Jesus’ physical death and subsequent resurrection as the basis for our faith, and thus our spiritual salvation (justification, sanctification, and later glorification).

I would contend, then, that 10 and 11 focus the context for what follows in verse 12:

10 For if while we were enemies we were reconciled to God by the death of his Son, much more, now that we are reconciled, shall we be saved by his life. 11 More than that, we also rejoice in God through our Lord Jesus Christ, through whom we have now received reconciliation.
12 Therefore, …
— Romans 5:10-12a (ESV)

I will show below that the text following 5:12 further solidifies this context.

Death and life in Romans 5:13–21

The remainder of chapter 5 continues the contrast between death through Adam and life through Jesus and returns the emphasis back to the overall theme of the letter: explaining how faith and salvation can function in a Church composed of both Jews and gentiles.

Here, Paul says that, yes, we have been two separate peoples under separate spiritual economies since the time of Abraham, and we will remain so in most respects, but we all have a common ancestor in Adam. Within the Church, we must recognize that both peoples are infected with the sin nature of Adam because of his sin, but now both have been united by our faith in the salvation brought by Jesus.

Key death phrases in this section are:

14 … death [thanatos] reigned from Adam to Moses, even over those whose sinning was not like the transgression of Adam, who was a type of the one who was to come.

15 … if many died [apothnéskó] through one man’s trespass, much more have the grace of God and the free gift by the grace of that one man Jesus Christ abounded for many. 16 … For the judgment [krima] following one trespass brought condemnation [katakrima], but the free gift following many trespasses brought justification. 17 For if, because of one man’s trespass, death [thanatos] reigned through that one man, much more will those who receive the abundance of grace and the free gift of righteousness reign in life [zóé] through the one man Jesus Christ.

18 Therefore, as one trespass led to condemnation [katakrima] for all men, so one act of righteousness leads to justification and life for all men. … 21 so that, as sin reigned in death [thanatos], grace also might reign through righteousness leading to eternal life through Jesus Christ our Lord.
— Romans 5:14-21 (ESV)

Surely all of that death, judgement, redemption and life terminology must be speaking only of the spiritual state!

A different metaphor in Romans 6–7

Here Paul shifts the conversation about death. In this section, “death” is neither physical death nor spiritual death, but rather he uses the metaphor of “putting to death”, or overcoming, the evil inclinations brought on by our sinful natures. I discussed this recently in great detail in Yetzer, Yotzer and “The Law” in Romans 7:1–6

Romans 8

In this chapter, Paul closes out the discussion that fills the first half of the letter.

1 Therefore, there is now no condemnation for those who are in Messiah Yeshua. 2 For the law of the Spirit of life in Messiah Yeshua [the Torah written on our hearts] has set you free from the law of sin and death [the fleshly “evil inclination”].
— Romans 8:1-2 (TLV) comment mine

“Therefore” in 8:1 harks back to all that came before, but in particular to 7:4, discussed in the previous article:

Therefore, my brothers and sisters, you also were made dead to the Torah through the body of Messiah, so that you might be joined to another—the One who was raised from the dead—in order that we might bear fruit for God.
— Romans 7:4 (TLV)

By now, I hope that most of you will agree that Paul’s discussion of theology is primarily about the spiritual results of sin, not about the mortality of the body.

Interpreting Romans 5:10–14

Here, then, is my interpretation of Romans 5:12 in its closest context:

10 For if while we were enemies we were reconciled to God by the death of his Son, much more, now that we are reconciled, shall we be saved by his life. 11 More than that, we also rejoice in God through our Lord Jesus Christ, through whom we have now received reconciliation.

12 Therefore, just as sin came into the world through one man, and death [thanatos] through sin, and so death [thanatos] spread to all men because all sinned …
— Romans 5:10–12 (ESV)

For if while we were enemies — While we, as Jew or gentile, were in opposition to God and Torah.

We were reconciled to God by the death of his Son — We were brought back into a close relationship (which was lost when we first sinned) with God on be basis of Jesus’ crucifixion.

Much more, now that we are reconciled — More importantly, now that that relationship has been restored.

Shall we be saved by his life. — I discussed the meaning of salvation when I analyzed this verse above, taking Thayer’s definition, “to deliver from the penalties of the Messianic judgment, i.e., to make one a partaker of the salvation by Christ.”

More than that, we also rejoice in God through our Lord Jesus Christ, through whom we have now received reconciliation. — We celebrate the fact that we have been brought into fellowship with God, the Father.

Therefore—because of Jesus’ crucifixion and resurrection by which we have been reconciled to God.

Just as—in the same fashion as.

Sin came into the world through one man—Sin came into existence on earth. By disobeying God in the matter of the Tree of Knowledge, Adam and Eve brought the curse on mankind and on the ground that he depends on.

And death through sin—this will require discussion of two issues:

  1. The contextual discussion above addresses the question of whether this “death” (thanatos) is spiritual death only, or whether it includes any physical component at all. Based on we’ve seen in chapters 1–8, and especially 5:10–11, I can only conclude that death here is referring only to spiritual death.
  2. We also have to determine whether the remainder of verse 12 limits this death to mankind only, or if animals and other things are included.

And so death spread to all men because all sinned—to my mind, the grammar here limits death due to sin to the sinners themselves.

But let’s consider the curses themselves…

Death in Eden

The sin in Eden

The word “die” occurs 3 times in the Garden of Eden (Genesis 2:17; 3:3,4). In each case, it is a grammatical variation of the Hebrew muwth. As expected, the Greek Septuagint (LXX, a 2nd century BC Jewish translation of the Old Testament into Greek) translates each of these three occurrences using apothnéskó, which in this case imparts no new information.

What does the text tell us? In Gen 2:17 God’s words were, “in the day that you eat of it you shall surely die.” Eve’s flawed retelling of this to the Serpent was, “‘You shall not eat of the fruit of the tree that is in the midst of the garden, neither shall you touch it, lest you die.'” The Serpent’s response was, “You will not surely die.”

Are we to take this as a discussion of physical death, spiritual death, or perhaps both? That’s a tough question to some since it is not addressed specifically.

If the answer is “physical“, then did God lie and the Serpent tell the truth? That, of course, is not tenable unless the word “day” (from the root, יוֹם, yom) means something other than a literal day. In an Ancient Near East (ANE) context, that is certainly a possibility, but it’s making an unprovable assumption, and it’s a risky interpretation in the context of Genesis 1–3. If you require Genesis 1 to be using the word, day, literally for the creation days, then in Genesis 2–3, the same word should probably have the same meaning.

“Both” might mean that both were telling half-truths, which raises the same troubling issues.

If the answer is “spiritual“, then God was truthful, and the Serpent a liar. I’ll go with this one!

But, for the purpose of this post, I have to ask how Adam and Eve could have had any comprehension of either physical or spiritual death if there had been no death at all on earth up to that point. Any attempts to explain that away can only be speculative. Lacking data, then speculation is fine, but dogmatism is not.

Since Adam’s physical death didn’t come until 930 years later, I feel personally confident in speculating that the death promised to him was spiritual only, though there is no record that either God or the Serpent explained that to him or Eve. I further speculate that he was not created immortal but would have lived forever from the fruit of the Tree of Life, as stated in gen 3:22.

The curses of Eden

The Serpent

According to Genesis 3:14–15, the Serpent was cursed for his own sin.

14 So the LORD God said to the serpent:
Because you have done this,
you are cursed more than any livestock
and more than any wild animal.
You will move on your belly
and eat dust all the days of your life.

15 I will put hostility between you and the woman,
and between your offspring and her offspring.
He will strike your head,
and you will strike his heel.
— Genesis 3:14-15 (CSB17)

Angelic beings were created to oversee the cosmos, much like mankind was created to manage Earth. The Bible reports that angels are rebellious just like humans, but I see nothing in the Bible to indicate that the angels and humankind are judged under the same set of rules, or that other angels were included in the Serpent’s curse.

In fact, it’s unclear just what exactly the serpent was, and what its relation was to Satan. Revelation 12:9 and 20:2 state that it was Satan, but that could mean that Satan “possessed” a member of an animal family. “On your belly you shall go” does indeed sound like snake, but “the serpent was more crafty than any other beast of the field that the LORD God had made” doesn’t sound snakish at all, so who knows?

It’s unclear to me why God would have cursed all snakes because of the perfidy of one, and the part of the curse recorded in verse 15 certainly does not pertain to snakes! Well, I’m satisfied not knowing the unknowable!

The Woman

Eve’s curse is recorded in Genesis 3:16. It mentions only pain in childbearing and relational difficulties between husband and wife. From the wording, it seems that childbearing was already painful, so this just made it more so. If it was painful, could it also have been perilous?

He said to the woman:
I will intensify your labor pains;
you will bear children with painful effort.
Your desire will be for your husband,
yet he will rule over you.
— Genesis 3:16 (CSB17)

Adam

Adam’s curse is found in Genesis 3:17–19. Strictly speaking, Adam wasn’t cursed at all, directly. What the text says is, “cursed is the ground because of you”. What that curse does, though, is to set up an enmity of sorts between Adam and his environment, which certainly would be considered a curse.

17 And he said to the man, “Because you listened to your wife and ate from the tree about which I commanded you, ‘Do not eat from it’:
The ground is cursed because of you.
You will eat from it by means of painful labor
all the days of your life.

18 It will produce thorns and thistles for you,
and you will eat the plants of the field.
19 You will eat bread by the sweat of your brow
until you return to the ground,
since you were taken from it.
For you are dust,
and you will return to dust.”
— Genesis 3:17-19 (CSB17)

Alternatively, it may be that Adam’s own curse is that discussed above, plus

22 The LORD God said, “Since the man has become like one of us, knowing good and evil, he must not reach out, take from the tree of life, eat, and live forever.” 23 So the LORD God sent him away from the garden of Eden to work the ground from which he was taken. 24 He drove the man out and stationed the cherubim and the flaming, whirling sword east of the garden of Eden to guard the way to the tree of life.
— Genesis 3:22-24 (CSB17)

I see no Biblical indication, in Genesis 3 or elsewhere, that animals, plants, or the extraterrestrial cosmos were cursed for man’s sin. Certainly, the flora, fauna and ecology of earth are greatly affected by man’s curse. That doesn’t mean that it had any effect on their mortality, other than to make life harder.“Be fruitful and multiply and fill the earth and subdue it, and have dominion over the fish of the sea and over the birds of the heavens and over every living thing that moves on the earth.”
— Genesis 1:28 (ESV)

Good and Very Good

Many Young Earth Creationists claim that there could not possibly have been death before the fall because during the creation week, at the end of every day God looked at what He had done that day and pronounced it “good.” At the end of the sixth day, as a matter of fact, it was “very good.”

Now how, they ask, can anything be good or very good if it can die? Well, gosh… How does any fallen human being presume to know what God considers to be good? It’s His design, so by definition, it is good!

Let’s check the language:

טוֹב (tov, pronounced tove) This can be adjective, verb, or noun, and it means … hang onto you hats … good, pleasant, agreeable, beneficial, beautiful, best, better, bountiful, cheerful, at ease, fair, favor, fine, glad, goodly, graciously, joyful, kindly, loving, merry, pleasant, precious, prosperity, ready, sweet, wealth, welfare, well-favored. And all of these meanings are subjective! Good luck agreeing on the shading!

מְאֹד (m`od pronounced meh-ODE) This is an adjective meaning very, exceedingly, much, greatly.

Really, there’s not much help there. The word is subjective.

From my engineering perspective, a good design is one that does what the specs required, does what it was designed it to do, and does it elegantly.

Philosophical bias

In my opinion…


The universe is not a static artwork hanging on a wall. It’s a living, dynamic organism, designed by God to mature and blossom with little interference, to showcase His majesty, and to house and employ His angelic host, the first “generation” of His children, the B’nai Elohim, or Sons of God (Genesis 6:2–4).

And later, after reaching a suitable degree of maturity and elegance, a Garden was planted on one planet to house and nurture the second generation of His children, humanity.

Elegantly!


Nature vs Eternity

Development and growth per God’s blueprint demand movement, change, and thermodynamic flow. Exchange and equilibrium. Birth and death. This is true for the universe as a whole, for galaxies, stars and star systems, and for planets.

Angels are like humans in that they image God, they answer to Him, they interact with Him, they have freewill and thus can sin, and God has given them meaningful work to do.

They are unlike humans in that they have no physical bodies that are inherently vulnerable to mishap, wear and tear, and mischief. They don’t give birth, and they don’t die, and they aren’t influenced by hormones. However, when they have temporarily taken on human form, they have sometimes gotten into big trouble.

In the Eternal State, I believe human bodies will be secondary. In the meantime, they are the shell we are confined to. Spirits are immortal, bodies are not. By their nature, bodies are vulnerable. With God’s protection or the Tree of Life, they can be maintained indefinitely, but without it, death is inevitable.

Fecundity

The first commandment given to humans was,

“Be fruitful and multiply and fill the earth and subdue it, and have dominion over the fish of the sea and over the birds of the heavens and over every living thing that moves on the earth.”
— Genesis 1:28 (ESV)

Where there is fecundity, there has to be death. Neither animals nor humans can give birth indefinitely without eventually running out of space and resources. We value ecosystems and our environment. Ecology, God’s creation, demands cycles of life and death to maintain the health and balance of the planet.

Natural Life

I have in front of me paper after paper and article after article featuring Henry Morris’ grandson and many of his colleagues repeating over and over again that “death is an insult”, and “if God designed death into creation, then He is a monster”, and “death is wasteful and cruel.” This is all nonsense to me.

Isaiah described the Olam Haba (world to come) in the imprecise way of prophecy, particularly poetic prophecy. As sometimes happens, he confused the Millennium with the Eternal State, as described in Revelation. Under the topic, “new heavens and new earth” (65:17), the following passage describes what I believe life will be like in the Millennium, and perhaps what it was designed to be like in Eden:

20 No more will babies die in infancy,
no more will an old man die short of his days —
he who dies at a hundred will be thought young,
and at less than a hundred thought cursed.
21 They will build houses and live in them,
they will plant vineyards and eat their fruit.
22 They will not build and others live there,
they will not plant and others eat;
for the days of my people
will be like the days of a tree,
and my chosen will themselves enjoy
the use of what they make.
23 They will not toil in vain
or raise children to be destroyed,
for they are the seed blessed by ADONAI;
and their offspring with them.
24 Before they call, I will answer;
while they are still speaking, I will hear.
25 The wolf and the lamb will feed together,
and the lion eat straw like an ox
(but the serpent — its food will be dust).
They will not hurt or destroy
anywhere on my holy mountain,”
— Isaiah 65:20-25 (CJB)

As for animals, verse 25 doesn’t promise that the wolf and the lamb will be immortal, or even that the lion or wolf will lose its predatory instincts, but only that wild animals will no longer plunder domestic herds.

Humans were created mortal but designed to live long and peaceful lives and to die content, like David in 1 Chronicles 29:28 (CJB), who “died, at a ripe old age, full of years, riches and honor.”

This is my view of Eden, as well…


Gotcha Proofs by Young Earth Creationists, II

Posted on:

Modified on:


Y’all know that I’m an Old Earth Creationist. I make no apologies for rejecting Young Earth interpretations that defy the senses that God gave me. I try to present my opinions respectfully, but sometimes it’s hard in the face of some absurd arguments for that viewpoint.

For several years, I have been “trolling” the Biblical Creation group on Facebook, just for perspective. I rarely comment, or I’d spend all day every day at it. Their stock in trade is supposed “proof” in the form of half-baked misrepresentations of evidence. I did post a detailed response to a post two years ago, which I later transcribed here.

I took on another one today:


This is the original article:

VERY RARE OCTOPUS FOSSIL SHOOTS DOWN EVOLUTION.......

Darwin once said the octopus evolved from starfish. Not only is there no evidence for this, but there are no known ancestors of the octopus. Darwinists have claimed we don't see octopus fossils to prove anything anyway. Not anymore. This supposedly "95 million year old" fossil complete with tentacles and suckers is remarkably preserved and sits in a Paris museum. Normally when an octopus dies, it sinks and gets eaten very quickly, or becomes a blob and decays within days-It's been called a rarer specimen than finding a fossilized sneeze (Science Daily). So a fossil like this does 2 things..1 . It proves that octopuses have always been octopuses as God made them fully complete in the beginning. 2. It shows that something preserved this octopus quickly. According to the Biblical timeframe and Noah's flood, masses of sediment would have created toxic conditions wiping out massive amounts of sea life as we see in the fossil record, quickly preserving specimens as they died on the ocean floor. The Bible trumps evolution..again!

My response:

Please! Things that are true need to be proved by truth, not by uninformed gotchas. My main Facebook presence is in Bible archaeology groups, and the same thing goes on there with supporters of charlatan “Christian archaeologists” like Ron Wyatt and others, whose idea of proof is, “It looks like a duck, so it absolutely IS a duck.”

As a retired petroleum explorationist with decades of practical experience in depositional analysis, I say this story is BUNK! To begin with, fossilization is very commonly found in continental flash flooding, lake beds, aeolian (windblown) sand dunes, and many other situations. In ocean waters, turbidity mud flows are common below silty river mouths; and in deep water, in mud flows due to earthquakes, minor sudden fault shifts, and even when gravity finally tips over mudbanks formed by years of current or tidal action, or even the slow process of continental drift. All those things not only occur but have been observed in action.

As to the specifics here: First, don’t quote Darwin. He authored the theory, but even modern evolutionists who idolize him know that many of the specifics of his views have been superseded or discarded. The theory remains, of course, but please cite newer sources, which posit octopus’ origins in early mollusks (snails and slugs), far removed from starfish.

This particular fossil is similar to modern octopi, but with notable differences in the sucker arrangement and the ink sac, among other factors. This species does NOT exist today.

“It proves that octopuses have always been octopuses”. That’s either an overzealous statement or an outright lie. It proves NOTHING. It does nothing to prove the Bible, which I believe on unwavering faith, and it doesn’t prove anything pro-evolution, either.

As a devout Christian with one foot in theology and the other in science, I wrote the following, for anyone interested (contrary to the link, the actual title is, “Does Science Trump Theology?”, and the short answer is no, but it is valuable):

https://gpront.blog/…/19/theory-in-science-and-theology/